With respect to the asbestos issue, we are doing our best to ensure that generally veterans are aware of their rights to access the Department of Veterans Affairs for services, so that we have as much general outreach as we possibly can give to them within our communications strategy. For example, we have Salute! magazine, which goes out, admittedly, to existing veterans, not clients, but through that network there's a lot of interaction at Legion halls and things like that where people who are clients share that information and share the Salute! magazine. It gets well distributed across the country. We communicate in the Maple Leaf magazine, which is the internal magazine of DND.
So we attempt to make it known that for anybody who has any kind of illness that they think might be related to their military service, Veterans Affairs is there for them to come and see us.
When it comes to a specific illness and linking it back to the causal effect, we have thousands of maladies that could be attributable to military service, depending on what the circumstances were. It would be very difficult for us to go back and try to trace through history to find where people may have served and to highlight for them that they may have served in a particular area. It's a very complex subject, as I've learned in the last while as we've looked at this asbestos issue. But what we're doing is we are attempting to see what we can do in terms of communications on the subject, and we are looking at ways and means of enhancing that--I'll call it--outreach, to let people know that awards are being given for this particular substance and that we are there for them.
I don't know if that helps at all in terms of your questions.