I'd like to focus a bit on the family aspect of support for elderly parents, in our case veterans, but obviously your answers may apply to all such family situations. I may be generalizing by saying that in the generations past, as our parents got old and needed help, we tended to do that at home as much as possible, because the institutions and hospitals weren't as readily available. We've gone through a time when there were the bricks and mortar available for the most part, and that's where we tended to spend our last days.
I guess this is the first part of my question, but I sense that the pendulum is swinging back and more and more people are choosing to spend their final days, weeks, months, at home with family, whether it's a young woman with cancer or whether it's a senior who knows the time is coming. Whether it's a veteran or a senior non-veteran, is there an acceptance in society that this pendulum does exist, the swinging back does exist, and if so, are we really planning for more and more of the home-based final days in terms of caring for our parents? We're going to be there some day, too--to those who may be listening to this on webcast--and we'll be facing that. I am wondering about the overall philosophical approach to where we will be with this in five, ten, or fifteen years.