Thank you, Dr. Pringle, for joining us today. When you're talking of Keeping the Promise, you talk very much about poor health in later years. In fact, poor health in later years is not inevitable, and you talked a bit here about health promotion. Last night, as many of us will talk about for a long time, many talked about how important it was for education.
In terms of education, they were talking certainly about themselves and understanding it better, but mostly about their supporting families and caregivers—not the professional people. In fact, I had some sense that some professional people clearly don't understand PTSD or some of those affected diseases that come following trauma.
You talked earlier about realistic ideas. One of the things they talked about, which struck me, is why there hasn't been a book written by those who have been affected by PTSD, so that it's basically one of those peer things. Many of those folks were affected with their families. Their families still don't get it; they still don't understand it. And I think it's hard sometimes for a family member to understand when it's coming from that individual rather than coming from someone extended from the family or outside of the family.
Do you have any comments on that?