The Royal Canadian Legion will give you a tremendous amount too. They have a lot of lists of veterans who aren't DVA clients, and they would be able to help you.
Also, Clara in her paper here talks about the various physical things--imbalance, tai chi, physical exercise--and, sir, the same in yours, but I don't see anything regarding mental health. Or maybe I didn't read it properly.
You said that 40% of veterans tend to fall more frequently than other adults. From my understanding--I can't speak for the committee--the older veterans who I speak to, especially some of the ones who are very frail, seem to reflect a lot on what their wartime experience was and those kinds of things. An awful lot of them are also suffering from maybe dementia, a touch of Alzheimer's, and those things. I don't know how many of those folks would have filled out a survey, but I know that for folks who have dementia or Alzheimer's, filling out a survey is quite challenging no matter how simple you make it.
In your study, did you have an opportunity to study the mental health of these individuals? A lot of times, that could lead to physical problems, which could then lead to falls. So did you have a chance to do that, and if not, would you be planning to do one in the future?