Unfortunately, I'm not going to be able to answer that question to your satisfaction, because I actually work in the geriatric component, the long-term-care component, at Parkwood Hospital in the veterans care program. I don't work in the operational stress injury program. Certainly there would be people well able to describe that program in detail to you. My focus is geriatrics.
But in terms of your question about how veterans are different, one of the things in long-term care that I think is particularly important is that the long-term-care veterans population is mostly male, and the long-term-care population from the community is predominantly female.
That's going to change for a couple of reasons, partly because the demographics in the mortality rates are changing—men are living longer—and partly because family structures are changing. The given scenario where you have the younger spouse who cares for the older man who is then able to live out his whole life at home is going to change as well, because the family structure is changing.
What we have in the veterans care population is a real opportunity to understand what the needs of aging men are that then can be extrapolated to what the needs of aging men in the community are going to be over the next few decades when the numbers start to balance out and we will have more equal numbers of men and women surviving to older ages.