Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, Madam, for your presentation.
We have the Canadian Medical Association in town today doing their lobbying efforts. One of the things they did with MPs was check our pulse, our blood pressure, our glucose, and all that, and I found out today that as a 52-year-old, I have the body of a 51-year-old. Amazing. It's simply amazing.
My question for you is about dealing, generally, with a generation that doesn't like to ask for help. How do we get them around the asking and actually say, you know, you can do this?
Second, of course, in terms of veterans and their past experiences, is that some of them may be suffering not from dementia or Alzheimer's but from psychological nightmares or concerns of that nature. It concerns not just them but their caregivers as well. What advice do you give to the committee in order to assist them in dealing not only with their own human frailties but with their psychological frailties as well?