Right. I see what you're saying. So if you had the occupational therapist who's embedded and enlisted in the military and the veteran leaves, and now they're being offered an occupational therapist who is a generalist, say, in a rural town, you're wondering what the difference will be.
I think that's where the treatment plan comes into play. How are we going to supply what they've already been given, not only to, say, pain management that they're receiving or if they're receiving vocational counselling? The treatment plan before releasing them is crucial to figuring out what they're going to need over here in rural Manitoba. Now, if you can't supply it, then maybe we need to reconsider the timing. Maybe we actually might have to take that rural OT and get him or her trained in PGAV, with the pain program. Or maybe we have to do those kinds of special little things.
I know this is the ideal. I'm sorry sir, because I know you're saying that other people need it too. But maybe that's what we need to do.
But maybe a lesser solution that doesn't cost as much would be to find a university or a person who specializes in the area of the discipline, say an occupational therapist, and they collect evidence-based new articles that are the most recent things shown to work with veterans with specific problems, that can be distributed to occupational therapists in rural towns, and they're able to reference those. At least they're providing something more than the general treatment that they might be providing now, as I do.