Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good afternoon. I certainly appreciate the effort you've taken to present us with such detailed information from your perspective, in the particular vein of occupational therapists.
I'd like to build on something that Roger Valley brought up, which is in the papers today, and which is with regard to the effects on military families. It seems that it's not only that the veteran or the soldier suffers, but the family suffers or is affected. So I think we can extrapolate—maybe not one to one—to say that if we're talking about veterans' issues, it's not only the veteran we're dealing with, it's the family.
I'll make the hypothesis that you won't have a really healthy veteran unless you have a healthy family that surrounds that veteran. So if you go into a situation, if you're called in to go to veteran so and so, do you have much interaction with the family? I know you're dealing with senior veterans, and I'm not sure what your experience is with families, but do you deal with the family at all in terms of doing the assessment on the veteran himself or herself?