I'm not sure of the answer to that, but we certainly have the same sorts of health workforce issues in Australia, particularly in some of our rural areas. We have a network of providers that link into our veterans of interest, the Veterans and Veterans Families Counselling Service, and people can also use our health care treatment arrangements. So if there's a health professional there, they certainly have no problem accessing treatment. But we are also looking at other techniques.
For instance, some of our Internet-based activities mean that people, wherever they are, can get support and assistance. We are looking at—and I don't know the details—things like tele-medicine. We want to use our clinicians based in the cities to provide services over the phone and through video conferencing to people in more remote areas. We are facing the same issues on the number of health workforce people who can help in this area.