A qualified answer to that is yes, I agree. A great many veterans are going to come back, and they're going to be receiving care of some nature from Veterans Affairs Canada. It's only reasonable, as I understand it.
I understand that when the service personnel leave Afghanistan, they stop in Cypress. In Cypress they're interviewed with respect to any problems. Some of the problems that have been identified have been PTSD.
I was talking with a district officer from Veterans Affairs Canada, and they indicate, if memory serves me correctly, that 27% of the persons interviewed in Cypress have indicated that they require assistance with respect to PTSD. Now that may be higher as some return to Canada and leave the service.
That is particularly interesting with respect to the member of the militia or the reserves who goes on a nine-month contract, six months being in Afghanistan. Then he comes back to his unit and fails to attend any parades with the militia unit--they parade two nights a week--and they lose contact with him for whatever reason. And then he requires assistance. So there's a difficulty in that particular respect. But I feel that if a person has experienced the terrible difficulties in Afghanistan, he or she will require assistance for a great many years.