Thank you for that question, because it's such an important issue for us. So many individuals who are injured are injured with operational stress injuries, and those don't go away overnight. Basically what we have in place.... I won't talk about DND's process; they have excellent services while they are in service.
When they arrive at our door, we have both a clinical and a non-clinical support system. One is in partnership with DND, which is called the operational social support network or the peer support group, OSISS. I don't know if your committee has been briefed on that recently. That peer support network was founded by DND, but about 70-plus percent of the people who go to that network for peer support assistance are veterans. It caught on in a very major way with veterans.
That peer support group counsels individuals, and the peers who run these support groups are people who suffer from operational stress injuries. Our Sainte-Anne's hospital provides the clinical support to that peer network so that individuals don't get overburdened while suffering from an OSI and helping others who are suffering from OSIs. That group is used as a means to listen and assess problems that have arisen among the people who go to the groups, and they are referred to our services when the individuals are ready for them.
On the clinical side, we have established ten operational stress injury clinics, where clinicians, in a team setting, work with veterans who are diagnosed through those clinics and a treatment plan is established for them. Through our case managers in the department, the treatment plan is monitored, with continuous feedback on the treatment plan and the case, in an attempt to stay on top of the issue.
This differs quite dramatically from the way the department dealt with cases like this in the past.