It's early days. We have probably close to 3,500 clients currently in the program. We've had about 500 complete the program. So it is early to be looking at what kinds of outcomes we're achieving, but we have some early information that is telling us that a large percentage of people, when they complete the program, are getting employment.
I want to also point out that rehabilitation is not just about getting people jobs. It's also about improving their capacity to function in their family units, in their community, and if possible in their jobs. We will over time have better information about what kinds of outcomes we're achieving. We give people surveys when they enter the program, when they leave the program, and then two years out. We're looking at areas such as what their health status is when they're coming in, what their employment status is, what kind of financial resources they have, how they are integrated into their community, and whether they feel recognized for their service. Those are all pieces that we'll be measuring over time to look at what the impact has been, but we're certainly seeing, in early days, that we're having significantly positive impacts on mental health in particular. We have a number of individual cases that I've personally seen in which the kinds of outcomes we have been able to achieve are extraordinary—people with mental health conditions, which Janice spoke so eloquently about, who did not have hope in the past and now have it. They have the opportunity.
It's hard to measure the value of that opportunity. If you're giving the right services by the right people at the right point in time, you can have a tremendous impact on someone's life. This is the piece that is maybe not being talked about enough. It's not necessarily well understood, and we haven't seen as many public results as we will see in the future.
If Janice....