I can't speak to how much it's costing to do that, but I can certainly emphasize—and this is another tremendous capacity that we have with our operational stress injury clinics, the ten clinics we have across the country—that they are involved not only in outreach to the community and to the physicians in the community and the providers, in terms of educating, best practices around how you treat people, but they're also involved in research. They're also affiliated with the universities, or defence, or the Canadian Institute for Health Research--they're affiliated with that as well--so they're looking into some very interesting kinds of research, things like resilience and risk factors for post-deployment, for injured, such as why it is that some people go through traumatic events but come out the other end fine, while other people do not. I mean, they're looking into a lot of different research, and the clinics are a prime area for that in terms of data and that kind of thing. So there's some really interesting research.
We're also looking at integration of our veterans into the workplace. That research is happening. We have, for example—