What surprises me as well, in the wake of Mr. Vincent's questions, is that you're saying you don't have any statistics on clients who are hospitalized or treated at your post-traumatic care clinics. Those clinics—we visited them—are excellent, and I was amazed and interested. However, there's no follow-up.
So I'm also wondering about that point because there doesn't seem to be any follow-up. We don't know the suicide rate among individuals dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder who are hospitalized at your facilities. They are hospitalized, but one would say no one knows what happens to them after that.
And yet, it seems to me that the entire question of subsequent support for families is very important. Someone who suffers post-traumatic stress changes character, behaviour, and there is a whole adjustment that has to be made with the family. After that person has been treated at your facilities, I suppose there must be psychosocial follow-up, follow-up with the family, to promote that individual's return to society.
How long does that follow-up last? Why is there not more follow-up? I don't understand. You can't tell us that. In fact, it's not you I'm speaking to. It's our system which is unable to tell us how many people have committed suicide. Follow-up has been done with the families. I don't understand. I'm trying to follow, but I don't understand.