I could certainly start, and Raymond and Tina can respond.
The post-deployment study, for an example, that the Canadian Forces did to identify any physical and mental health problems following deployments indicated that 13% of the 8,000-and-some they had surveyed indicated they had problems in five or six mental health areas. Because of that, they are being referred and they are being put in counselling.
Anecdotally, what I'm hearing within National Defence is that there are a lot more younger veterans coming forward to the mental health clinics on the bases and to the OTSSC centres, and they are talking more. They are talking about what their issues are. So they're seeing progress in that area.
Even when you look at it from a Canadian perspective, stigma is still a major issue. The Mental Health Commission of Canada, as you know, is embarking on a nine-year or ten-year anti-stigma campaign. We are working closely with the Mental Health Commission on some of these areas to ensure that veterans and their families are considered in all of the work they're doing, including the anti-stigma campaign.