I think that's a very difficult question. I guess in the Korean War, the families didn't hear anything, and now it's almost become a challenge. I was at a NATO meeting a few years ago where they were talking about suicide specifically. One of the issues that came up for American soldiers is that sometimes there'd be a loss of a relationship in the family, where, say, the spouse has now left the soldier and has then sent that over by e-mail, and the soldier then becomes of course quite upset and suicidal. The people around the soldier get quite concerned. They were specifically concerned about that level of communication back and forth, for both the soldier and the family.
I think the challenge now is.... I don't know if it's better or worse. I think there's a sense of more connectiveness, that the soldier is not as “away”, with Skype and all those kinds of things. But I think there can be negative effects of that on both the soldier and the family.