That's a wonderful question. Thank you.
Regarding improvements, that really comes back to the point that we really need to look at outcomes. With all our energy invested in our veterans and our people living in the military, with in-patients and out-patients, and various kinds of medications and interventions, I think we really need to look at outcomes.
Does something improve the veteran's quality of life and that of his or her family? I don't think we have good data on that.
As for improvements overall, I think we've come a very long way since 1993 when I first did my clinical rotation at the Stadacona psychiatric hospital and we saw our first folks come back from Bosnia. But we've come a long way since that time in terms of identifying.
I think we still have some problems in identifying reservists who leave our system, and then we can't track them. I think that's an issue.
In terms of programs, we have all worked pretty hard at trying to stay in line with evidence-based programming. The problem is trying to implement those in the community as we are civilian external providers to any system. There are many gaps and problems.