The first part starts in the education process prior to deployment, and it has to be accepted in the military culture. It cannot be career-ending. In that way people will come forward and get treatment, because it's that early intervention that's absolutely key to preventing their living a life of isolation. It translates into the family: you live in complete silence at work, you don't report it, and when you go home, your family bears the brunt of the aggressiveness and the isolation you feel.
There needs to be that early intervention and that education. There are programs in place. There has been lots of progress with the Canadian Forces--