Now, many veterans who have, say, PTSD and don't realize it for 10, 15, 20 years afterwards, which is becoming commonplace as there's more work done on PTSD and more people realize what it is and the stigma is taken off it, they're forced to deal with the insurance companies, are they not?
And the reason I ask this is that, before they can get a lot of their benefits, oftentimes they have to go to Sun Life, from my experience, and the decision is often made by Sun Life as to whether or not they have PTSD. In my experience, it's irrelevant whether or not they have a doctor's diagnosis that they have PTSD, the diagnosis of a qualified medical physician such as you were talking about before.
If I could just maybe have you look into that, or if we could talk about that after, that's something I would like to see done. We can't get through it all in a five-minute question and answer, but it's something I wanted to bring up.
We were talking about the 1,400 and the 432 decisions on PTSD last year. What are the timelines we're talking about here from when a veteran files to have the first review done—the 68% that are in favour? What are the timelines between point A and getting the decision on his initial review?