Absolutely, yes. We started off with army recruits receiving the BattleSMART program back in July of 2006. Back then it wasn't actually called BattleSMART; that name was only coined in July of 2009. That was when the program became known as BattleSMART.
In July of 2006, it was introduced as a psychological resilience or coping skills program for army recruits. We kept statistics from the time it was introduced in July 2009, and in the 12 months after it was introduced we noticed a 50% reduction in the number of recruits who were referred for psychological problems and a 50% reduction in the number of recruits who were discharged for psychological problems. Also, the recruits who received the coping skills program were anecdotally much happier. They seemed, to the psychology staff and the training staff, to be a bit more savvy about psychological adjustment and coping and that sort of thing.
The program continued in the army for the army recruits, and then the air force and the navy picked up on it in about 2008, and it's been going there ever since. It has been modified as we go and as we learn things, and we have meetings with our scientific advisory committee twice a year. We have a number of Australian experts in the field of stress and coping who meet with us twice a year. We talk about modifications that we might need to make to the BattleSMART program, but as I say, it is being introduced pre-deployment and a version is being developed for post-deployment, and of course, as you say, we've got a version for those who are transitioning out of defence.