Well, I think PTSD is PTSD.
On the needs of the RCMP and the training of the psychologists—I don't know if I'm getting your question right here—they may be few and far between in the sense that we have the 15 or 19 psychologists within the RCMP, but they're not clinical psychologists who our members can go and talk to.
To have somebody on the outside, there are identified psychologists within certain regions who can talk to the RCMP, but just to take that one step further, I'll give you an example with regard to a shooting, and I apologize if I'm rambling.
This member was told, “Here's a psychologist who is recognized by the RCMP.” That psychologist's name was also given to the family of the victim who was shot. Because of the scenario, the small community...it's hard to identify somebody different. A psychologist is a psychologist; they have professional ethics, and they'll separate it, but when I'm telling you my version of it and somebody else is telling their version, in a small community that's also a point of....
I don't know if that helps.