The mental health survey from 2013 is really trying to help us understand the extent of mental illness in the Canadian Armed Forces and look at the change between 2002, when we initially did this survey, and 2013. We designed that study in a way that also used questions that were very similar to the civilian survey that was done by Statistics Canada, so it gives us the ability to compare numbers in the Canadian Armed Forces with those in the civilian health sector as well, which is useful for us to be able to understand mental illness in the Canadian Armed Forces.
We have also looked at things like how military personnel access care. Who do they go to if they feel that they have concerns with mental illness? What is it that would stop them from going for care if they feel they have mental illness? We try to evaluate access to care, barriers to care, and those kinds of things so that we can try to put in place measures to ensure that people are able to come forward for care when they need it.
Our centre of excellence is going to be looking at things from a more clinical perspective than we're able to do in a survey. The centre of excellence really wants to try to keep track of what's going on cutting edge with respect to care. This is where we're going to try to undertake some of the studies that are looking at personal life mental health care, looking at neurofeedback, looking at neuro-imaging, what we're learning with respect to how the brain responds to post-traumatic stress disorder, and whether or not there are changes that we can track and see when people are being treated.
We're also trying some new medications and are looking particularly at control of nightmares and sleep disturbance in post-traumatic stress disorder. I think that those are probably the main differences between the Centre of Excellence and what we're doing with the survey.