I can add to that.
It's exactly what Nora said: traumatic brain injury is a common injury, with common diagnostics and common presenting symptoms. How the veteran or the family will access supports to deal with that consequence of service can be very different in Canada.
I speak from the experience in my former employment of trying to make services accessible for military families in particular and for some of my peers. What's different is the legislative context. What's different are the organizational frameworks that veterans and their families have to access.
Take just a simple thing like provincial health care. All of a sudden, I can't rely on what I know from the States, or the U.K., or Australia. I have to work with 10 different provinces to try to get those provinces to understand. Then there are the provincial chapters for the Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons and provincial chapters for registered nurses.
When you talk about a family health team, you're dealing with an organization and a circle of support that is provincially regulated at many different layers: at the government layer, but also at the professional and organizational layers. That's the piece where we need to work I think very aggressively in this country to build awareness, understanding, and mindful interaction and engagement with veterans and their families.