I'll emphasize Dr. Ritchie's previous comment. In my experience speaking with a number of veterans who have discovered that mefloquine could be the cause of their symptoms, there's an extraordinary amount of relief that I believe has real therapeutic value to learning what the cause of their symptoms is.
They come home from taking mefloquine, with their personalities in many cases fundamentally altered. They can't make sense of why they feel the way they do and why they are suddenly burdened with these many problems. To learn that it isn't a psychiatric disorder, but that it's in essence a poisoning can be very therapeutic.
We are working to try to reduce the stigma associated with psychiatric diagnoses. But for many soldiers, to know that it's not actually a psychiatric diagnosis, that they're not weak, that there's no character flaw underlying their symptoms, that it's the effect of a poison, this is extraordinarily therapeutic for many of them.
We should continue to combat stigma, but we do need to acknowledge that this is therapeutic for many soldiers to learn.