Maybe I'll start.
First, we want to acknowledge that, as the minister said, one suicide is one too many. We actually take that very seriously, understanding that it does occur. The department has a whole range of mental health services, and I believe I'm here Thursday with Dr. Courchesne to talk about mental health and suicide.
We have a whole range of services for mental health issues available to our veterans, whether in our operational stress injury clinics or some of our apps. We have apps that are available on mental health and first aid. We have 4,000 mental health professionals across the country. Because we don't have an office in every town and we don't have an OSI clinic in every location, we do have contracts with professionals in the field to help veterans. We also have a 1-800 number—and I'm giving you the short version—where there's somebody on the phone seven days a week, 24 hours a day, and they can get counselling very quickly.
However, the important part is for veterans to come forward. We know in Canada that at Veterans Affairs we have 200,000 clients, and approximately 130,000 are veterans. The reality is that we have 10,000 who are case managed, and those we really know and we follow them very closely. But there is a whole segment, between 130,000 and 670,000, who don't come to see us. We don't know who they are. When they come forward, we're there to help them, but they have to come forward for help, even if it's not service related. We always talk about the service relationship. They can use the 1-800 number whether it's service related or not. They can get 20 sessions with a psychiatrist or psychologist very quickly, regardless of whether the injury was service related or not, but it's important for them to come forward.
To your question, your point, of what we are doing for all veterans, we're not tracking all veterans but we are tracking those 10,000 who are case managed, and to a certain extent, the 130,000 veterans we have and 60,000 survivors.