Thank you for your question.
I just wanted to add that your comments were a great morale booster for the clinic. We had lots of feedback from them, so thank you very much. It's good for them to hear some good recognition.
With respect to suicide in the veteran population—and this more in the realm of our directorate of research—if a veteran is in our care and they commit suicide, we know about that, so we can track that part of the population that we serve, which is about a third of all the veterans who are in Canada. What we have difficulty tracking is those who are not in direct receipt of our services. That doesn't mean that we can't; it's just that it's difficult. Our researchers work with the Canadian Armed Forces and with Statistics Canada to try to capture that information.
That information is not available on a punctual basis. They have to do it over several years to try to track and report. The next report on the CAF and veterans mortality study is going to be released in 2017. Right now we have rates up to 2013. They go in three- to four-year cycles to gather that data, but it's difficult for us to track it because, unlike the Canadian Forces, we're not a health care system. They're not our patients, so it happens a little bit outside of our reach.