We have. The problem, in a way, is that population-wise in Canada, we're small. But there are universities...UBC, for example. For the last two or three years I've been going there to lecture to the graduating class, and this year I had breakfast with some of the kids to try to recruit them and I just chatted with them. My last couple of slides always say, if you see a veteran, realize that they have this whole suite of services; ask people if they've served. At one level, you produce documents, you get it out there, you educate people, but in the other way, you can get out to physicians early in their training and just have people realize they can just ask that one question. In medicine, you ask a question only if it leads to something you can do. In this case, there's the whole suite of services—vocational rehab, treatment, all of this stuff beyond the provincially funded system.
We're trying. At Dalhousie University, it's been either me or one of our military psychiatrists for the last 15 years who gives the lecture to the psychiatrists on PTSD. So it's every opportunity that we get at the large gatherings, and then more and more documents and publications. That's how we're working on things.