Thank you for the question. It's very appropriate.
Again, I think you will obviously have that opportunity to engage with experts from other countries. If you look at the American experience, where they have such a large number of veterans, they have a much bigger research budget and so on than we do. They have a very tailored mechanism for delivering mental health services through their health care facilities. You may well wish to look at that kind of a model.
The challenge for us in Canada is that health care is the responsibility of the provinces. What we have tried to do from a Veterans Affairs-Government of Canada perspective is to try to determine how we can best leverage the work that the provinces do. The best example, obviously, is our network of OSI clinics. As you know, the department funds those clinics but the services are delivered and administered by the provinces. Those clinics have proved to be, from our perspective, a very effective way of targeting the resources and support to veterans struggling with things like post-traumatic stress disorder, because it gives them a context.
The other thing that we're doing, of course, which was announced in the budget, is the development of this centre of excellence in PTSD. The intent there is to try to ensure that through that mechanism, the Government of Canada has a source of advice for this very type of thing. What are the best treatment methodologies out there? What is most effective? That, in turn, will inform programming for Veterans Affairs.