Sixty-eight is our total staff at Veterans Affairs. We have 16 case managers, and each case manager will be responsible for an average of 200 veterans, depending on the level of care required. We have many more veterans who are not actively case-managed. We are aware of them. We may have case-managed them in the past, but at the present time they don't need anything from us. They're coping quite nicely at home, but as soon as anything changes for them, they will be actively case-managed, and they will go back to that same case manager they had previously, so there is always that one point of contact. That helps us to manage those good relationships with our veterans, and even though we're not meeting up face to face on a regular basis, they have formed a relationship over a period of time with that veteran.
The actively case-managed veterans are those who either require some support at home at the moment or some form of treatment, whether it be physical, surgical, or counselling and mental health types of treatment. Those are the veterans we actively case manage, and the level of risk and need determines how often we are in contact with them. So for perhaps our younger contemporary veterans who have mental health issues and who are high risk, we could be having weekly contact or more, depending on the situation at that time.