When it comes to military families, we know that children and adolescents in military families take on responsibilities. Everybody chips in with the idea of “team”. So when those families leave service, those children already know those roles. When there's distress in the families, what we've [Technical difficulty—Editor] boys who were really trying to protect the family, or trying to protect the mom, trying to keep the dad kind of on an even keel. They're beyond us trying to offer individual services. There is very little available for them.
We didn't treat younger children. I have a colleague who tells me often about the level of devastation among these children because of the lack of predictability and control.
Again, I come back to the idea of case management. Case management means not managing files; it means going into families, doing a comprehensive needs assessment, and ruling out the effects of military service—not ruling it in, but making sure [Technical difficulty—Editor] attributable to military service there.