Thank you.
I will add to that with respect to ill and injured patients. I don't want to suggest that the continuity of care is more important for them. It's important for everyone, of course, but we are trying much harder now to anticipate early—when we're aware that the member is going to release—and to find and integrate them into their civilian health care even before they have left the CAF, so that the turnover can be slow and gradual. They can start seeing their new providers while they're still in the CAF, so that we really are bridging that gap.
Now, that happens more often for the more significantly ill and injured. We are not at the point of being able to make those kinds of transitions for the non-injured members. That's where the bridging techniques that Colonel Noonan just mentioned will be important.