Thank you.
First, I would like to acknowledge that I am situated in Vancouver on the unceded traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations.
To answer your question, thank you, and yes, as you stated, in the Canadian Armed Forces we do have robust mental health care, services and programs available to everyone. I can go into detail, but what I would like to emphasize is that, yes, we follow evidence-based care for every mental health condition, every psychiatric and psychological condition, including PTSD.
Also, I would like to mention that we have studied this, and people with PTSD very frequently have comorbid conditions. That means they have not just PTSD but anxiety disorders or depression, and some of them, unfortunately, have substance-use disorders as well. We are usually dealing with complex clinical pictures for those individuals who unfortunately cannot continue their military service and are released from the military, so we encourage people—including women—to seek help as early as possible, because research shows that early intervention has a way better outcome.
We treat people with evidence-based treatment modalities in multidisciplinary care. We have a multidisciplinary team with psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and addiction counsellors in our mental health care plans, so our outpatients or members get comprehensive care when they are ill.
When the realization comes up that unfortunately the member cannot continue their service and will be released on a medical basis, quite early we start the transition process that you've heard about. As soon as members get permanent employment limitations that are not compatible with continued military service, at that point they are connected with a nurse case manager. We work with them through the transition process.
As clinicians, our responsibility is to work closely with the primary care clinician and the nurse case manager to establish follow-up care for those members by the time they release from the military. We try to do it as early as possible. We see how comfortable our members are with their new providers in the community and we try to ensure that by the day they leave they already have the appointments set up with the psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker or whoever they need. This is what we can do. Many of the psychologists who are treating our members in the community are not just Blue Cross providers and not just providers for the Canadian Armed Forces. They are providers for Veteran Affairs Canada as well, so this transition is quite smooth.
Probably you've heard about the operational—