Absolutely.
For the past 20 year, up until the start of COVID, we delivered something called the veterans transition program. This is a 10-day group-based counselling program. It's delivered in a retreat format and it's built around the concept of soldiers helping soldiers.
Something that the founders of our program discovered very early on was that the needs and experiences of veterans and soldiers were often not well served by the existing psychological services that were out there in the community. They were largely undertaken and run by civilian counsellors, psychologists who did not have an understanding of military experience and military culture, so there was a disconnect between the client and the service provider.
Our approach is to bring veterans together who understand one another's experience and we have a curriculum that is guided by professional psychologists who've undergone special training with us to understand military experience and culture. However, the group that we're delivering to is also facilitated by two returning graduates, veterans who have been through the program and come back to facilitate as peer supporters. They act as the bridge between the psychologists, who are not always but usually civilians, and the military participants in the program. They help us build trust. They help us understand the culture, the language and the experience so that we can build cohesion in the group and start the work therapeutically and in terms of helping their transition.
That's the program we deliver. We have modified it due to COVID. Obviously, we've incorporated a single-phased delivery and we incorporate social distancing and PPE, but we have continued to deliver throughout COVID.
That's a rundown on our program.
I'm sorry. I know there was a second component to your question, but I've forgotten what that was.