Thank you so much.
There are a couple of things that I'd like to go over, so I'm grateful that I have the five minutes here.
When I was leaving the military, the pennies dropped [Technical difficulty—Editor] as two components of Veterans Affairs. One is post-career advice. We go through courses and people talk about the opportunities after the military, but the focus that we've mostly been talking about is health care. There is a health care component. The well-being of our veterans is both physically and emotionally, so it's health care in a different form.
This question goes to Ms. Lowther. I really appreciate your presentation. I am grateful for your service, as I am for everybody's service. Mr. Laurion, 37 years is a long time, so thank you very much for your dedication to our nation.
You spoke about having a checklist. In a previous presentation, we had a member from the LGBTQ+ community mention that when they went through the checklist, it didn't really work for them. I don't think we need to throw the baby out with the bathwater, but one of the things we really want to focus on is personalized care. How do we get to that? Yes, there has to be some form of checklist, but it has to ask the right questions.
Could you expand a bit on your comments and what you were sharing, so that I can bridge the gap?