I think we have to distinguish between two types of prevention. One is primary prevention, where we try to prevent people from initiating drug use in the first place. In that regard, we're doing poorly. We invest in programs that have been shown repeatedly to be ineffective, particularly programs that try to create fear among young people by telling them that if they start using drugs they'll live a very short life. Those programs have been well evaluated and shown not to be effective.
The primary prevention programs that do work are the ones that intervene early on in children's lives, in unhealthy family environments and such.
The secondary prevention that I was referring to is more about preventing disease and death and other comorbidities among people who are already using drugs. That's where we are really doing a miserable job. The evidence is in Saskatchewan, where we have an epidemic that's out of control for which there are effective preventative measures that—