I don't think we fully understand why. In the case of indigenous Canadians, many of them live in rural and northern communities. They have isolation and marginalization. They do not sign up for events and educational opportunities like many non-indigenous Canadians might.
I think one of the transformations of the work we're doing is to move drowning prevention to a public health model, where it's provided to everybody without barrier. As soon as you put a barrier of any kind—a bathing suit, money, or a requirement—then the people at greatest risk will actually be the people who will be excluded by those barriers. I think one of the pieces of work that we're trying to do is understand this better, find solutions from the communities that are most impacted and make those solutions barrierless.