With regard to the Schizophrenia Society of Canada and the various ones in each of the provinces, we do work quite closely with them. We work very closely with the Mood Disorders Society of Canada along with the, I think, 17 members of CAMIMH, the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health, and I know that you're familiar with that. So, yes, we work very closely.
We have stayed away to some degree from specific diagnoses, although there's a recognition that schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are among the more complex and more difficult diagnoses to deal with. The one thing all of these have in common are issues like stigma, and so they have been part and parcel of the Opening Minds initiative that we've been carrying on since the beginning of the commission. We are continuing to do so with a focus on children and youth, the workplace, health care professionals, and the media. Certainly the way that media reports deaths by suicide and so forth is something that impacts all of these organizations. While we haven't taken a particular diagnosis or diagnostic category, we do work very closely with all of them and we know them all extremely well.
With regard to corrections or prison health, which I think you were referring to, and concurrent disorders, we know there is a much higher incidence of people with mental illnesses and substance use problems in the corrections population both provincially and federally. I'm hoping that during the next phase of the commission we may have an opportunity to look at that a little more closely. As I mentioned, we do have a large number of stakeholder groups. We've made more progress with some than with others. Going forward, that is a very large number, when you combine all of the provincial and federal institutions and then the people in the community who it impacts. We do recognize that it's an important area. We haven't really made that much headway, but we have been devoting our efforts to other areas. Certainly with At Home/Chez Soi, we followed the progress of that population as they went through the justice system including corrections, so in that one area I would say we have made some progress, but we do need to do further work.