Again, an individual is turned over to provincial authorities and they become eligible for the kind of treatment that they have to have. In normal circumstances that individual will be assessed by a board that has been set up by the province, and they will make a number of determinations. The individual could be detained in the hospital, the individual could be absolutely discharged, or the individual could have a third finding, to be released with certain conditions. That is what happens to the individual. They have a review of the case involving them every year, or it can be extended up to two years, as I indicated in my opening remarks.
That is the regime. That's the framework we've had in place in Canada, to have individuals get the help they need within the provincial health system. What we have done for a small group is to have another designation with respect to the high-risk individual. As I indicated to your colleague across the aisle, there are a number of criteria to decide whether the individual comes within that category. This has complete judicial oversight. In fact, it's the courts that make that determination. If there's any change, the courts make that determination.
We do get the courts involved at the beginning. Indeed, with respect to high-risk individuals, we get them involved if there's any change to that. But the individual who loses the high-risk designation, or the individual who doesn't get it in the first place, is within the provincial health care system in terms of getting the treatment they need.