I think you answered well. You're right. The study has been extended and so the participants are continuing to gather information.
Essentially, being a prevalence study means that adults who are involved in the justice system in Whitehorse or the Whitehorse region have agreed to participate and are having a full neuropsychological assessment done within an FASD diagnostic context or team. Some of those individuals are then receiving a diagnosis of FASD, and some are not.
They can refer them based on anything, so prenatal alcohol exposure or any risk factors aren't needed. The idea is that we really want to get an idea of who is in the system and how many of them have FASD, which is a question that's arisen from some of the other members today.
We don't yet know what those numbers will look like because we're still conducting the study and the data is being collected. We hope once that data is collected we'll not only have an idea what the numbers are in terms of the number of individuals with FASD—the cultural issues, our representations of what we're seeing—but also in terms of characteristics of the brain that have contributed to justice system involvement.