Thank you.
I'd like to turn my next question to Professor Iftene.
Thank you for sharing your perspective on the experience inmates have in our federal prisons, which I don't think has often been talked about. Over the summer, I got to visit two of our federal institutions in British Columbia. That was a big learning experience for me.
You centred a lot of your remarks on the substandard medical care available to inmates in federal institutions. For patients who might be in a maximum-security prison, serving time for a very serious crime—we're talking about life imprisonment—when those patients start exhibiting symptoms of dementia and are obviously unable to comply with a regular prison routine, or even interactions with guards or other inmates, how do they progress, generally? Do they go to a lower-security facility?
Could you talk a bit about inmates who are diagnosed with those neurocognitive disorders and start exhibiting some of those symptoms?