It's very difficult. Many times, in prisons, dementia and other major cognitive impairments are misdiagnosed, because first responders tend to be officers. They obviously do not have any expertise in this. Even the prison physician, who might have access to seeing these people, does not have the expertise necessary to diagnose these issues.
What we end up seeing, many times, is people who may have had dementia for a number of years, but who were misdiagnosed as having alcohol withdrawal. That's a very common thing we see, or having behavioural issues, misbehaving and being sent into various [Inaudible—Editor]. Now it's structured intervention units, but it used to be solitary confinement, or other things like that.
In fact, I've seen people with dementia moved from minimum-security institutions, because they were serving life, not because they're—