I respect very much the discussion around stigma. I think it's been mentioned a lot in this discussion here, and I think it has its place, particularly in the general population.
But I also want to shift the focus a bit, because when I've spoken with a lot of inmates over the last several months, to be quite frank with you, I didn't detect a real stigma barrier, nor did I detect that when I spoke with the professionals working in prisons. What I heard from the inmates was that they did recognize they had problems and wanted access to treatment, and couldn't get it.
From the professionals, what I heard repeatedly—it didn't matter which institution I went to—was that there was inadequate diagnosis. When people are entering the federal corrections system, the professionals are saying that what's really needed is front-line, accurate, and comprehensive diagnosis at that point so people can be identified and get treatment.
So if wasn't necessarily for lack of people wanting to say they have a problem, although I'm sure that's prevalent and I'm not denying it. But I'm just wondering what you think about that in terms of the diagnostic resources in our system, and whether we should be putting more focus on them.