Well, there are all kinds of programs operating in different timeframes, and our intervention with the women starts the day they arrive. I think what's critical is that we don't just do interdiction; we must do prevention, harm reduction, and treatment, and I can tell you we do that in a really comprehensive way.
So when women arrive, they are seen by health care right away, for example. They enter into a reception awareness program. They also have a comprehensive medical assessment, and soon after that the mental health and substance abuse assessments begin. The assessment is part of the treatment. So all of that begins right away, and I'm very proud of the statistics.
In the women's facilities, women are in a core program within 50 days. The way we deliver programs now is that they're either moderate or high intensity, and they're modular, addressing a whole variety of issues. So within 50 days, women have started the engagement phase of treatment, often targeted at their substance abuse. They have access to a chaplain, and a psychologist or psychiatric services. As well we have AA and NA meetings here in the facility, and many volunteers come in and offer support to the women.