I'd like to offer a slightly different perspective on that. I think Canada has been very strong in trying to avoid some of the challenges and problems within some other countries. For example, although there are some provinces that have been coming out with a protective approach, Nova Scotia is the only one that's based on a child abuse approach with mandatory reporting, and Newfoundland and Labrador has been modifying its laws and will have that kind of approach as well with its new changes to law. We've actually actively tried to avoid that because we recognize that it substitutes one kind of a taking away of power from the individuals. It is a very paternalistic approach.
In a couple of days, I'll actually be presenting some research that I've done comparing what happened in the child protection area and lessons learned from the adult protection area in the United States. What we find is that a very, very high level--a good third--of the reports that were received and that are investigated by the agencies that are required to investigate them are unsubstantiated. Now, that doesn't mean there's no harm occurring. It means that the agencies themselves have in many cases become overwhelmed with all of these calls that range in a wide continuum of harm, and that they establish significantly higher thresholds in policy and practice and basically treat all the ones that fall below that threshold as unsubstantiated, so those individuals don't get assistance.
The other thing we find is that much of the time our focus in terms of things like mandatory reporting is based on the assumption that there's going be support and services from government to meet the needs of older adults. What we find, however, unfortunately, is that the agencies have the mandate and tend not to have the funding and the resources to accomplish that mandate. We see that particularly when there's an economic decline: there are fewer services available for the individuals.
The other approach, again, that Canada has clearly and historically steered clear of, is trying to set up a special kind of law that tries to criminalize abuse and neglect of older adults. That is an American approach. There is no evidence to show that carving out a special law specifically for older adults in any way protects them more, or safeguards them more, than the general provisions within the criminal law.