That kind of monitoring—knowing that we're looking for this and having access to the data—allows us to see what's going on and monitor and explore whether there is actually a problem that needs to be fixed. I think it's important that we look at the data to see whether it's a blip rather than a trend, but because we pay attention to these things, because we report it so formally, we have the opportunity to ask whether there is a problem, and if there is, to ask whether we should then look at the program criteria and explore whether something among them is having this unintended consequence, if that's what it is.
On May 3rd, 2016. See this statement in context.