When we do an audit like this, we set an objective to look at the program and, in this case, primarily to see what the department was doing to prepare women offenders for release. We've now done three audits on preparing offenders for release. We did one that looked at the population in general, then we did one that looked at indigenous offenders, and then we did one looking at women offenders.
In each case, for each of those audits, we considered those different subpopulations when we got to the indigenous offenders and the women offenders to try to identify what might be the unique issues or the issues that are of more importance to those types of populations. For the indigenous offenders, it was the culturally appropriate programming and it was also understanding the aboriginal history. Those were a couple of things that were unique about that population.
With the women offenders, it was the fact that such a high rate of them have mental health issues. That's how we make the adjustments in our audit, by looking at the individual populations and deciding which factors are most important for those populations.