That's the part that depends on, as you're alluding to, where they are in the country. I can't speak to what they're experiencing when they're in the corrections facilities or that programming and how they're able to access it at that point in time, because we're not usually privy to that information.
As I say, when they come back into the community, what we are able to do is work from a community standpoint on reintegrating them by working with the families and working with elders in the community. We heard earlier references to healing lodges and things like that. Our experience at first nations and Inuit health branch is that these culturally based healing methods are definitely a positive influence on the individuals when they have access to them.
We're seeing more and more evidence in provincial jurisdictions of acceptance of these models and application of these models. Our whole mandate at the branch has been to integrate our system with the provincial systems and other systems, whereby we try to align and try to make it as seamless as we possibly can, notwithstanding jurisdictional challenges that come in, of course. They're there, but again I can't speak to the corrections situation. I apologize for that.