Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Shelagh Jane Woods. I am director general of the Primary Health Care and Public Health Directorate in the First Nations and Inuit Health Branch.
On behalf of Health Canada, I would like to thank you for inviting me to speak here today. I am pleased to attend with my colleague, Dr. RoseMarie Ramsingh, the executive director of community medicine at the first nations and Inuit health branch.
Let me begin by emphasizing the fact that Health Canada is working diligently with all of its partners to help close the gap that remains in the overall health status of first nations on reserve and Inuit, including the burden of tuberculosis.
I think it is fair to say that we have helped bring about a significant reduction in TB rates among first nations on reserve and in Inuit communities over the past 30 years. The rates, however, as we all know, remain much higher than among the non-aboriginal population born in Canada and among the overall general population.
During the three-year period from 2005 to 2008, the overall aboriginal TB rate was relatively stable, with an average of 27.3 cases per 100,000 people. This, of course, is much higher than the rate among immigrants to Canada of 13.4 cases per 100,000 in 2008, and the overall rate in the general population, everyone included, of 4.8, which is much lower.
Canada adopted the global stop TB partnership rate reduction target—3.6 cases per 100,000 population by 2015—for the entire Canadian population, including first nations and Inuit. It will take a concerted effort among all partners to get there. We are engaged in a number of activities now toward that goal.
Our mandate at Health Canada is to provide or support the provision of health services in on-reserve first nations communities south of the 60th parallel. In addition, we currently provide funding for TB prevention and control in Nunatsiavut in Labrador. The three northern territories, as you all know, are responsible for all health program service delivery there, and this incorporates TB prevention and control activities for all territorial residents, including the first nations and Inuit. Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada provide funding to support certain health promotion and disease prevention activities in the territories.
The regional offices of the first nations and Inuit health branch work very closely with key partners to ensure the delivery of TB prevention and control services to first nations on reserve, comparable to the services available to those living off reserve. These partnerships exist across each of the regions and include the provinces, local or regional health authorities, and of course, most importantly, the first nations communities themselves.
We support TB reduction through the application of the Canadian tuberculosis standards, which provide the Canadian standard for both public health and clinical management aspects of TB prevention and control.
While each regional office of the first nations and Inuit health branch has its own unique partnerships in place for the delivery of these services, the goal remains the same: to try to ensure equitable access to timely diagnostics, treatment, and follow-up care for those exposed to and diagnosed with TB. Additionally, the provision of TB prevention and education are important components of these programs in every region.
From fiscal year 2004-05 to fiscal year 2009-10, Health Canada invested a total of $42.4 million in our national TB program. The program is currently funded at a rate of $6.6 million a year. In 2009-10, that is, in this last fiscal year, Health Canada invested an additional $3 million to support the delivery of health promotion, TB prevention, and, most importantly, outbreak control services on reserve across Canada. This included support for on-reserve communities to build their own capacity and TB programming. We also supported some project-based work with Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Assembly of First Nations.
In recent years, the first nations and Inuit health branch has reallocated additional funds, particularly to the Manitoba region each year, due to its relatively high incidence of TB, in support of the latter's TB program and to provide the additional funds needed to cover surge capacity and other activities during TB outbreaks. We do this wherever there are outbreaks.
The national TB program at the first nations and Inuit health branch at Health Canada is closely linked to the Public Health Agency's TB program. The agency is currently developing a Canadian tuberculosis prevention and control strategy, and in parallel we are renewing our own first nations national TB elimination strategy, which will be included as a component of the Public Health Agency's strategy.
Our strategy is being renewed through a working group of federal partners, external TB experts, stakeholders and—