Thank you for your question.
For our review we accessed the data specific to the Canadian Medical Association, so we did a multi-year review of our specific records.
The Canadian Medical Association does not run any health systems or services directly. However, despite not doing that, we still found many incidents of prejudice and discrimination within our own records. Whether that was how we promoted physician income over the wellness of indigenous peoples, for example, there were things that were clear in our records.
We are also currently going through the Canadian Medical Association Journal to look at the research that has been published over the entirety of that journal's existence, and we expect those results to be ready in 2025.
In addition, we met with many indigenous community members and had a guiding circle made up of elders, knowledge keepers and indigenous physicians, who gave us a lot more information than what we could find in our records. For example, they expressed to us, despite its not being in our records, the role that physicians played in the sixties scoop, as well as in the ongoing overrepresentation of child apprehension that occurs with indigenous families, so that was included in our apology, as well as what we found directly in our records.
We don't have access to the hospital records directly, but we do have the records of how the association representing physicians communicated about and advocated—or rather, in many cases, didn't advocate—on behalf of people who were experiencing harms in those hospitals.