Yes. There are a lot of Métis health researchers across the Métis homeland right now, and they're doing a lot of looking into and researching access to health services for Métis people. They're looking into different areas, specifically in mental health or other types of services, and largely, the number one recommendation that's coming out of those research reports is the need for more Métis health care providers. That means actual Métis people entering the health care or mental health care profession to be able to weave our ways of knowing into these systems in ways that work for our people, to deliver culturally responsive and culturally safe care to our people.
For example, we recently travelled over to Rome to meet with the Pope. We brought a Métis psychotherapist with us. That person has been trained in the western ways of clinical psychotherapy; however, being a Métis woman herself and a practitioner of our traditional ways, she weaves those pieces into the systems of working with our people in a way that traditional health care systems do not and cannot.
It largely comes from increasing supports to promote the health care profession with our people and within our communities, and I think that's a model we can look at, extending health care education into our communities so that people are wanting to go toward those paths.