Thanks for the question.
CAMAP is particularly proud of our development of this particular program. This is a national program that is federally funded by Health Canada. It is a multi-year program. It is meant to help clinicians who are new to the field as well as those who are already in the field looking to expand their skills.
This is a very large program. I think our team kickoff included about 90 invitations. There are currently, from the ground up, eight working groups. They are diverse from a geographical point of view, from a medical and nursing background point of view and from an EDI lens. They are each working on a module that will contribute to the overall curriculum.
These working groups are accountable to an executive committee of leaders of each of those working groups. They are then overseen by both the CAMAP board and, perhaps more importantly, a national stakeholder committee that is made up of 17 different national member organizations, each of which is a significant stakeholder in MAID in this country. I will not name all 16 of them for you, but they include the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the Canadian family practitioners association, the CNA, rural physicians, indigenous representation, palliative care, psychiatry and the Collège des médecins du Québec. It's quite a diverse group. There's quite a bit of oversight. We have a project team of three full-time staff.
Again, this project will last until 2025. At the end, we will have seven modules that are online, off-line, synchronous, asynchronous, bilingual, easily accessible and fully accredited by the national organizations, including the family practitioners, the royal college and the nursing association, which have already committed to helping us achieve that proper accreditation.
We are not looking at credentialing. We will not be applying letters after the names of the people who complete this course, but they will be able to point to this curriculum to say that they have completed it. We hope that this will in fact help with the standardization issue across the country, which is significant at this point, and help build confidence in both the clinicians and the public.
I hope I have answered your question.