To answer your first question, the study is going well, but it's a large study and there are lots of people involved. We took the time at the onset of the study to engage the community of stakeholders to determine the priority areas of study, and 3,000 Canadians across the country contributed to that understanding. Then we brought together two workshops of scientists--about 60 scientists from across the country--to have the same conversation.
We knew when we framed this study a year ago that we were addressing the right issues. Fifteen million dollars is a lot of money, but it's not enough. So we wanted to be very careful and know that we were spending the money in the most effective way.
We have a study that's framed around understanding more about the prevalence and incidence, the actual state and prevalence, of these conditions in Canada; understanding the impact to individuals, families, and society as a whole; understanding health services and what's available and what's needed; better understanding risk factors for onset and also for progression, because there are secondary prevention issues that don't get dealt with very well either; and really understanding and be able to paint a very robust picture of neurological conditions in Canada so that it will inform our policy and decision-making.
The status of the study is that we have some surveys out in the field. Statistics Canada has survey projects under way as part of the study. We have nine research teams, which are large pan-Canadian teams across Canada that are now funded. Funds are flowing and contribution agreements are signed, I'm happy to report. Their work is getting under way.
We have a progress meeting scheduled for March 1 and 2 where all of those teams will come together and do what Dr. Beaudet was talking about this morning, which was the open sharing of information even though you're still in the middle of your project. The foundation of this study is that people will share throughout.
I don't have any findings to report to you, but one of the happy consequences of this study is that what we have seen from that very first meeting of scientists--which we actually convened before the study was announced--is a level of collaboration and collegial information sharing and knowledge exchange that has never existed within the neurosciences in Canada before, particularly among researchers who do clinical and population-based research. We experienced many situations where colleagues were actually down the hall from each other, but because one works on epilepsy and one works on MS, they had never actually met each other.
That has been a tremendous benefit of this study. We now have teams. We have expert advisory groups in each of those areas of the study that I mentioned, all working....
So the vast majority of Canadian researchers working in the neurosciences are in some way connected to this study, perhaps because they are contributing on one specific piece of information about the condition they work with or perhaps because they are a PI or a co-PI on a very large project.
I wish I had more to report to you in terms of findings, but certainly we are seeing very positive offshoots of the study, and we will look forward to March 1 and 2, when we have our first progress meeting.