My work with indigenous communities—albeit limited, as I am a settler myself—suggests to me that we have to ask different questions. We have to let other people lead. We have to take cues in other ways.
The question about psychedelics, for example, is an instructive one. Asking about psychedelics doesn't actually get to priority questions within the indigenous communities that I've worked in. The questions are about safe access to housing, to water and food systems, and to education systems for their children. Psychedelics are not really the priority, yet psychedelics are part of the world we live in and sometimes part of the ceremonies that indigenous people are participating in.
It's really a reimagining of the health priorities that sometimes don't necessarily fit into a neat category that we think of as science per se.