Thank you to all the witnesses for being here today.
Kimberley, I'm replacing Marc Serré. He was very disappointed that he wasn't here today. He's out of town. Thank you for being here. I'm sending along Marc's gratitude for you being here.
I think we've lost Dr. Seely, unfortunately.
There's a doctor at McMaster, Dr. Juliet Daniel, who's doing incredible research on triple X breast cancer in Black women. I think it was Dr. Seely who mentioned that women who get triple X breast cancer are more likely to die.
I visited Dr. Daniel's lab and met with her team. She's underfunded in her research. I'm not surprised by what we're hearing today about Black women, indigenous women and non-Caucasian women being excluded from research. It doesn't surprise me in the least. If the committee is looking for a Black woman to come and talk about it, Dr. Daniel would be an exceptional witness, if you have time.
My sister was diagnosed in 2019 and has had surgery, chemo, radiation and tamoxifen. It sucks. I'm sorry, but there's no other way to describe the ordeal that you go through.
Cheryl, I think you're very strong. I'm a crier too, so I can relate. It's okay.
I want to talk about the task force, because I have had issues with it for years. I've met with Canadian perinatal mental health folks. They have issues with the guidelines as well. We're talking about breast cancer today, but just the methodology. I'm sure you all saw that today, the health minister announced the external expert review panel, and I think we're all happy to see that.
I'll start with Dense Breasts because I've met with you for probably five or six years now.
What would you like to see? Should the task force be disbanded? How do you get expert input into the task force? How would you like to see it work to come up with the guidelines? They are separate from government.