Yes, I have read that study. I'm the vice-president and research chair for the Canadian Indigenous Nurses Association, and we work with all three distinct groups in the country. We are actually celebrating our 50th year anniversary this year. We are the oldest health care provider organization, both indigenous and non-indigenous, in the country.
We've done some really groundbreaking work with primary health care providers. We worked with the Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada committee quite closely on this, and we were able to support them to do some information and data gathering not only with the Inuit communities they work with, but also with health care providers.
Much of our work—and we're going into phase two of it—is about working with primary health care and national indigenous primary health care organizations. We started out with friendship centres, social workers, physicians and, of course, nurses, and now we're going to expand to try to work with pharmacy, occupational therapy and indigenous dental associations. What we have found from our work is that primary indigenous health care providers are facing multiple challenges in trying to address the cancer and cancer prevention needs of indigenous communities, and certainly Inuit and northern ones.
Thank you for the good question.