Mr. Speaker, yes, the study the member is referring to is the one I was referring to in my speech, from the status of women committee, where we were studying the task force recommendations. Multiple witnesses testified about Black women and indigenous women. The research was from the 1980s; it was so outdated. A disproportionate number of women who are Black or indigenous are impacted by breast cancer, but this is not reflected in the task force's recommendations.
Therefore 1000%, again, that is what we say. We need updated evidence. As I answered earlier, the task force chair said that the evidence did not even show a clear benefit of screening, yet nobody on the task force represented any of the groups in question, so it makes no sense.