Indigenous people in Quebec want more than an apology from CMA. They want 'concrete actions' - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 08:20 PM | Calgary | 1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Indigenous people in Quebec want more than an apology from CMA. They want 'concrete actions'

The Canadian Medical Association (CMA) held a ceremony in Victoria, B.C. on Wednesday to publicly acknowledgethe "unacceptable health disparities" experienced by Indigenous people due to the legacy of colonialism, residential schoolsand systemic racism in Canada.

Canadian Medical Association apologizes for past and ongoing harms

A woman stands in front of a sign that reads Centre d'amitie autochtone de Lanaudiere.
Jennifer Brazeau says she would like the CMA to present a plan to ensure Indigenous people feel welcome and that doctors are educated on Indigenous culture and identity. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Jennifer Brazeausays an apology means little without a plan for meaningful action to drive change.

That was her sentiment ahead of thepublic apology from Canada's largest association of medical doctors for past and ongoing harms the medical profession has caused First Nations, Inuit and Mtispeople.

"Anapology isn't a panacea for change, they actually have to have concrete actions that follow," saidBrazeau, theexecutive director of the Native Friendship Centre of Lanaudire in Joliette, Que., which is about 75 kilometres north of Montreal.

The Canadian Medical Association (CMA) helda ceremony in Victoria, B.C. Wednesday afternoon to publicly acknowledgethe "unacceptable health disparities" experienced by Indigenous people due to the legacy of colonialism, residential schoolsand systemic racism in Canada.

The CMA, which was founded 157 years ago and advocates for medical standards and care,shared what it has learned about how its actions and inactionhave contributed to harming Indigenous people in the health system.

That includes the use of outdated and racist terms, forced sterilization and medical experimentation as well asthe ongoing challenges around birth alerts and child apprehension.

"There's a lot of different harms that they have done or that they've contributed to for Indigenous people that have created a system where we don'tfeel safe to go receive medical services," saidBrazeau.

WATCH| The launch of anIndigenous-run mobile clinic:

Indigenous-run mobile clinic aims to improve health-care access in Quebec

3 months ago
Duration 1:58
A mobile clinic in Joliette, Que., aims to improve access to the health-care system for Indigenous patients in the region. It comes nearly four years after the death of Joyce Echaquan, an Attikamekw woman who filmed health-care workers spewing insults at her in hospital before she died.

The case of Joyce Echaquan

One of the most recent examplesis the death of Joyce Echaquan. TheAtikamekwmother of seven diedat the Joliette hospital in September 2020shortly after recording herself as health-care staff in a hospital north of Montreal hurled racist remarks at her.

A Quebec coroner's inquiry concluded racism and prejudice contributed toEchaquan's death and recommended for the province to acknowledge that systemic racism exists and commit to helping eliminate it.

"This is not history. The presence[of discrimination] isstill there, and we have to deal with this problem," saidStanley Vollant, an Innu surgeon at Montreal's Notre-Dame Hospital andchiefmedical officer for the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Health and Social Services Commission.

Echaquan's cousin, Lorraine Echaquan, says she and her kids have had negative experiences with the health-care system.

"With what happened with Joyce, we don't seem to dare defend ourselves anymore.... We're more withdrawn. There's a lack of trust with the doctors, nursesand so on," she said.

A man and woman pose for a photo, their heads close together.
Joyce Echaquan, seen here in a photo with husband Carol Dub, died at the Joliette hospital in September 2020shortly after recording herself as health-care staff in a hospital north of Montreal hurled racist remarks at her. (Facebook)

The late woman's cousin says she hopes this apology will mark the "start of a real dialogue and concrete action to repair past wrongs and build a future with respect."

"Regaining the trust in doctors is going to be hard, it's going to take time," she said."It's sure going to be hard to accept these apologies," she added.

Late but 'never too late'

Vollant, who has been a member of the CMA since 1984, says he's proud of the association for choosing to apologize, calling it "the first step in the healing process."

"We have waited 150 years. It's a little late, but it's never too late," he said.

Now, he says he wants to see health departments and associations inevery province take similar action to help build "the path of cultural safety"with Indigenous people.

In 2023, the college that regulates Manitoba's physicians apologizedfor its current and historical failure to respond to Indigenous-specific racism in the medical profession.

Nakuset,the executive director of the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal, says she would like to see "creative and different forms of changing the behaviour," such as checking the biases of health-care staff through questionnaires.

"We are waiting for the institutions to change. We are not seeing them change," she added.

Brazeau, for her part, would like the CMA to present a plan to ensure Indigenous people feel welcome and doctors are educated on Indigenous culture and identity.

To do that, she said doctors could be encouraged toparticipate in community activities, such as powwows, or attend any number of events to connect with Indigenous people andhelp rebuildthe relationship and trust with those in the medical profession.

"We recognize that doctors have gone througha lotofeducationto get to where they're at, but they might still have some learning to do," she said.

CBClivestreamedthe ceremony that beganat 4 p.m. ET on the traditional territory of the lkin-speaking people of Songhees and Xwsepsum Nationsin this story.


Co-written with Hnia Ould-Hammou, with files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak, Sharon Yonan-Renold, and Alison Northcott