Federal health research funding agency cuts ties with Carrie Bourassa, who falsely claimed Indigenous ancestry - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Federal health research funding agency cuts ties with Carrie Bourassa, who falsely claimed Indigenous ancestry

Canada's federal agency for funding health research has cut ties with University of Saskatchewan Prof. Carrie Bourassa following a CBC News investigation casting doubt on her claims of being Indigenous.

U of S professor has provided no evidence for her many claims of being Indigenous

A woman in a Metis sash is interviewed by several media outlets.
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research ended Carrie Bourassa's appointment as IIPH scientific director last November. (Morgan Modjeski/CBC News)

Canada's federal agency for funding health researchhas cut ties with University of Saskatchewan Prof.Carrie Bourassa,following a CBCNews investigation casting doubt on her claims to Indigeneity.

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) made the announcement Wednesday afternoon.

Until recently, Bourassa was the scientific director of the Institute of Indigenous Peoples' Health (IIPH), one of 13 CIHR institutes. It provides much of the funding in Canada for health research focused onIndigenous people.

Last month, CBC News published an investigation showing there was no evidence for Bourassa'spublic claims to be ofMtis, Anishinaabe and Tlingit ancestry. In her response to the report, Bourassa changed her story, claiming she was Mtis because she was adopted by a Mtis friend of her grandfather.

A shock to many

Days after that report, the U of S and the CIHR put Bourassa on administrative leave. Today, in an emailed statement, CIHRsaid it "has decided to end its appointment of the scientific director of IIPH."

The organization said it "will engage immediately with the Indigenous health research community to establish a process for the appointment of a new Scientific Director of IIPH."

The revelations about Bourassa came as a shock to many in academia across Canada, especially in Indigenous circles, where Bourassa wielded a lot of power and influence. The CIHR says it's sensitive to that fact.

"Maintaining an ongoing dialogue with the Indigenous health research community is integral to strengthening our relationship and promoting reconciliation," said the emailed statement.