Press Release
April 8, 2025
Treaty One Territory, Manitoba – A joint study by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) and researchers from the University of Manitoba reveals that First Nations birthing parents in Manitoba experience significantly higher rates of contact with Child and Family Services (CFS) compared to non-First Nations birthing parents.
The study was published last week in the international journal BMC Public Health. The researchers analyzed de-identified (anonymous) government health and social service data that is stored in the Population Research Data Repository at UM’s Manitoba Centre for Health Policy. They studied the 20-year period from 1998 to 2019, tracking data for more than 13,000 First Nations birthing parents and more than 106,700 non-First Nations birthing parents who had their first child between those years.
The results revealed that:
“There has been no previous study in Manitoba or elsewhere that has estimated population-level rates of CFS contact among parents,” said Dr. Kathleen Kenny, a postdoctoral fellow in community health sciences at the Max Rady College of Medicine, who led the study. “Our research shows devastating and detrimental harm by CFS to First Nations families and communities over the past 20 years that is broad and extensive. The scale and scope of disruption by this system should be considered in remedies to mitigate its long-term impacts on First Nations families and support healing.”
“This system was never built for us. It does not reflect who we are, how we care for each other, or what our children need. Every child removed from their family and Nation is a tragedy. It breaks the sacred and spiritual bonds, severs connection to land, and inflicts lasting harm on our Nations. When half of all First Nations birthing parents have an open CFS file, that is not protection; it is systemic oppression. Forcing our families into colonial frameworks is a violation of our rights and our sovereignty,” states Grand Chief Kyra Wilson.
The researchers’ joint recommendations include:
“As a participant in this important research, I know firsthand the power of data to tell the truth about what our families have endured. I applaud Dr. Kenny and the University of Manitoba for working in true partnership with the AMC to expose the systemic harms of child welfare and support our Nations’ healing and sovereignty. We need more First Nations-specific research like this to support First Nations as they move away from colonial provincial structures toward systems grounded in our own laws, jurisdiction, and sacred responsibilities to our children,” concluded Grand Chief Kyra Wilson.
For more information, please contact:
Matthew Kruchak
Communications Officer
Rady Faculty of Health Sciences
University of Manitoba
Phone: 204-789-3480
Email: matthew.kruchak@umanitoba.ca
Communications Team
Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs
Email: media@manitobachiefs.com
ILR5