Pope Francis' child protection board called Tuesday for victims of clergy sexual abuse to have greater access to information about their cases and the right to compensation, in the first-ever global assessment of the Catholic Church’s efforts to address the crisis. The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors issued a series of findings and recommendations in its pilot annual report, zeroing in on the church in a dozen countries, two religious orders and two Vatican offices with detailed analysis. In its most critical note, it called for greater transparency from the Vatican’s sex abuse office , the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

It said the office’s slow processing of cases and secrecy were retraumatizing to victims, and its refusal to publish statistics or its own jurisprudence continues "to foment distrust among the faithful, especially the victim/survivor community.” The 50-page report marks something of a milestone for the commission, which in its 10-year existence has struggled to find its footing in a Vatican often resistant to confronting the abuse crisis and hostile to endorsing victim-focused policies. Francis created it in 2014, a year after his election, to advise the Vatican on best practices to prevent clergy sexual abuse .

He named Boston’s then-archbishop, Cardinal Sean O’Malley , as the commission’s head. After several founding members resigned in frustration , fed up with Vatican stonewalling and the commission’s own inter.