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- 1. Arthritis, 2014 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201500114178Description:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians aged 15 and older. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2015-06-17 - Articles and reports: 82-624-X201500114095Description:
This article examines incidence and mortality rates for the three most common types of female reproductive system cancer — uterus, ovary and cervix. Data from the Canadian Cancer Registry and the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database are used to analyze changes over time and differential risk by age.
Release date: 2015-02-17 - 3. Arthritis, 2013 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201400114014Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2014-06-12 - Articles and reports: 82-003-X201301111876Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article reports seroprevalence estimates (prevalence based on blood samples) for hepatitis B and C (HBV/HCV) infections and vaccine-induced HBV immunity based on nationally representative data from the first and second cycles of the Canadian Health Measures Survey.
Release date: 2013-11-20 - 5. Arthritis, 2012 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201300111833Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2013-06-17 - 6. Arthritis, 2011 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201200111657Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2012-06-19 - Journals and periodicals: 82-584-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This report is part of a larger study: the Canadian Forces Cancer and Mortality Study (CF CAMS). It examines causes of death in a cohort of individuals with a history of military service in Canada's Regular Force between 1972 and 2006. Separate analyses were carried out for the entire CF CAMS cohort and for those who were released from the Canadian Forces between 1972 and 2006.
Release date: 2011-05-31 - 8. Respondent differences and length of data collection in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201000211384Description:
The current economic downturn in the US could challenge costly strategies in survey operations. In the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), ending the monthly data collection at 31 days could be a less costly alternative. However, this could potentially exclude a portion of interviews completed after 31 days (late responders) whose respondent characteristics could be different in many respects from those who completed the survey within 31 days (early responders). We examined whether there are differences between the early and late responders in demographics, health-care coverage, general health status, health risk behaviors, and chronic disease conditions or illnesses. We used 2007 BRFSS data, where a representative sample of the noninstitutionalized adult U.S. population was selected using a random digit dialing method. Late responders were significantly more likely to be male; to report race/ethnicity as Hispanic; to have annual income higher than $50,000; to be younger than 45 years of age; to have less than high school education; to have health-care coverage; to be significantly more likely to report good health; and to be significantly less likely to report hypertension, diabetes, or being obese. The observed differences between early and late responders on survey estimates may hardly influence national and state-level estimates. As the proportion of late responders may increase in the future, its impact on surveillance estimates should be examined before excluding from the analysis. Analysis on late responders only should combine several years of data to produce reliable estimates.
Release date: 2010-12-21
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Analysis (8) ((8 results))
- 1. Arthritis, 2014 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201500114178Description:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians aged 15 and older. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2015-06-17 - Articles and reports: 82-624-X201500114095Description:
This article examines incidence and mortality rates for the three most common types of female reproductive system cancer — uterus, ovary and cervix. Data from the Canadian Cancer Registry and the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database are used to analyze changes over time and differential risk by age.
Release date: 2015-02-17 - 3. Arthritis, 2013 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201400114014Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2014-06-12 - Articles and reports: 82-003-X201301111876Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article reports seroprevalence estimates (prevalence based on blood samples) for hepatitis B and C (HBV/HCV) infections and vaccine-induced HBV immunity based on nationally representative data from the first and second cycles of the Canadian Health Measures Survey.
Release date: 2013-11-20 - 5. Arthritis, 2012 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201300111833Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2013-06-17 - 6. Arthritis, 2011 ArchivedStats in brief: 82-625-X201200111657Geography: CanadaDescription:
This is a Health fact sheet about Arthritis among Canadians. The data used are based on a question from the Canadian Community Health Survey that asked respondents if they had arthritis, excluding fibromyalgia.
Release date: 2012-06-19 - Journals and periodicals: 82-584-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This report is part of a larger study: the Canadian Forces Cancer and Mortality Study (CF CAMS). It examines causes of death in a cohort of individuals with a history of military service in Canada's Regular Force between 1972 and 2006. Separate analyses were carried out for the entire CF CAMS cohort and for those who were released from the Canadian Forces between 1972 and 2006.
Release date: 2011-05-31 - 8. Respondent differences and length of data collection in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201000211384Description:
The current economic downturn in the US could challenge costly strategies in survey operations. In the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), ending the monthly data collection at 31 days could be a less costly alternative. However, this could potentially exclude a portion of interviews completed after 31 days (late responders) whose respondent characteristics could be different in many respects from those who completed the survey within 31 days (early responders). We examined whether there are differences between the early and late responders in demographics, health-care coverage, general health status, health risk behaviors, and chronic disease conditions or illnesses. We used 2007 BRFSS data, where a representative sample of the noninstitutionalized adult U.S. population was selected using a random digit dialing method. Late responders were significantly more likely to be male; to report race/ethnicity as Hispanic; to have annual income higher than $50,000; to be younger than 45 years of age; to have less than high school education; to have health-care coverage; to be significantly more likely to report good health; and to be significantly less likely to report hypertension, diabetes, or being obese. The observed differences between early and late responders on survey estimates may hardly influence national and state-level estimates. As the proportion of late responders may increase in the future, its impact on surveillance estimates should be examined before excluding from the analysis. Analysis on late responders only should combine several years of data to produce reliable estimates.
Release date: 2010-12-21
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