Health
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Selected geographical area: Canada
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Results
All (2,889)
All (2,889) (20 to 30 of 2,889 results)
- Articles and reports: 82-003-X202400600002Description: Optimal oral health is an essential element of healthy aging. Oral health problems such as tooth loss, periodontal disease, and dry mouth accumulate throughout adult life and worsen with increasing age. Using data from the 2019/2020 Canadian Health Survey on Seniors, this study explores the link between dental insurance, income, and oral health care access among seniors (aged 65 and over) in Canada. It contributes to the understanding of oral health care among seniors before the implementation of the Canadian Dental Care Plan.Release date: 2024-06-19
- Table: 17-10-0059-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: QuarterlyDescription: Components of natural increase, quarterly: births and deaths.Release date: 2024-06-19
- Public use microdata: 13-25-0010Description: The public use microdata file (PUMF) from the Canadian Health Survey on Seniors (CHSS) provides data at the provincial level. Over the two-year period, data were collected from approximately 42,000 respondents aged 65 or older, residing in households in all provinces. The file includes information on a wide range of topics, including oral health, care receiving, community service use, access to health care services, vaccines, smoking, alcohol consumption, general health, chronic health conditions and provides information on the socio-demographic characteristics of the population. Note: The Canadian Health Survey on Seniors (CHSS) is a supplement to the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) - Annual component.Release date: 2024-06-14
- Public use microdata: 82M0013XDescription: The public use microdata file (PUMF) from the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) provides data for health regions and combinations of health regions across Canada. Over the two year period, data are based on interviews with approximately 130,000 respondents aged 12 or older, residing in households in all provinces and territories.
The files include information on a wide range of topics, including: physical activity, height and weight, smoking, exposure to second hand smoke, alcohol consumption, general health, chronic health conditions, injuries, and use of health care services. It also provides information on the socio-demographic, income and labour force characteristics of the population.
Release date: 2024-06-14 - Articles and reports: 71-222-X2024002Description: This article examines trends in rates of employment and unemployment, as well as hourly wages and work hours, for the year 2023, and explores how disability intersects with age, sex, educational attainment, and racialized groups to influence labour market outcomes.Release date: 2024-06-13
- Articles and reports: 82-622-X2024001Description: The purpose of this document is to define the concept of peer groups, to give an overview of how they are created and to demonstrate their usefulness. This paper presents the 2023 classification of the peer groups.Release date: 2024-06-11
- Journals and periodicals: 82-622-XGeography: CanadaDescription: The Health Research Working Paper Series publishes: analytical work-in-progress; background documentation for specific research projects (e.g methodological papers); lengthy reports intended for specific clients, and; compendiums of data tables. Publication in this series does not preclude publication of specific aspects of the work in a peer-reviewed journal.Release date: 2024-06-11
- Journals and periodicals: 89-652-XGeography: CanadaDescription: This publication presents key highlights and results from the General Social Survey on the topics of caregiving and care receiving; social identity; giving, volunteering and participating; victimization; time use; and family.Release date: 2024-06-05
- Articles and reports: 89-654-X2024001Description: This article is the first main release by Statistics Canada based on findings from the 2022 Canadian Survey on Disability (CSD). It is divided into three sections—demographics, employment, and income—and provides a general snapshot on persons with disabilities to inform on government priorities and community interest in the areas of disability prevalence, labour market participation, and income inequality. Where possible, the report will be compared with results from the 2017 CSD to provide insight into changes over the past five years.Release date: 2024-05-28
- Stats in brief: 11-001-X202414938144Description: Release published in The Daily – Statistics Canada’s official release bulletinRelease date: 2024-05-28
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Data (1,085)
Data (1,085) (900 to 910 of 1,085 results)
- Table: 13-10-0251-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 1680 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (8 items: Belgium (French speaking) ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Food and beverages (5 items: Fruits; Chocolate or candy; Vegetables; Coke or other soft drinks that contain sugar ...) Student response (7 items: Never; Once a week; 2 to 4 days a week; Less than once a week ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- 902. Health behaviour in school-aged children 2002, student response to question: How often do you brush your teeth? ArchivedTable: 13-10-0252-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 1044 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (35 items: Austria; Belgium (Flemish speaking); Belgium (French speaking); Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Student response (5 items: More than once a day; At least once a week; but not daily; Once a day; Less than once a week ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0253-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 1050 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (35 items: Austria; Belgium (Flemish speaking); Canada; Belgium (French speaking) ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 15 years; 13 years ...) Student response (5 items: Not injured in the last 12 months; 2 times; 1 time; 3 times ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0254-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 728 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (9 items: Belgium (French speaking); Estonia; Czech Republic; Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Result of injury (7 items: Bone was broken; dislocated or out of joint (includes broken and/or chipped teeth); Sprain; strain or pulled muscle; Concussion or other head or neck injury; knocked out; whiplash; Cuts and puncture or stab wound ...) Student response (2 items: Yes; No ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0255-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 312 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (9 items: Belgium (French speaking); Czech Republic; Estonia; Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Student response (6 items: At home or in the yard; In the street or road or parking lot; At a sports facility or field; but not at school; At school including school grounds ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0256-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 416 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (9 items: Belgium (French speaking); Czech Republic; Estonia; Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 15 years; 13 years ...) Student response (8 items: Biking or cycling; Skating (including roller blading; skateboarding and ice skating); Playing or training for sports or a recreational activity; Riding a skate scooter ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0257-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 92 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (8 items: Belgium (French speaking); Czech Republic; Estonia; Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Student response (2 items: Yes; No ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0258-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 404 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (9 items: Belgium (French speaking); Czech Republic; Estonia; Canada ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 15 years; 13 years ...) Location of treatment (4 items: Doctor's office or health clinic; Emergency room; School health service; Hospital admission for at least one complete day ...) Student response (2 items: Yes; No ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- Table: 13-10-0259-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 92 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (8 items: Czech Republic; Belgium (French speaking); Canada; Estonia ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 15 years; 13 years ...) Student response (2 items: Yes; No ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
- 910. Health behaviour in school-aged children 2002, student response to question: In what month did the most serious injury happen? ArchivedTable: 13-10-0260-01Frequency: Every 4 yearsDescription: This table contains 480 series, with data for years 2002 - 2002 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2010-03-30. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (7 items: Canada; Estonia; Czech Republic ...) Sex (2 items: Males; Females ...) Age group (3 items: 11 years; 13 years; 15 years ...) Student response (12 items: January; April; February; March ...).Release date: 2010-03-30
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Analysis (1,672)
Analysis (1,672) (1,260 to 1,270 of 1,672 results)
- 1,261. Accounting for a significant methodological change in analyzing Canadian Community Health Survey data ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110423Description:
Statistics Canada's Canadian Community Health Survey uses two sample frames and two data collection methods. In cycle 2.1, a change was made in sample allocation between the two frames. A study of the collection method effect by Statistics Canada revealed comparability problems between cycles 1.1 and 2.1. In contrast, the Institut de la statistique du Québec took a comprehensive look at the changes, and classified 178 variables as "comparable" or 'non-comparable". It made recommendations to Quebec users concerning chronological and interregional comparisons.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,262. Sample design of the Canadian Health Measures Survey ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110426Description:
This paper describes the sample design used to satisfy the objectives and logistics of the Canadian Health Measures Survey. Among the challenges in developing the design were the need to select respondents close to clinics, the difficulty of achieving the desired sample size for young people, and subsampling for measures associated with exposure to environmental contaminants. The sample design contains solutions to those challenges: the establishment of collection sites, the use of more than one sample frame, and a respondent selection strategy.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - Articles and reports: 11-522-X200600110427Description:
The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) is one of a series of health-related programs sponsored by the United States National Center for Health Statistics. A unique feature of NHANES is the administration of a complete medical examination for each respondent in the sample. To standardize administration, these examinations are carried out in mobile examination centers (MECs). The examination includes physical measurements, tests such as eye and dental examinations, and the collection of blood and urine specimens for laboratory testing. NHANES is an ongoing annual health survey of the noninstitutionalized civilian population of the United States. The major analytic goals of NHANES include estimating the number and percentage of persons in the U.S. population and in designated subgroups with selected diseases and risk factors. The sample design for NHANES needs to create a balance between the requirements for efficient annual and multiyear samples and the flexibility that allows changes in key design parameters to make the survey more responsive to the needs of the research and health policy communities. This paper discusses the challenges involved in designing and implementing a sample selection process that satisfies the goals of NHANES.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,264. Measuring the health of populations: the conceptual and analytic approach of the Global Burden of Disease Study ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110428Description:
In the last two decades, considerable international effort has been put into the development of summary measures of population health that integrate information of mortality and non-fatal health outcomes and international policy interest in such indicators is increasing. There are two main classes of summary measures of population health: health gaps and health expectancies. The Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) is the best known health gap measure and quantifies the gap between a population's actual health and a normative health goal, defined in terms of a global standard life table specifying the healthy years of life lost due to a death at any given age.
This paper gives an overview of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) conceptual framework, the relationship of the DALY to other measures of population health, and the GBD analytical approach, with particular attention to issues in (1) dealing with biased and missing data, (2) dealing with uncertainty and (3) specific technical issues in ensuring cross-population comparability. The latter include dealing with variations in quality and completeness of cause of death information, explicit use of a comprehensive framework and internal consistency checks for improving comparability of estimates of incidence, prevalence and mortality for causes, the assessment of disability weights, and techniques for improving the comparability of the assessment of the disease burden attributable to risk factors.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,265. International comparisons in measuring health states: experiences from the world health surveys ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110429Description:
During the last three decades, there has been general acceptance of an approach to describing health states of individuals in terms of multiple domains of health, and in developing self-report instruments that seek information on each of these domains. A health state is thus a multi-dimensional attribute of an individual that reflects his or her levels on the various components or domains of health. Thus, a health state differs from pathology, risk factors or etiology, and from health service encounters or interventions.
How to describe health states, is a central challenge in undertaking the measurement of health. The relationship of health states to other aspects of health such as future non-fatal health outcomes or risk of mortality need to be examined. The way people report their own health varies consistently with factors such as education, sex, age, or other cultural factors. Various people use different response category cut-points across cultures or population sub-groups, and this 'response shift' implies that self-report categorical data are not comparable across individuals. The responses cannot be directly used to measure health without adjustment.
In recognition of this the WHO World Health Surveys (WHS), used a set of questions across a core set of domains to measure health states and employed vignettes to detect and correct for biases in self-report in order to adjust for response category cut-point shifts. This paper will describe the instrument used in the WHS and the methods used to provide cross population comparable data. It will present results from the WHS demonstrating the existence of systematic reporting biases, the ability of respondents to rate vignettes and their use to adjust for biases in order to make data more comparable. Future strategies to address these problems will be discussed.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,266. A research agenda for developing comparable measures of functional health status for use in population surveys ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110430Description:
In this presentation, Mr. Murray discusses the notion of functional health status and proposes an agenda for developing comparable methods of measuring this concept.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,267. Application of statistical disclosure methods to the Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program Database ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110431Description:
We describe statistical disclosure control methods (SDC) developed for a public release Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP) micro-data file. CHIRPP is a national injury surveillance database managed by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC). After describing CHIRPP, the paper includes a brief overview of basic SDC concepts, as an introduction to the process for selecting and developing the appropriate SDC methods for CHIRPP given its specific challenges and requirements. We then summarize some key results. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implication of this work for the health information field and closing remarks with respect to the some methodological issues for consideration.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,268. Creation of public use micro-data files for the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110433Description:
The process of public-use micro-data files creation involves a number of components. One of its key elements is RTI International's innovative MASSC methodology. However, there are other major components in this process such as treatment of non-core identifying variables and extreme outcomes for extra protection. The statistical disclosure limitation is designed to counter both inside and outside intrusion. The components of the process are accordingly designed.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,269. Methodological issues in measuring the mental health of children and young people in Great Britain ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110435Description:
In 1999, the first nationally representative survey of the mental health of children and young people aged 5-15 was carried out in Great Britain. A second survey was carried out in 2004. The aim of these surveys was threefold: to estimate the prevalence of mental disorders among young people, to look at their use of health, social and educational services, and to investigate risk factors associated with mental disorders. The achieved number of interviews was 10,500 and 8,000 respectively. Some key questions had to be addressed on a large number of methodological issues and the factors taken into account to reach decisions on all these issues are discussed.
Release date: 2008-03-17 - 1,270. Discussion and presentation of the disability test results from the Current Population Survey ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-522-X200600110438Description:
In accordance with an effort to design a set of questions for the Current Population Survey (CPS) to measure disability, potential questions were drawn from existing surveys, cognitively and field tested. Based on an analysis of the test data, a set of seven questions was identified, cognitively tested, and placed in the February 2006 CPS for testing. Analysis of the data revealed a lower overall disability rate as measured in the CPS than in the field test, with lower positive response rates for each question. The data did not indicate that there was an adverse effect on the response rates.
Release date: 2008-03-17
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Reference (107)
Reference (107) (90 to 100 of 107 results)
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5189Description: The objectives of the BCPCHC Survey are: - To provide more information on how people manage their chronic conditions; - To identify barriers to care for those living with chronic conditions including economic and travel related barriers; - To identify barriers to self-management of chronic conditions.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5201Description: The health effects reported by individuals living in communities in close proximity to noise sources such as traffic, airports, railways and wind turbine installations are not fully understood due to limited scientific research in this area. The CNHS was developed to address this gap by investigating the prevalence of health effects or health indicators among a sample of Canadians exposed to these noise sources using both self-reported and objective health measures.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5203Description: This survey collects data on non-acute health care facilities that provide medical or professional nursing supervision or some higher level of care to residents.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5231Description: The objective of the Canadian National Health Survey (CNHS) is to gather information about the health of Canadians.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5233Description: The Canadian Health Survey on Children and Youth (CHSCY) is designed to paint a portrait of the health and well-being of Canadian children and youth by collecting information about factors influencing their physical and mental health. The survey covers a broad range of topics related to the overall health of children and youth including chronic conditions, injuries, physical activity, nutrition and their social environment (family, friends, and communities).
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5242Description: The purpose of this survey is to better understand the transition to civilian life, its impact on the health of released Canadian Armed Forces members, as well as to provide information that may help to improve Department of National Defence and Veterans Affairs Canada programs and services offered to transitioning Canadian Armed Forces members and their families.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5253Description: The main objective of the Survey on Opioid Awareness is to better understand the current level of knowledge of the general Canadian population regarding opioids. This survey will also collect information regarding the willingness and ability of Canadians to act in the event of an opioid overdose.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5255Description: The program collects and disseminates financial operating data concerning government controlled and not-for-profit residential care facilities. Data may be used to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5262Description: The survey will be used in conjunction with other data sources to understand how the planned legalization of cannabis for non-medical use could impact the Canadian economy as well as other health and social services.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5267Description: Canadian Health Survey on Seniors
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