cover image: Healthy children, healthy families, healthy communities : 2008-10 First Nations regional health survey

Premium

20.500.12592/0sbnwq

Healthy children, healthy families, healthy communities : 2008-10 First Nations regional health survey

3 Jan 2013

There was no difference in the percentage of caregivers reporting that traditional cultural events were very important in the lives of their child by the gender of their child (67.6% [95% CI: 59.2-75.1%] of male children versus 59.3% [95% CI: 52.2-66.0%] of female children) or by the remoteness of their community (62.6% [95% Traditional CI: 52.8-71.5%] in communities less than 50 kilometers from a [...] There has been no significant change in the percentage of youth who reported hunting or trapping in the year prior to the 2008-10 RHS versus the year prior to the 2002-03 RHS (in which 18.3% [95% CI: 13.1-25.0%] of youth reported hunting or trapping in the year prior to the survey.) 44 BC Provincial Results of the 2008-10 First Nations Regional Health Survey Just over seventeen per cent, (17.3% [9 [...] There was no difference in the percentage of youth who reported hunting or trapping in the year prior to the 2008-10 RHS by gender (19.4% [95% CI: 13.9-26.4%] of male youth versus 9.4% [95% CI: 5.9-14.6%]E of female youth) or by the remoteness of their community (14.9% [95% CI: 11.0-19.47%] of youth in communities less than 50 km from a service centre and 12.1% [95% CI: 6.3-22.2%]E of youth in com [...] There was no significant difference in the percentage of adults who reported hunting or trapping in the year prior to the 2008-10 RHS by adult age group, nor in the percentage of adults participating in hunting or trapping in the year prior to the 2008-10 RHS by the remoteness of their community. [...] There was no difference in the percentage of BC on-reserve First Nations youth who reported fishing in the year prior to the 2008-10 RHS by gender (34.3% [95% CI: 27.6-41.6%] of male youth versus 26.5% [95% CI: 19.2-35.5%] of female youth), or by the remoteness of their community (24.9% [95% CI: 19.8-30.9%] of youth in communities less than 50 kilometers from a service centre, 32.3% [95% CI: 23.0-
food security health education food school public health health promotion surveys nutrition obesity indians of north america breastfeeding diet language medicine overweight alternative medicine health services accessibility indians, north american further education chronic condition teaching and learning health treatment food insecure native peoples first nations diseases and conditions bmi superannuation food supplies esteem sweets first peoples’ cultural council
Pages
220
Published in
Canada

Related Topics

All