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Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada

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Title: Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada


1
Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada
  • Margaret Haworth-Brockman, Executive Director
  • Prairie Womens Health Centre of Excellence
  • Gender, Diversity and Health Workshop
  • February 11, 2013

2
Outline
  • How we came to do this project
  • What the project includes
  • Our methods
  • Some examples of our findings
  • Where to from here

3
Shifts Silver Linings
  • New emphasis on Healthy Living for our work
  • Opportunity to build on expertise in SGBA (to
    more open audiences?) discourse analysis and
    practical applications
  • At PWHCE we had experience
  • Profile of Womens Health in Manitoba
  • Guidelines for practical applications of GBA for
    PAHO
  • Collaboration on Rising to the Challenge, beyond
    GBA 101
  • Recent work on Gender and Health Statistics
    commissioned by the WHO

4
Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada
  • Collaboration by three Centres of Excellence for
    Womens Health
  • National-level project
  • A reconstruction and critique of the healthy
    living discourse
  • SGBA of healthy living topics
  • Exploration of a few healthy living strategies
  • Promising practices

5
Integrated Pan-Canadian Healthy Living Strategy
of 2005
  • Goals are to improve overall health outcomes and
    reduce health disparities.
  • Does not offer sex-specific targets nor make
    provisions to address the determinants of
    healthwhich include sex and genderin
    measurement, reporting or formulation of policies
    and programs.

6
Healthy Living Discourse
  • Some contradictions
  • Individual vs. social responsibility for health
  • Individual vs. collective and systemic solutions
    for chronic diseases
  • Leading to
  • Transformation of risk and probability for
    populations into certain danger for individuals
  • Focus on physical health rather than mental
    health
  • Blame for certain types of illnesses
  • Limited attention to context of healthy living
    and sex, gender, diversity as well as the
    determinants of health

7
A Profile of Women and Healthy Living in Canada
8
Healthy Living Topics
  • Each snapshot includes current rates,
    sex-specific details, gendered influences, risk
    factors, critique of measures, and policy
    implications.
  • Women in Canada, 15 years and older - mostly

9
Health Indicator Framework
10
National-Level Data Sources
  • Canadian Community Health Survey, including
    CCHS-Nutrition Module, Cycle 2.2, 2004 CCHS,
    Cycle 3.1, 2005 and annuals 2007-2008 and
    2009-2010.
  • Canadian Health Measures Survey, Cycle 1, 2007-
    2009
  • Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey, Annual
    2010
  • Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use Monitoring Survey,
    2010
  • National Trauma Registry, Comprehensive Dataset
    (NTR-CDS)
  • General Social Survey-Victimization Cycle 2009
  • Association of Workers Compensation Boards of
    Canada, National Work Injury Statistics Program
    (AWCBC - NWISP)
  • Census of Agriculture, 2001 and 2006
  • Public Health Agency of Canada, Sexually
    Transmitted Infections Surveillance Data

11
Analytical Process
  • Definition of issues measures
  • Gathering Informationreview of data add gender
    contexts, meaning, experience
  • Analytical Inquiryasking challenging questions
  • Implications Lessons to build gender sensitive
    strategies

12
SGBA of Healthy Living Strategies
  • Sex- and gender-informed discussion on healthy
    living strategies in Canada at various levels of
    government.
  • Review of strategy documents plus consultations
    with policy makers about how gender has been
    considered in their healthy living strategies.
  • Detailed examination of strategies in Prince
    Edward Island, Ontario, Manitoba and British
    Columbia

13
Gender-Sensitive Practices, Policies and
Programs in Healthy Living
  • Scoping review of research on gender-sensitive
    promising practices in healthy living.
  • Selected examples of promising practices,
    policies and programs related to our ten healthy
    living topics.
  • Recommendations for future directions to advance
    healthy living in Canada for women.

14
Some Quick Results
  • Women with higher incomes are more likely to take
    part in physical activity, but are also more
    likely to drink heavily
  • Aboriginal women less likely to drink heavily
  • We know very little about sexual behaviour for
    women over the age of 49 or those not considered
    high risk
  • All women show excessive sedentary behaviour
  • Tobacco smoking rates are largely declining,
    except among young women and women who use
    smoking as a coping behaviour
  • Older women find food labels complicated, and
    they dont necessarily prefer cooking programs
  • Occupational injury data may under-represent
    womens injuries in certain sectors

15
Conclusions
  • A gender lens on healthy living can shift our
    understanding of, and responses to, the needs of
    women in Canada.
  • Responses to healthy living for women in Canada
    might look different if they incorporate sex,
    gender, diversity and equity.
  • A sex and gender lens can allow the Pan-Canadian
    Healthy Living Strategy and provincial strategies
    to address the inequities that prevent healthy
    living for women.

16
More Information
  • The Source
  • www.womenshealthdata.ca

Fact Sheets
17
Acknowledgements
Co-authors Ann Pederson, Barbara Clow, Harpa
Isfeld, Anna Liwander and Linda Snyder This
project was made possible through a contribution
from Health Canada
Thank you! Questions or comments m.haworth-brockm
an_at_uwinnipeg.ca apederson_at_cw.bc.ca b.clow_at_dal.ca
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