Complaints have almost doubled between 2007 and 2008
Vancouver now carries the dubious title of hate-crime and gay-bashing capital of Canada.
According to figures released by Statistics Canada on Monday, police-reported hate crimes in Vancouver almost doubled from 79 in 2007 to 143 in 2008 — including 34 hate attacks motivated by the victim's sexual orientation, by far the highest ratio of gay-bashing crimes among major Canadian cities.
Read more: http://www.theprovince.com/news/Canada+hate+crime+capital/3155257/story.html
Read more...
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Aboriginals to tell commission residential school truths
The Canadian Press
WINNIPEG—The head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on residential schools says the stories of survivors will no longer be relegated to the sidelines of Canadian history.
Manitoba Justice Murray Sinclair says the commission will allow aboriginals to talk about what happened to them at the schools and their stories will finally get the attention they deserve.
Sinclair was speaking Wednesday at the opening of the commission's first public hearing in Winnipeg.
He said no one will be forced to speak of abuse suffered at the schools, but if survivors choose to come forward they will have the commission's full attention.
“To all those who wish to share their experience with us, I promise you this: if you have something to tell, we will hear you. You will not be questioned. You will not be asked to prove anything. You do not have to share anything that you do not wish to share.
“You will be provided with supports to assist you. You will be treated with respect. You will be treated with dignity.”
To read more, please visit:http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/824277--aboriginals-to-tell-commission-residential-school-truths?bn=1
Read more...
WINNIPEG—The head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on residential schools says the stories of survivors will no longer be relegated to the sidelines of Canadian history.
Manitoba Justice Murray Sinclair says the commission will allow aboriginals to talk about what happened to them at the schools and their stories will finally get the attention they deserve.
Sinclair was speaking Wednesday at the opening of the commission's first public hearing in Winnipeg.
He said no one will be forced to speak of abuse suffered at the schools, but if survivors choose to come forward they will have the commission's full attention.
“To all those who wish to share their experience with us, I promise you this: if you have something to tell, we will hear you. You will not be questioned. You will not be asked to prove anything. You do not have to share anything that you do not wish to share.
“You will be provided with supports to assist you. You will be treated with respect. You will be treated with dignity.”
To read more, please visit:http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/824277--aboriginals-to-tell-commission-residential-school-truths?bn=1
Read more...
Friday, June 4, 2010
Public Forum: The Politics of Poverty and Public Health
The World Health Organization says health inequalities result from
“a toxic combination of poor social policies and programmes, unfair
economic arrangements, and bad politics.”
Canadians might well ask: “Why is it so hard to reduce poverty and close
the health equity gap in such a rich country?”
A panel of eminent political and public health leaders, as part of the
Canadian Public Health Association Centennial Conference, will reflect on
this challenge and debate the politics of the way forward.
Everyone welcome!
Monday, June 14, 2010
Sheraton Centre Toronto
Grand Ballroom, Lower Concourse
123 Queen Street West
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Speakers:
Carolyn Bennett, MP, St. Paul’s, Toronto
Andrea Horwath, MPP, Hamilton Centre
David McKeown, Medical Officer of Health, Toronto
Jessica Yee, Executive Director, Native Youth Sexual Health Network
Moderator
Paulette Senior, CEO, YWCA Canada
Read more...
“a toxic combination of poor social policies and programmes, unfair
economic arrangements, and bad politics.”
Canadians might well ask: “Why is it so hard to reduce poverty and close
the health equity gap in such a rich country?”
A panel of eminent political and public health leaders, as part of the
Canadian Public Health Association Centennial Conference, will reflect on
this challenge and debate the politics of the way forward.
Everyone welcome!
Monday, June 14, 2010
Sheraton Centre Toronto
Grand Ballroom, Lower Concourse
123 Queen Street West
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Speakers:
Carolyn Bennett, MP, St. Paul’s, Toronto
Andrea Horwath, MPP, Hamilton Centre
David McKeown, Medical Officer of Health, Toronto
Jessica Yee, Executive Director, Native Youth Sexual Health Network
Moderator
Paulette Senior, CEO, YWCA Canada
Read more...
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Health Equity Survey
This Echo funded survey is part of a project called Making Gender-Based and Equity-Assisting Frameworks Accessible: Knowledge Translation Strategies for Ontario's Healthcare Professionals. It is anonymous. It will help the Project Team understand how Ontario’s health-care professionals use an equity lens in their work. It’s one way for you to influence development of knowledge translation strategies and tools to support health-care providers, planners, and policy-makers as well as expand equity as a key criterion when developing, implementing, and evaluating health programs and services. Please fill out the survey by June 30, 2010!
Access survey at:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=vQGpZ26FnfsaKoOA8qO%2fDXb8p2VSmNRVCgCasIqou4Y%3d&
Read more...
Access survey at:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=vQGpZ26FnfsaKoOA8qO%2fDXb8p2VSmNRVCgCasIqou4Y%3d&
Read more...
Survey: Women's Health in Ontario
Please encourage women you know to take a moment to fill out a 20 minute electronic survey about the health issues that are of most interest to them, especially in relation to personal experiences with health, services, information and treatment. The information gathered will help to increase our understanding and provide an overview of the health issues for women in Ontario. The survey is anonymous and seeks to hear from women across Ontario. We are encouraging women from a wide range of experiences and backgrounds to participate in the survey. We strongly encourage women who are often under-represented in women's health research, including but not limited to: Aboriginal women, immigrant and refugee women, rural women, lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans women and women with disabilities to fill out the survey and ensure the issues are represented.
This survey is part of a project called Health Research and Knowledge Translation: Including the Voices of Ontario Women. This project is being carried out by a partnership that includes the Ontario Women's Health Network, and is under the guidance of an Advisory Committee. The project is funded by Echo: Improving Women's Health in Ontario, an agency of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
Please pass on the survey link to women you work with, friends, family members and other women in the community. Fill out your survey today!!
The survey is available online until June 27 at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/womenhealth
Read more...
This survey is part of a project called Health Research and Knowledge Translation: Including the Voices of Ontario Women. This project is being carried out by a partnership that includes the Ontario Women's Health Network, and is under the guidance of an Advisory Committee. The project is funded by Echo: Improving Women's Health in Ontario, an agency of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
Please pass on the survey link to women you work with, friends, family members and other women in the community. Fill out your survey today!!
The survey is available online until June 27 at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/womenhealth
Read more...
Health Impact Project: Advancing Smarter Policies for Healthier Communities
The Health Impact Project, a collaboration of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and The Pew Charitable Trusts, is a national initiative designed to promote the use of health impact assessments (HIAs) as a decision-making tool for policymakers. HIAs use a flexible, data-driven approach that identifies the health consequences of new policies and develops practical strategies to enhance their health benefits and minimize adverse effects.
The Health Impact Project will promote the use of HIAs by:
• Creating a national center of excellence housed at Pew and providing the coordination and infrastructure needed to establish HIAs as a well-recognized field in the United States;
• Demonstrating the effectiveness of HIAs by funding a series of HIA demonstration projects in various sectors and throughout various regions of the country;
• Building a training and technical assistance network that will support a new group of HIA practitioners and engage and strengthen current HIA practice centers;
• Completing two major federal-level HIAs to address policies of great importance to health in the United States and validate the effectiveness and importance of this tool; and
• Researching and broadly disseminating a review of existing laws, regulations and policies that might support the use of HIAs and help practitioners find new opportunities to implement them.
For more information, please visit: http://www.healthimpactproject.org/
Read more...
The Health Impact Project will promote the use of HIAs by:
• Creating a national center of excellence housed at Pew and providing the coordination and infrastructure needed to establish HIAs as a well-recognized field in the United States;
• Demonstrating the effectiveness of HIAs by funding a series of HIA demonstration projects in various sectors and throughout various regions of the country;
• Building a training and technical assistance network that will support a new group of HIA practitioners and engage and strengthen current HIA practice centers;
• Completing two major federal-level HIAs to address policies of great importance to health in the United States and validate the effectiveness and importance of this tool; and
• Researching and broadly disseminating a review of existing laws, regulations and policies that might support the use of HIAs and help practitioners find new opportunities to implement them.
For more information, please visit: http://www.healthimpactproject.org/
Read more...
Friday, May 28, 2010
Low-income Canadians have more heart attacks
Canadians who live in low-income neighbourhoods are more likely to have a heart attack than their wealthier counterparts, a new report indicates.
But their quality of care in hospital seems to be about the same, finds a new report released by the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
Almost 67,000 Canadians landed in hospital due to a heart attack in 2008-2009.
For more infomation, please visit: http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Health/20100528/heart-attacks-100528/
Read more...
But their quality of care in hospital seems to be about the same, finds a new report released by the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
Almost 67,000 Canadians landed in hospital due to a heart attack in 2008-2009.
For more infomation, please visit: http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Health/20100528/heart-attacks-100528/
Read more...
Thursday, May 27, 2010
National Wear it Pink Day- May 27th!
May 27, 2010 is National Wear It Pink Day, a celebration of our commitment in the battle to end women’s cancers! Embrace your inner pink-ness and declare it a day for our mothers, daughters, sisters and friends everywhere! Wear PINK and show your support!
For more information, please visit: http://to10.endcancer.ca/site/PageServer?pagename=10_wear_it_pink_day
Read more...
For more information, please visit: http://to10.endcancer.ca/site/PageServer?pagename=10_wear_it_pink_day
Read more...
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
New South Asian Health Equity Report
“A Diagnosis for Equity: An initial analysis of South Asian health inequities in Ontario” is a new report on South Asians and Health Inequities.
Over the past two years, the Council of Agencies Serving South Asians (CASSA) has worked closely with community providers and other stakeholders to build a strategy to promote health equity for South Asian Communities in Ontario. This work included consultations with close to 150 participants from over 60 organizations and key expert interviews.
A Diagnosis for Equity combines the findings from these consultations with a scan of existing research to show that South Asian communities in Ontario experience health disparities that are symptoms of social inequity. This exploratory report indicates that these disparities must be addressed through coordinated community-based action that challenges the social determinants of health, like racialization and poverty, and puts forth recommendations for action.
For more info feel free to contact Keerthy: Keerthy@cassa.on.ca or 416-932-1359 x 12, or visit http://www.cassaonline.com/index3/
Read more...
Over the past two years, the Council of Agencies Serving South Asians (CASSA) has worked closely with community providers and other stakeholders to build a strategy to promote health equity for South Asian Communities in Ontario. This work included consultations with close to 150 participants from over 60 organizations and key expert interviews.
A Diagnosis for Equity combines the findings from these consultations with a scan of existing research to show that South Asian communities in Ontario experience health disparities that are symptoms of social inequity. This exploratory report indicates that these disparities must be addressed through coordinated community-based action that challenges the social determinants of health, like racialization and poverty, and puts forth recommendations for action.
For more info feel free to contact Keerthy: Keerthy@cassa.on.ca or 416-932-1359 x 12, or visit http://www.cassaonline.com/index3/
Read more...
Labels:
health,
health equity,
south asians
The Regional Diversity Roundtable is hiring! Deadline May 24th
The Regional Diversity Roundtable is a network of organizations and institutions committed to
building inclusion and diversity competence that results in the institutionalization of equity in their core values, structures, workforce, policies and services. They are currently hiring a Program Assistant. Deadline is May 24th and the competition is open to youth aged 15-25.
For more information, please contact:
Sume Ndumbe-Eyoh
Coordinator, Regional Diversity Roundtable
sume@regionaldiversityroundtable.org
P. 905 457 7288 ext 236 F. 905 454 0767
www.regionaldiversityroundtable.org
Read more...
building inclusion and diversity competence that results in the institutionalization of equity in their core values, structures, workforce, policies and services. They are currently hiring a Program Assistant. Deadline is May 24th and the competition is open to youth aged 15-25.
For more information, please contact:
Sume Ndumbe-Eyoh
Coordinator, Regional Diversity Roundtable
sume@regionaldiversityroundtable.org
P. 905 457 7288 ext 236 F. 905 454 0767
www.regionaldiversityroundtable.org
Read more...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)