Over 80 indicators measure the health of the Canadian population and the effectiveness of the health care system. Designed to provide comparable information at the health region and provincial/territorial levels, these data are produced from a wide range of the most recently available sources.
This Internet publication is produced by Statistics Canada and the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
([B] = Bilingual; see "Bilingual products" below )
| Product: | Health Indicators | ||
| Catalogue no.: | 82-221-XWE | ||
| Frequency: | Semi-annual | ||
| Status: | Ongoing/Available | ||
| Latest issue: | 2009, no. 1 | Free | |
| Release date: | June 25, 2009 | ||
| Subscription: | one year (365 days) | N/A | |
| System requirements: | Internet browser. | ||
aids, aids deaths, aboriginal peoples, access to health care, age specific mortality rates, alcohol consumption, alcoholic beverages, arthritis, asthma, bed occupancy rate, body mass index, breast cancer, breast examinations, breast feeding, cancer, chronic health problems, colorectal cancer, days of care, deaths, depression, determinants of health, diabetes, emotional well-being, expenditures, food consumption, health behaviours, health indicators, health professionals, health risk factors, health surveys, health system, high blood pressure, hip replacement, hospital morbidity, hospital separations, hospital utilization, housing conditions, hysterectomy, immigrants, immunization, infant mortality, influenza, job satisfaction, knee replacement, labour force, life expectancy, lifestyle, live births, lone-parent families, low birth weight, low income cutoffs, mammography, medical check-ups, medical education, mortality, obesity, pain and discomfort, pap smears, perinatal mortality, physical activity, population distribution, respiratory diseases, seniors, sexually transmitted diseases, stillbirths, stress, suicide, teenage pregnancies, tobacco use, working conditions.
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Some bilingual products have changed to separate English and French products. In these cases, back issues are bilingual and the more recent issues are unilingual.
Canadian Institute for Health Information