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Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada. Margaret Haworth-Brockman, Executive Director Prairie Women’s Health Centre of Excellence Gender, Diversity and Health Workshop February 11, 2013. Outline. How we came to do this project What the project includes Our methods
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Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada Margaret Haworth-Brockman, Executive Director Prairie Women’s Health Centre of Excellence Gender, Diversity and Health Workshop February 11, 2013
Outline • How we came to do this project • What the project includes • Our methods • Some examples of our findings • Where to from here
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 Women’s 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
Rethinking Women and Healthy Living in Canada • Collaboration by three Centres of Excellence for Women’s 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
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 health—which include sex and gender—in measurement, reporting or formulation of policies and programs.
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 Healthy Living Discourse Some contradictions: Individual vs. social responsibility for health Individual vs. collective and systemic solutions for chronic diseases
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
Figure 2. Organizing framework for gender-sensitive indicators. Adapted, with permission from the authors, from Moussavi et al. {{2736 Moussavi, S. in press;}}. Health Indicator Framework
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
Analytical Process Definition of issues & measures Gathering Information—review of data & add gender contexts, meaning, experience Analytical Inquiry—asking challenging questions Implications & Lessons to build gender sensitive strategies
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
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.
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 don’t necessarily prefer cooking programs • Occupational injury data may under-represent women’s injuries in certain sectors
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.
Fact Sheets More Information The Source www.womenshealthdata.ca
Co-authors: Ann Pederson, Barbara Clow, Harpa Isfeld, Anna Liwander and Linda Snyder This project was made possible through a contribution from Health Canada Acknowledgements Thank you! Questions or comments: m.haworth-brockman@uwinnipeg.ca apederson@cw.bc.ca b.clow@dal.ca