Poverty In Canada

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than the general population. They rank lower on almost every measure of health compared to the rest of the Canadian population (Jock & Lemchuck-Flavel, 2004).
Poverty
Poverty is the most important social determinant of health. It directly affects all other social determinants of health for Aboriginal people including income, employment, education, food security, housing, and many more. Many Aboriginal Canadians live in poverty, which causes a large portion of them to live in impoverished housing that causes many health conditions for children and adults (Adelson, 2005). It is also a factor in the high suicide rate among Aboriginal youth and contraction of HIV/AIDS as well as other diseases (Adelson, 2005). Poverty can have a significant role in food insecurity among Indigenous Canadians. It can make it difficult for many Aboriginal families to access nutritious foods from markets or grocery stores and is a barrier for those that try to provide for …show more content…

This is a problem for those living on-reserve and off-reserve. On average, non-Aboriginal households have less than three individuals, while Aboriginals living on reserve average four individuals per household. Also, compared to seven percent of all Canadians, 53 percent of urban Inuit and seventeen percent of Aboriginals living off-reserves live in overcrowded housing (Adelson, 2005). The high percentage of overcrowded housing among urban Inuit families is related to their relocation to housing in cities and villages from their traditional homes (Smylie, 2004). According to Adelson (2005), homes that are owned by Aboriginals in Canada are ten times more likely to be without a flush toilet, two times more likely to require significant repairs, ninety times more likely to not have piped water supply, and five times more likely to be missing washrooms than non-Aboriginal

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