Health Sci 1002B Final
What did the study done by McClean's magazine (partnered with the CMA) examine? - ✔✔Life
and death by neighbourhood
(where you live may decide how soon you die)
Winter and spring of 2013, the C
...
Health Sci 1002B Final
What did the study done by McClean's magazine (partnered with the CMA) examine? - ✔✔Life
and death by neighbourhood
(where you live may decide how soon you die)
Winter and spring of 2013, the CMA held public town hall meetings in Winnipeg, Hamilton,
Charlottetown, Calgary, Montreal, and St. John's. What were the 4 purposes of these meetings? -
✔✔1. To determine what factors beyond the health care system influence health
2. What initiatives offset the negative impact of these determinants
3. What governments and health care providers should be doing to address these social
determinants
4. How equal access for all to the health care system can be achieved
McClean's magazine partnered up with the CMA to talk about and explore in a town hall format
what 4 main social determinants of health? - ✔✔income
housing
nutrition/food security
early childhood development
Why did McClean's magazine and the CMA decide to hold these town meetings? - ✔✔- Public
opinion is very important
- More and more it's coming to light that health is more than just health care
- A study called Code Red prompted this as well
What is Code Red? What did Code Red suggest? - ✔✔- Study done by a researcher in
collaboration with the Hamilton Spectator (done in Hamilton, ON)
- Health is predetermined by postal code.
What would happen to the baby of a mother who is living in this neighbourhood:
- bottom 20% of the city's income earners
- six times less likely than the wealthiest hamiltonian to seek first-trimester prenatal care
- more than six times as likely to be a teenager or to have dropped out of school - ✔✔Her baby's
future:
- Born underweight and risk of needing weeks in neonatal intensive care would also be higher
- Because it's born underweight + environment, the child will likely face a number of difficulties
later in life (ie. heart disease, obesity, diabetes, cognitive delay/impairment)
What was the purpose of the Code Red study? - ✔✔To describe the disparities in the
determinants of health and health status that exists in the City of Hamilton's neighborhoods in a
way that could be easily comprehended by a lay audience.
How was data collected for the Code Red study? - ✔✔- Looked at health records; specifically
emergency room visit data and hospital admission records from 2006 - 2008 for every patient
listing Hamilton as a home (~ 400,000 observations)
- They didn't look at these records at the individual level (didn't look at names); it was
anonymous
- Looked at death records along with postal code of residence at the time of death Death
- Both local District School Boards (Catholic and Public) provided data on high school
- Variables relating to various determinants of health were collected from the 2006 Census of the
Canadian population (ie. dwelling value, median income, % of immigrants etc.)
- Data were entered into a GIS for mapping
by renters.
After gathering data and analyzing results from the Code Red study, what did the Hamilton
spectator do between April 10 and April 17, 2010? - ✔✔Published the Code Red series in 7
instalments (published 7 maps along with associated statistics ie. avg age of death, CV disease,
hospital admission rate etc. so that people could see what was happening by area/postal
code/region)
- One of the maps was an aggregate map which looked at the overall results
What was the key variable in the Code Red study? - ✔✔Postal code
Describe the statement "Two Streets Two Worlds" as it relates to Hamilton (as determined by the
Code Red study)? - ✔✔- In neighborhoods like Hamilton's depressed, residents die an average
Third World Death - at 65.5 years of age
- If they lived 5 or 6 km, say, on Rice Avenue in the city's leafy suburbs they would live beyond
86 years
Why can Hamilton Health Sciences not solve the problem (where you live strongly influencing
when you die)? - ✔✔Health care system's overall objective is helping sick people, not dealing
with the social determinants of health that may have caused them to be sick
Why is "Two Streets Two Words" a reality in Hamilton
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