The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada

Poster Presentation The Territorial North (i.e. Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut) is markedly different from the rest of Canada; yet there is little statistically reliable information about adolescent well-being in the region. The objective of this paper is to create a portrait of adolescent we...

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Main Authors: Daley, Angela, Burton, Peter, Phipps, Shelley
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship@Western 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/pclc_conf/2015/Day1/13
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/pclc_conf/article/1011/viewcontent/AngelaDaley_Poster.pdf_Angela_20Daley_20Poster
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spelling ftunivwestonta:oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:pclc_conf-1011 2023-10-01T03:58:24+02:00 The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada Daley, Angela Burton, Peter Phipps, Shelley 2015-03-19T19:30:00Z application/pdf https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/pclc_conf/2015/Day1/13 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/pclc_conf/article/1011/viewcontent/AngelaDaley_Poster.pdf_Angela_20Daley_20Poster unknown Scholarship@Western https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/pclc_conf/2015/Day1/13 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/pclc_conf/article/1011/viewcontent/AngelaDaley_Poster.pdf_Angela_20Daley_20Poster Population Change and Lifecourse Strategic Knowledge Cluster Conferences Sociology text 2015 ftunivwestonta 2023-09-03T06:57:17Z Poster Presentation The Territorial North (i.e. Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut) is markedly different from the rest of Canada; yet there is little statistically reliable information about adolescent well-being in the region. The objective of this paper is to create a portrait of adolescent well-being in the Territorial North relative to Southern Canada. We do so using the Canadian Community Health Survey, a nationally representative dataset. We examine seven domains of well-being with 23 indicators by region and Aboriginal identity for youth aged 12 to 17. We include objective and subjective measures, reflecting the importance of adolescents’ perspectives in studies of their own well-being. We find negligible differences among the non-Aboriginal population; while most indicators are substantially worse for Aboriginal youth, especially in Northern Canada (e.g. income, poverty, household education, family structure, crowding, food insecurity, exposure to second-hand smoke, school enrolment, smoking, sexual activity, obesity and overweight, oral and mental health). However, there are exceptions (e.g. physical activity, fruit and vegetable consumption, stress, body image, belonging). Nevertheless, Aboriginal youth in the North are generally less satisfied with life. This is not surprising since they fare worse in most well-being indicators considered in this study. Text Northwest Territories Nunavut Yukon The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western Canada Northwest Territories Nunavut Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
op_collection_id ftunivwestonta
language unknown
topic Sociology
spellingShingle Sociology
Daley, Angela
Burton, Peter
Phipps, Shelley
The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
topic_facet Sociology
description Poster Presentation The Territorial North (i.e. Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut) is markedly different from the rest of Canada; yet there is little statistically reliable information about adolescent well-being in the region. The objective of this paper is to create a portrait of adolescent well-being in the Territorial North relative to Southern Canada. We do so using the Canadian Community Health Survey, a nationally representative dataset. We examine seven domains of well-being with 23 indicators by region and Aboriginal identity for youth aged 12 to 17. We include objective and subjective measures, reflecting the importance of adolescents’ perspectives in studies of their own well-being. We find negligible differences among the non-Aboriginal population; while most indicators are substantially worse for Aboriginal youth, especially in Northern Canada (e.g. income, poverty, household education, family structure, crowding, food insecurity, exposure to second-hand smoke, school enrolment, smoking, sexual activity, obesity and overweight, oral and mental health). However, there are exceptions (e.g. physical activity, fruit and vegetable consumption, stress, body image, belonging). Nevertheless, Aboriginal youth in the North are generally less satisfied with life. This is not surprising since they fare worse in most well-being indicators considered in this study.
format Text
author Daley, Angela
Burton, Peter
Phipps, Shelley
author_facet Daley, Angela
Burton, Peter
Phipps, Shelley
author_sort Daley, Angela
title The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
title_short The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
title_full The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
title_fullStr The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
title_full_unstemmed The Well-Being of Adolescents in Northern Canada
title_sort well-being of adolescents in northern canada
publisher Scholarship@Western
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/pclc_conf/2015/Day1/13
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/pclc_conf/article/1011/viewcontent/AngelaDaley_Poster.pdf_Angela_20Daley_20Poster
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
genre Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
op_source Population Change and Lifecourse Strategic Knowledge Cluster Conferences
op_relation https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/pclc_conf/2015/Day1/13
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/pclc_conf/article/1011/viewcontent/AngelaDaley_Poster.pdf_Angela_20Daley_20Poster
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