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Introduction Language is a social determinant of health. Addressing social determinants of health is paramount to successful progression along the HIV-care continuum. Canada is a bilingual country with French and English as official languages. There are few studies to date that have focused on the impact of being a French-speaking linguistic minority on the HIV-care continuum. The primary objective of this scoping, systematic review of literature is to evaluate existing gaps in access to...
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Introduction In 2001, 50%–55% of French-speaking minority communities did not have access to health services in French in Canada. Although Canada is officially a bilingual country, reports indicate that many healthcare services offered in French in Anglophone provinces are insufficient or substandard, leading to healthcare discrepancies among Canada’s minority Francophone communities. Objectives The primary aim of this scoping systematic review was to identify existing gaps in HIV-care...
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Health and social service systems can be difficult to traverse, especially in the stressful situations that often necessitate accessing them. In Quebec, these difficulties are exacerbated for English speaking or limited French-proficient persons. This thesis employs a needs-based assessment to explore how linguistic-based access barriers to health and social services affect Montreal’s English-speaking Disability community, focusing on those with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities...
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Cet article décrit et analyse les besoins et préoccupations des personnes âgées autonomes appartenant aux groupes ethniques francophones et résidant dans Ottawa-Carleton. L'objectif principal est d'explorer les raisons pour lesquelles elles utilisent peu les services de soutien communautaires pour les personnes âgées francophones. Nous avons effectué des entrevues semi-structurées auprès de quatre représentantes et de six personnes âgées des communautés ethno-culturelles francophones, et...
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Background There is ample evidence of ethnic and linguistic segregation in the Canadian labour market. However, it is unknown if there is equitable representation of visible and linguistic minorities in nursing professions. Methods We cross-tabulated aggregate data from Statistics Canada’s 2006 Census. Analyses examined the distribution of visible and linguistic minorities, including visible minority sub-groups, among health managers, head nurses, registered nurses, licensed nurses and...
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Thème
Domaine d’intervention ou d’étude
Groupe(s) linguistique(s) minoritaire(s)
Population concernée
Pays
- Canada (7)
Province ou territoire canadien
- Colombie-Britannique (1)
- Manitoba (3)
- Nouvelle-Écosse (1)
- Ontario (5)
- Québec (2)
Année de publication
- Entre 1900 et 1999 (2)
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Entre 2000 et 2025
(5)
- Entre 2010 et 2019 (3)
- Entre 2020 et 2025 (2)