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Abstract English and French are both official languages in Canada. Whereas official language minorities (English speakers in Quebec, French speakers in the rest of Canada) face healthcare barriers and poor health outcomes, autistic individuals and their families also struggle with accessing healthcare. We examined healthcare access at the intersection of these groups: the autistic community, including English minority-language speakers from Quebec, French majority-language speakers from...
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Background Canada is a bilingual country; however, outside of Quebec, healthcare services are predominantly offered in English. With the increasing older adult population and stretched healthcare resources, Francophone older adults may face significant challenges in accessing care due to their linguistic minority status. This study explores the experiences of caregivers of Francophone older adults in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Methods Using a convenience sampling strategy, caregivers of...
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À l’aide des données tirées de l’Enquête sur la population de langue officielle en situation minoritaire de 2022 et de la Base de données ouverte sur les établissements de soins de santé, la présente étude examine l’incidence de la proximité des établissements de santé, et d’autres facteurs régionaux et sociodémographiques, sur l’accès à des soins dans la langue de choix de la population de langue officielle en situation minoritaire au Canada. Dans cet article, les soins en concordance...
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Using data from the 2022 Survey on the Official Language Minority Population and the Open Database of Healthcare Facilities, this study examines how distance to health care facilities, alongside regional and sociodemographic factors, relates to access to language-concordant care for the official language minority population in Canada. In this article, language-concordant care refers to individuals receiving health care services in their preferred official language (English or French). The...
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Résumé Contexte et but. Dans le contexte linguistique minoritaire où l’accès à des services en français est un défi, l’étude voulait documenter dans quelle mesure la crise de la pandémie avait eu un impact sur les familles francophones au Manitoba, Saskatchewan et Alberta. Méthodes. À partir des informations recueillies lors de 6 World Café du Monde, un sondage a été créé et distribué en ligne aux membres d’organismes francophones dans ces provinces. Des analyses descriptives et de...
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La technologie de santé numérique s’intègre dans les soins de santé améliorant l’engagement des patients dans les décisions partagées, favorisant ainsi leur prise en charge et la qualité des soins. FirstHx développe des outils innovants dans cette optique, mais leur mise en oeuvre est complexe pour la population francophone dans un contexte majoritairement anglophone. Cette étude vise à valider culturellement cet outil et à évaluer la satisfaction des utilisateurs. Une méthodologie mixte...
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Importance: Patients who live in minority language communities often receive health care services of lower quality and safety compared with patients who speak the majority language. Yet the outcomes associated with care provided by physicians who speak a patient’s primary language remain unknown. Objective : To examine patient-physician language concordance and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) among patients with hypertension. Design, Setting, and Participants This...
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Health services or care in the minority official language by age group and gender, Canada, among adults in the minority official language population who considered it important to obtain health services or care in the minority official language, 2022. Possibility to conduct more specific searches for Quebec, Canada outside Quebec, certain provinces, or certain regions.
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Abstract Objective Providing care in a patient’s preferred language improves health outcomes and patient satisfaction. In Ontario, access to French-speaking physicians (FSPs) is estimated using FSP-to-Francophone population ratios and compared with total physician-to-total population ratios. This approach fails to consider the fact that FSPs also serve non-Francophone patients and that Francophones must compete with the entire population to access FSPs. As a result, this approach...
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Area of intervention or study
Minority language group(s)
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- Canada (11)
Canadian provinces or territories
- Canada (except Quebec) (4)
- Alberta (2)
- British Columbia (1)
- Manitoba (1)
- New Brunswick (1)
- Newfoundland and Labrador (1)
- Nunavut (1)
- Ontario (4)
- Prince Edward Island (1)
- Quebec (4)
- Saskatchewan (2)
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