• In 2022, Canada's population grew by more than one million people, setting a new record as the country welcomed more immigrants. (cheknews.ca)
  • If 2021 was the year when floods and wildfires and record-smashing heat waves made the disastrous effects of climate change impossible for Canadians to ignore, 2022 is supposed to be when this country gets serious about building resilience to even worse consequences yet to come. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Inuit (plural: the singular, Inuk , means "man" or "person") is a general term for a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic regions of Alaska , Greenland , and Canada , and Siberia. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Canadian Inuit do not consider themselves, and are not usually considered by others, to be one of the First Nations, a term which normally applies to other indigenous peoples in Canada. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • That's the compelling finding of the paper, "Human Activity mediates a Trophic Cascade caused by Wolves" that appears in the August issue of Ecology by Mark Hebblewhite (University of Alberta) and colleagues. (eurekalert.org)
  • Much of ecology in the good old days was based on equilibrium models of populations, communities, and ecosystems, an assumption we know to be irrelevant to a world with a changing climate. (ubc.ca)
  • When we analyse the details of coral reef declines, we find that many species are affected by rising sea temperatures, but some are not, and it is possible that some species will adapt by natural selection to the higher temperatures. (ubc.ca)
  • As the case numbers grow, the necropsy results from stranded killer whales will undoubtedly reveal the changing health threats to this species across both age classes and sub populations. (vin.com)
  • Males and females had similar relative body masses, but species with greater sexual size dimorphism (male/female mass) in wild populations had comparatively larger female body mass in captivity. (bvsalud.org)
  • Moose populations can decline if one or more key habitat components is lacking. (nation.on.ca)
  • Due to habitat loss and fragmentation, fisher populations have historically declined. (nation.on.ca)
  • However, these strategies rely on access to abundant prey populations in close proximity to denning habitat, which may be negatively impacted by climate change and the development of human infrastructure in this region. (alaska.edu)
  • This condition is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern, which means one copy of the altered gene in each cell is sufficient to cause the disorder. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Fifty years later, homozygous mutations in the gene encoding the mitochondrial protein HCLS1-associated X1 ( HAX1 ) were found in affected descendants of the original Kostmann family. (medscape.com)
  • 14 , 15 Other data on Canadian drug user populations suggest substantial rates of overdose. (cmaj.ca)
  • Addressing mental health in the aftermath of disasters therefore requires careful long-term planning and substantial knowledge of the pattern of response across affected populations. (who.int)
  • Therefore, Canadians depend on fortified food sources and possibly vitamin D supplementation to help meet their needs. (cmaj.ca)
  • Groups of experts in Yogic Flying are engaged in creating coherent national consciousness in the United States, the Netherlands, Canada, Hamsa (Hungary), and an increasing number of other nations, which are enjoying a dramatic and sustained upsurge in positive economic and social trends. (globalgoodnews.com)
  • These trends have not only impacted the amount of backlog in the criminal court processes, but have also had a dramatic impact on provincial remand populations. (legalaid.on.ca)
  • Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death in Canada and globally (1), despite dramatic declines in tobacco use rates among Canadian adults and youths during the past 3 decades (2). (cdc.gov)
  • 10 - 14 Although significant differences in month of birth compared with population based controls have been reported, they have not been for the same months. (bmj.com)
  • So I look forward to seeing a significant success, and I'm glad that we've got such a strong partner in Canada on that process. (ucsb.edu)
  • Heterogeneity across studies was significant, reflecting different contexts (population and setting) and initiative characteristics. (cochrane.org)
  • In a linked article, Lee and colleagues 1 describe a significant negative association between the consumption of non-cow's milk beverages and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels in a large, cross-sectional sample of healthy Canadian children one to six years old. (cmaj.ca)
  • The Nairobi-based daily isn't coy about Africa's growing strategic importance, leverage, and need to be wooed, writing, "The continent, whose leaders often feel they've been given short shrift by leading economies, remains crucial to global powers because of its rapidly growing population, significant natural resources, and a sizable voting bloc in the United Nations. (worldcrunch.com)
  • This rising elderly population poses a significant challenge for many countries due to lack of sufficient caregivers. (naval-technology.com)
  • Urbanization often compounds disaster risk, particularly in low-resource areas, where population density presents significant threats to health, social capital and community resilience in humanitarian emergencies (4-5). (who.int)
  • There was no significant association between dietary intake and nutritional status with school performance, but it was found that the marital status of the parents was associated with student performance, the children of married parents had a higher educational achievement than the children of separated parents. (bvsalud.org)
  • We found no significant difference between the maps created by the 2 groups and only 1 mean difference for the importance ratings for 1 of the clusters: cancer prevention experts rated partnerships as more important to program success than did tobacco control experts. (cdc.gov)
  • He adds that Finnmark is the part of Norway where the populations use the largest part of their salaries on fossil fuels. (rcinet.ca)
  • This study aims to assess inequalities in COVID-19 vaccination uptake and intent in adults 18 years or older across Canada by identifying sociodemographic factors associated with non-vaccination and low vaccination intent using data drawn from the June to August 2021 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS). (biomedcentral.com)
  • In the ten Canadian provinces, all adults 18 years or older became eligible to receive their first dose between May 10 and May 27, 2021. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This study examined the associations between driving and PA behavior and weight status among Canadian adults. (humankinetics.com)
  • Interventions that decrease driving time and increase PA participation may be important for reducing weight among Canadian adults. (humankinetics.com)
  • Human interaction cases were found in every age class: 1 calf, two sub-adults, and two adults. (vin.com)
  • In doing so, the paper answers the question whether one can predict how the migratory, double-crested cormorant population will be managed through international law, when the United States perceives the rise of the cormorant population an economic and biological threat, but where Canada views the cormorant's comeback a biodiversity success story. (animallaw.info)
  • Can we predict how the migratory, double-crested cormorant population will be managed through international law, when the United States perceives the rise of the cormorant population an economic and biological threat, but where Canada views the cormorant's comeback a biodiversity success story? (animallaw.info)
  • In an important new book, Fearful Symmetry: The Fall and Rise of Canada's Founding Values , Brian Lee Crowley persuasively argues that the future prosperity of Canada depends on a revival of marriage and the family. (theinterim.com)
  • Despite the lamentable rise in divorce rates since the Trudeau Liberals reformed Canada's divorce legislation in 1969, marital unions in Canada are still far more enduring and stable than common-law relationships. (theinterim.com)
  • Crowds attend the Canadian Tulip Festival at Commissioners Park in Ottawa, on Saturday, May 13, 2023. (cheknews.ca)
  • Perturbations to zooplankton communities were sufficient to cause measurable differences in system-level metabolism (midday dissolved oxygen concentrations) at all but the lowest test concentration. (gc.ca)
  • We can reach conclusions about specific local areas, and that is valuable, but much of our current ecological wisdom on populations and communities relies on the faulty model of non-random sampling. (ubc.ca)
  • But you will find only piecemeal short-term studies of populations, communities, and ecosystems that are affected. (ubc.ca)
  • He estimates that even if Canada were to admit one million immigrants per year for the next 50 years, the proportion of elderly people in the Canadian population could still surpass 22 per cent in 2059, up from 13.2 per cent today. (theinterim.com)
  • New York is, as even this last vote shows, overwhelmingly Democratic, and numbers among its population a greater proportion of Irish and Germans than perhaps any other American city. (marxists.org)
  • And we have a sizable proportion that travel up to Canada. (cdc.gov)
  • The CCHS is an annual cross-sectional and nationally representative survey conducted by Statistics Canada, which collects health-related information. (biomedcentral.com)
  • But the study failed to find any correlation between sodium and blood pressure (PDF). (salon.com)
  • Another study in 1985 of over 8,000 men of Japanese descent found no relationship between sodium consumption and stroke . (salon.com)
  • Design Population based study with population and family based controls and a retrospective cohort identified from death certificates. (bmj.com)
  • In this study, we examined the occurrence of and the factors associated with nonfatal overdoses within a Canadian sample of illicit opioid users not enrolled in treatment at the time of study recruitment. (cmaj.ca)
  • The study also found barriers to food access were reported in West, Central, and North Edmonton. (todayville.com)
  • To our knowledge, this is the first Canadian study to examine the effect on 25-hydroxyvitamin D - the circulating form of vitamin D - from drinking non-cow's milk beverages. (cmaj.ca)
  • A study using data from the 2004 Canadian Community Health Survey Cycle 2.2 showed a mean dietary intake of 248 IU/d of vitamin D among children one to eight years old. (cmaj.ca)
  • Instead what we found was that the 'changes practice' option was ticked on smaller studies, usually confirmatory ones and not necessarily traditionally-rigorous study designs such as randomised, controlled trials. (biomedcentral.com)
  • In this study, I used fine-scale GPS location data (1 - 4hr fix-rates) collected near Wiseman, Alaska over the summers of 2018 and 2019 to analyze the movements of 10 female Canada lynx during their offspring-rearing periods. (alaska.edu)
  • A three-year-old study by the London-based group found that torture has been reported in all but about 35 countries worldwide and that there are more than 70 countries in which torture has been reported to be widespread or persistent. (antiwar.com)
  • Investigators often develop protocols and educational materials that are sufficient for their particular research study, but are not sufficiently documented to enable others, not involved with the study, to make use of them in an intervention setting. (cdc.gov)
  • This historical cohort mortality study uses life table analysis methods to compare the age-adjusted mortality experience through 2001 of 1,672 Libby workers to that of white men in the U.S. population. (cdc.gov)
  • In another study from the North American Severe Chronic Neutropenia Tissue Repository, mutations in ELANE genes were found in 90 (55.6%) of 162 patients. (medscape.com)
  • This study examined patterns of use of flavored tobacco products in a nationally generalizable sample of Canadian students in grades 9 through 12 after the implementation of a national ban on certain flavored tobacco products. (cdc.gov)
  • 9) A study examining industry documents found that flavored tobacco had additional "consumer benefits," including increased social acceptance because of pleasing aromas and aftertaste, increased excitement (including the sharing of flavors), increased smoking enjoyment, and a "high curiosity to try factor" (4). (cdc.gov)
  • One prospective study found that youths aged 11 to 15 who recognized Newport (menthol) cigarettes in an advertisement at baseline were more likely to initiate smoking at follow-up 1 year later (after the study adjusted for pertinent covariates) (14). (cdc.gov)
  • Activity in the housing market slowed down significantly last year as the Bank of Canada started raising interest rates. (cheknews.ca)
  • Results In Canada (n = 17 874) significantly fewer patients with MS were born in November compared with controls from the population census and unaffected siblings. (bmj.com)
  • A pooled analysis of datasets from Canada, Great Britain, Denmark, and Sweden (n = 42 045) showed that significantly fewer (8.5%) people with MS were born in November and significantly more (9.1%) were born in May. (bmj.com)
  • Trends in abundance over time among populations of cladocerans, copepods, and rotifers were found to differ significantly among treatments. (gc.ca)
  • 12 , 13 Recent estimates have suggested 500 to 1000 overdose deaths per year in Canada during the past decade. (cmaj.ca)
  • The Addis Ababa center alone collects over 40,000 units from 100% voluntary blood donations and for a population of 2.5 million, achieves the self-sufficiency target of 10 units/1000 of the population. (who.int)
  • the disorder is especially common among people of French-Canadian descent. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The Canadian economy has outperformed expectations so far this year, avoiding the slowdown many forecasters were anticipating in response to the Bank of Canada's aggressive rate hikes. (cheknews.ca)
  • But Royce Mendes, managing director and head of macro strategy at Desjardins, argues that population growth is interfering with the Bank of Canada's efforts by propping up demand in the housing market. (cheknews.ca)
  • The finding has implications both for housing affordability, and the Bank of Canada's efforts to get inflation under control. (cheknews.ca)
  • In recent years, Crowley has devoted much of his research to the impending crises posed by Canada's rapidly aging population. (theinterim.com)
  • These are a few of the news reports reflecting Canada's rising invincibility from the growing Yogic Flying groups across Canada. (globalgoodnews.com)
  • Ottawa: Geological Survey of Canada. (wikipedia.org)
  • Ottawa is trying to produce a comprehensive long-term road map for transforming everything from emergency services, to infrastructure, to supply chains, so Canada can become more resilient as temperatures keep rising in the decades ahead. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Extensive research published in the world's leading scientific journals has found that the group practice of the Transcendental Meditation Sidhi Programme Yogic Flying by the square root of one per cent of a population is sufficient to reduce negative trends, including crime and violence, and to promote positive economic and social tendencies throughout society. (globalgoodnews.com)
  • John Hickner came on the PBRN scene at the 1983 North American Primary Care Research Group meeting in Banff, Canada, where he decided he "wanted to be just like those Ambulatory Sentinel Practice Network (ASPN) guys. (jabfm.org)
  • We found the Faculty often waited until they felt there was sufficient confirmatory evidence before they suggested that practice should change. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The US Fish and Wildlife Service considered non-lethal management, regional population reduction, and a possible hunting season. (animallaw.info)
  • Our aim was to examine whether national salt reduction initiatives have been effective in reducing the amount of salt consumed in those populations. (cochrane.org)
  • When we focused on the subset of seven countries whose salt reduction initiatives included multiple components and were not focused solely on educating the public, we found that more than half (four of seven) showed a decrease in salt intake from pre-intervention to post-intervention. (cochrane.org)
  • Population-level interventions in government jurisdictions for dietary sodium reduction have the potential to result in population-wide reductions in salt intake from pre-intervention to post-intervention, particularly if they are multi-component (more than one intervention activity) and incorporate intervention activities of a structural nature (e.g. food product reformulation), and particularly amongst men. (cochrane.org)
  • Each hour/week of driving was associated with a 1.6% reduction in the odds of achieving sufficient PA. (humankinetics.com)
  • However, the lead investigators of both trials say the studies actually show consistent results - both found a lower rate of stroke than expected in this population, but the confidence intervals for stroke reduction with anticoagulation overlap, suggesting there is likely some effect, albeit less than that in clinical AF. (medscape.com)
  • The most common example of home-based interventions found in the literature was personalized instruction and recommendations for reduction of asthma triggers in homes based on walk-through observations and the results of the child's allergy skin tests. (cdc.gov)
  • Results: It was found that research into the impacts of siting industrial wind turbines in a rural residential population can be challenging for a quantitative methodological approach due to factors such as low population density, obtaining a sufficient sample, and achieving statistical power and statistical significance. (scirp.org)
  • The Ecological Society of America (ESA) is a scientific, non-profit, 9000-member organization founded in 1915. (eurekalert.org)
  • Ten of these countries provided sufficient data for quantitative analysis, gathered from studies that included 64,798 participants. (cochrane.org)
  • That latter figure is more than the population of Canada and a dozen other countries. (carolinajournal.com)
  • I know Justin has to review what's happened, but we think that after that process has taken place that Canada, the United States, and the other countries that are here can establish the kind of high-standards agreement that protects labor, protects the environment, protects the kind of high-value-added goods and services that we both excel at. (ucsb.edu)
  • The effort should have started sooner, with Canada lagging many other countries in getting down to this sort of work, despite temperatures warming here at about double the global rate. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Two of the 10 countries (Canada, Switzerland) showed an increase in salt intake after the intervention, however, in both countries the only data available were from several years prior to the intervention starting. (cochrane.org)
  • We are extremely concerned that in many countries devices are being authorized for use on the population without sufficient investigation of their effects on human rights. (antiwar.com)
  • In recent years, the US government has taken steps most importantly the adoption of an export policy that requires licenses to sell or ship electroshock equipment to all countries except Canada to reduce the likelihood that devices manufactured here will be sent to countries where they are used to torture or otherwise inflict harm. (antiwar.com)
  • The vast majority live in poor countries, but clinical care resources are predominantly found in wealthy countries. (johnbartontherapy.com)
  • Asbestos-contaminated Libby vermiculite was used in loose-fill attic insulation that remains in millions of homes in the United States, Canada, and other countries. (cdc.gov)
  • First we're asking all countries to do a country readiness assessment that takes into account cold chain, health worker capacity, micro planning, initial target populations and training. (bvsalud.org)
  • As supply increases vaccines will be rolled out to cover 20% of the population of participating countries and economies, which will ensure further high-risk groups are covered. (bvsalud.org)
  • However, countries at all income levels (high, middle, and low) often lack sufficient resources and capacity to address this issue (2-4). (cdc.gov)
  • Employment levels are going to be increasing a lot, just because we're adding a lot of people to the population. (cheknews.ca)
  • Higher population growth is also increasing the size of the economic "pie" as more people find jobs and spend money on goods and services. (cheknews.ca)
  • Up to two million people-almost one quarter of the country's population-died during this period. (agbu.org)
  • The survey of 127 people revealed a quarter of respondents were unable to access sufficient food for their families and more than half did not seek help with social advocacy agencies. (todayville.com)
  • But hers is only one of thousands of cases of people who are now turning to a 'micronutrient' approach to mental health and finding a permanent solution without the harm of psychotropic drugs. (wddty.com)
  • One, for example, looked at people suffering from generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder or persistent depression over five years of treatment, and found that only 12 per cent were in complete remission. (wddty.com)
  • Although happiness may vary between people based on personal experiences, the researchers found that life satisfaction - one of the factors that determines happiness - decreases after the age of nine and increases between the ages of 70 and 96. (medicaldaily.com)
  • Researchers found that people with better oral health - those having natural teeth and more frequent dental visits - had better chances of surviving head and neck cancers. (medicaldaily.com)
  • According to International Neutropenia Registry data from 2003 covering areas with a total population of 700 million in United States, Canada, Australia, and Europe (excluding France), 731 cases were reported, with a prevalence of about 1 case per million people. (medscape.com)
  • We rarely try to define the statistical 'population' which we are studying and attempting to make inferences about with our data. (ubc.ca)
  • Data from the 2010-2011 Youth Smoking Survey, a nationally generalizable sample of Canadian students in grades 9 through 12 (n = 31,396), were used to examine tobacco product use. (cdc.gov)
  • The real imbroglio is finding enough resources and personnel to gather sufficient evidence to convict anyone. (carolinajournal.com)
  • The Canadian labour market made a remarkable recovery post-pandemic and continued to add jobs even as interest rates began climbing last year. (cheknews.ca)
  • Before the pandemic, the Canadian economy would add 10,000 to 15,000 jobs in a typical month, he said. (cheknews.ca)
  • Of 72 patients with normal ELANE genes, 45 had sufficient DNA to undergo throughput sequencing to determine prevalence of other mutations( HAX1 , - WASp , SBDS , GFI1 , and G6PC3 ). (medscape.com)
  • Contact Fraser Health or telephone 604- 587-7866 or click here and choose the 'Find a class' tab for class locations and more information. (bcwomens.ca)
  • Health inequalities related to vaccination intent were observed in different groups in Canada. (biomedcentral.com)
  • For children and youth 1 to 18 years old, the estimated average requirement was set at 400 IU/d based on the ability to achieve a serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D level above 40 nmol/L, which is thought to be sufficient for bone health. (cmaj.ca)
  • How these challenges are reflected in population health and recovery is an important question to be answered. (vin.com)
  • In your table 1, I disagree that population health is not relevant to consumers and professionals. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Smart robots that can hold simple conversations and learn people's interests have been deployed in some UK care homes after an international trial found they boosted mental health and reduced loneliness. (naval-technology.com)
  • But no country has sufficient numbers of trained mental-health-service providers. (johnbartontherapy.com)
  • Nearly one-third of the US population lacks adequate access to mental-health-care providers. (johnbartontherapy.com)
  • Lennart Reifels, Centre for Mental Health - Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia. (who.int)
  • Jeff Healey, MD, Population Health Research Institute, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, lead investigator of the ARTESIA trial, believes that the risks and benefits need to be assessed in individual patients, but there should be some patient groups that will benefit from anticoagulation treatment. (medscape.com)
  • Placing the Blood Transfusion Service (BTS) under the mainstream health care delivery system has improved efficiency of managing the blood banks to ensure the whole population has access to safe blood supply. (who.int)
  • 00:06:52 In the first phase of the roll-out sufficient doses will be provided to cover health and social care workers. (bvsalud.org)
  • Over the past two months, the J ohn Humphrey Centre for Peace and Human Rights (JHC) in partnership with the Canadian Volunteers United in Action (CANAVUA) administered an online survey. (todayville.com)
  • But a closer look at the numbers shows high population growth is partly responsible for the strong economic results, potentially propping up the housing market at a time when high interest rates are supposed to suppress demand. (cheknews.ca)
  • The results are quite divergent when looking at turnout in comparison with the population of voting age (Table 2B). (elections.ca)
  • Overall, our results show that national government initiatives have the potential to achieve population-wide reductions in salt intake, especially amongst men, and particularly if they employ more than one strategy and include structural activities such as food product reformulation (i.e. food companies putting less salt in food products). (cochrane.org)
  • The wide variation of results across the studies we found presents a challenge in interpreting the current evidence and this warrants more research to help us understand this. (cochrane.org)
  • These results indicate that latitudinal differences play a role in affecting the timing of mating, gestation, and birth in Canada lynx. (alaska.edu)
  • In 2007 EPA revisited selected studies submitted by pesticide registrants to compute ratios of doses estimated from dosimetry to those estimated from biomonitoring and found results both less than (i.e., representing under-prediction by dosimetry based models) and greater than one (i.e., representing over-prediction). (cdc.gov)
  • The decline of the cormorant came as a result of reproductive failures, which were caused by the high level of toxic chemicals, mainly DDT and PCBs, found in the freshwater throughout the regions the cormorant inhabited. (animallaw.info)
  • Rapid population growth is challenging economists' understanding of the economy as they monitor how businesses and consumers are responding to high interest rates. (cheknews.ca)
  • Hebblewhite and his colleagues found that in the low-wolf area of Bow Valley elk populations were 10 times as high as in the high-wolf area. (eurekalert.org)
  • Populations of illicit drug users are characterized by high rates of illness and death, 1 , 2 and drug overdose is a major cause of death. (cmaj.ca)
  • It's about developing high-level goals for what Canadian adaptation policy is trying to achieve. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • In some cases background levels were so high as to suggest recent high level exposure in contravention of the experimental protocol and sufficient to mask subsequent exposure in the PHED trial. (cdc.gov)
  • Compared to the wild, captive diets are unlikely to be low in protein or fat, or high in carbohydrate, suggesting these macronutrients are not driving overeating in captive populations. (bvsalud.org)
  • My Canadian friends live in the Yukon (the far north of Canada) which is too arctic and too sparsely populated to ever have a professional team I think. (rbkweb.no)
  • There have been notable examples of collaboration between cancer prevention and tobacco control organizations in the United States and Canada (5). (cdc.gov)
  • More than half of tobacco users in grades 9 through 12 in Canada use flavored tobacco, despite a national ban on certain flavored tobacco products. (cdc.gov)
  • This result does not seem very credible to us, in view of the fact that all previous studies have found that compulsory voting increases turnout and the fact that the abolition of compulsory voting in the Netherlands in the early 1970s effectively reduced turnout there by about 10 percentage points. (elections.ca)
  • Large nationally representative samples of the population and careful measurement of dietary sodium intake were strengths of several studies. (cochrane.org)
  • Finnmark is actually bigger than Denmark in size, but the population is under 75,000. (rcinet.ca)
  • Moose rely on forests for shelter, sufficient food, and cover from predators. (nation.on.ca)
  • I don't believe the AF episodes picked up on these devices constitute a sufficient stroke risk to warrant anticoagulation, given the bleeding risk. (medscape.com)
  • This result is consistent with what was found in previous research. (elections.ca)
  • These issues are similarly important for research design: early assessment will il ustrate elevated patterns of distress across the population, which is likely to diminish over time for the vast majority. (who.int)
  • Provisioned populations in wild and free-ranging settings had similar relative body mass to those in research facilities and zoos. (bvsalud.org)
  • But in doing so we neglect in many cases to specify the statistical 'population' to which our conclusions apply. (ubc.ca)
  • He points out that if current trends persist, there will only be about two workers per retiree in Canada by 2030, down from 3.25 workers per retiree today. (theinterim.com)
  • Logistic regression was used to estimate associations between driving minutes (0−209, 219−419, 420−839, 840−1679, and ≥ 1680 min/week), motor vehicle access, sufficient PA (210 min/week of moderate-intensity PA or 90 min/week of vigorous-intensity PA), and the likelihood of being 1) overweight/obese vs. healthy weight and 2) obese only vs. healthy/ overweight. (humankinetics.com)
  • Nevertheless, because the issue of video surveillance has vitally important implications for the privacy rights of all Canadians, it is my hope that my findings in this instance may also be more broadly helpful to municipal and law enforcement authorities, and to public opinion. (gc.ca)
  • They asserted at one time that Canada desired to get held of us that she might victimise us for her own ends, and then that Canada thought of us at the eleventh hour. (uvic.ca)
  • In fact, over the past 15 years, there has been an increase in this "remand population", during a time in which the crime rate has remained constant or has fallen. (legalaid.on.ca)
  • At the same time, the green line indicates the world population. (cdc.gov)
  • BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said the strong population growth is making economists like himself reconsider what a normal monthly jobs report should look like. (cheknews.ca)
  • While population growth doesn't account for all of the boost in economic activity, Porter said the rate of population growth should be somewhat taken into account when looking at growth figures. (cheknews.ca)
  • It was only during a recent stint as the Clifford Clark Visiting Economist at the federal Department of Finance that he finally came to realize that common-law relationships, single-parenthood and rampant marital breakdown are jeopardizing the economic and social well-being of Canadians. (theinterim.com)
  • That includes finding ways to reduce rather than exacerbate social inequalities as vulnerable populations face some of the worst climate risks, exploring ways to leverage public funds for private investment in adaptation and adopting ambitious nature-based solutions. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • That Armenian heritage was very important to Paylan growing up in Canada. (agbu.org)
  • D'une part, pour les chercheurs qui croient déjà en l'importance d'étudier la politique au niveau de la circonscription, ma thèse vient empiriquement fonder leur postulat à l'effet que les citoyens considèrent ce niveau comme étant important, ce qui n'était pas démontré auparavant. (umontreal.ca)
  • Just as with the UK's finding on dexamethasone in the summer this is an important scientific step for the world as vaccines will be critical in the battle against COVID-19. (bvsalud.org)
  • I don't know the impact of the global financial crisis in Canada or Australia (where some of the authors are from) but in England there is an attempt to reduce the annual healthcare budget by over 20% by 2015 (the initiative started late 2010). (biomedcentral.com)
  • This rapid increase in population has led to an examination of whether the cormorant is an actual problem or merely a perceived issue. (animallaw.info)
  • If you found this evidence helpful, please consider donating to Cochrane. (cochrane.org)
  • We found that a diverse set of factors was associated with overdose episodes. (cmaj.ca)
  • Obviously, there are no closer friends that we have than the Canadians. (ucsb.edu)
  • Populations 17 874 Canadian patients and 11 502 British patients with multiple sclerosis. (bmj.com)
  • When we examined the nine initiatives that analysed men and women separately, we found that amongst men, more than half (five of nine) showed a decrease in salt intake after the intervention. (cochrane.org)
  • This intensive intervention is for a patient population previously considered unresponsive to treatment. (cambridge.org)
  • As the Bank of Canada looks to rebalance demand and supply in the economy, economists and the central bank are generally unsure what the net effect of higher immigration will be on inflation. (cheknews.ca)
  • Also, a local park (Old Mill Park) contains the remains of a lumber mill that was built to support the fledgling village when it was founded nearly one hundred years ago. (wikipedia.org)
  • The cormorant population has gone through some interesting cycles during the past 100 years. (animallaw.info)
  • The few who survived remained in Malatya in Eastern Anatolia until the late 1960s when they moved to Istanbul for seven years, and then took turns immigrating to Canada. (agbu.org)
  • Toyota and Honda have been developing care robots for many years, but it isn't only Japan (with its famously large elderly population) that's active in the field. (naval-technology.com)
  • We're confident that he's going to be able to provide a great boost of energy and reform to the Canadian political landscape. (ucsb.edu)
  • In November 2015, the Prime Minister mandated the Minister of Justice and the Attorney General of Canada to address bail reform as part of a larger modernization effort to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the criminal justice system. (legalaid.on.ca)