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Welcome
Welcome to the website of the Integrated Pan-Canadian Healthy Living
Strategy - approved by Federal, Provincial and Territorial Ministers
of Health at their annual Conference, held on October 22 and 23, 2005
in Toronto, Ontario.
The Integrated Pan-Canadian Healthy Living Strategy
The Healthy Living
Strategy provides
a conceptual framework for sustained action based on Healthy Living.
It envisions a healthy nation in which all Canadians experience the
conditions that support the attainment of good health. The goals of
the Strategy are to improve overall health outcomes and to reduce health
disparities. Grounded in a population health approach, the initial
emphasis is on healthy eating, physical activity, and their relationship
to healthy weights.
Included in the Strategy are pan-Canadian healthy living targets -
which seek to obtain a 20% increase in the proportion of Canadians who
are physically active, eat healthy and are at healthy body weights. While
ambitious, these targets can be achieved through collaborative action
and will serve to sustain momentum from the 10 percentage point, year
2010 physical activity target set by Ministers responsible and for Physical
Activity, Recreation and Sport in 2003.
While the Healthy Living goals and targets provide a standard reference
point for all sectors to measure the success of their own strategies
and interventions, to be successful, coordinated effort is required.
Proposed action has developed through intersectoral working groups, and
will be considered in the implementation of the Strategy.
The Strategy offers a means to ensure greater alignment, coordination
and direction for all sectors, and provides a forum for multiple players
to align efforts and to work collaboratively to address common risk factors.
This integration ensures that stakeholders are better and more broadly
informed, thereby facilitating greater synergy and improved identification
of opportunities across sectors. The intersectoral nature of the Healthy
Living Strategy also provides a national context and reference point
for all sectors, governments and Aboriginal organizations to measure
success of their own strategies and interventions.
The Strategy is a culmination of three years of consultation and input
from a wide variety of people and organizations across all sectors. The
following groups made the development of this Strategy possible:
- The Healthy Living
Task Group
- F-P/T Advisory Committee on Population Health and Healthy Security
- The Coordinating
Committee of the Intersectoral Healthy Living Network
- The Priorities
and Objectives Working Group
- The Public Information
Working Group
- The Research and
Surveillance Working Group
- The Intersectoral
Fund Working Group
Background / Timelines
- Each year in Canada, more than three-quarters of deaths result
from four groups of non-communicable diseases: cardiovascular, cancer,
diabetes, and respiratory. Risk factors that lead to these diseases,
such as physical inactivity and unhealthy eating, are growing, particularly
among some vulnerable groups
- In September 2002, the Federal/Provincial/Territorial (F/P/T) Ministers
of Health agreed to work together on an Integrated Pan-Canadian Healthy
Living Strategy. The goals of the Strategy are to improve overall health
outcomes and to reduce health disparities by addressing the common
preventable risk factors - namely physical inactivity and unhealthy
eating.. The Strategy aims at targeting all Canadians with a special
focus on children and youth, Aboriginal peoples and other vulnerable
groups.
- A consultation process was undertaken throughout 2003 and included:
- Four pre-consultation meetings,
- Nine Strategic Roundtables,
- An online consultation workbook,
- A national level Healthy Living Symposium, and
- Further meetings with key representative stakeholder groups.
- In September, 2003 the F/P/T Ministers of Health endorsed the Healthy
Living Strategy Framework and five action items, which included:
- Creation of an Intersectoral Healthy Living Network;
- Action in the areas of research, surveillance, and best practices;
- Exploration of options and models for an Intersectoral Fund;
- Exploration of options for a communications/health information
strategy; and,
- Further dialogue with Aboriginal stakeholders.
- In September 2004, First Ministers highlighted the importance of
efforts to address prevention, promotion and public health, and the
sustainability of the health system. First Ministers committed to working
across sectors through the Strategy's framework on initiatives
such as Healthy Schools (schools are one of the key settings of the
framework to address concerns related to healthy living among Canadian
children and youth).
- The Coordinating Committee of the Intersectoral Healthy Living Network
was launched September 22 - 24, 2004. It is being lead by co-chairs
representing Federal /Provincial /Territorial governments and the non-profit
sector. It will act as an engine to move the Healthy Living agenda
forward and ensure the guiding principles of the Network and Strategy
are upheld.
- Under the guidance of the Coordinating Committee, four Working Groups
were established, composed of members from Federal /Provincial /Territorial
networks, the private sector and non-profit organizations. The four
groups and their functions are as follows:
- Social Marketing / Public Information Working Group - Developing
a social marketing campaign with consistent, universal and targeted
messaging on Healthy Living.
- Priorities and Objectives Working Group - Developing specific
objectives, targets, performance indicators and evaluation frameworks
for the Strategy.
- Research and Surveillance Working Group - Developing an
integrated research agenda and identifying best practice and surveillance
activities for the Strategy.
- Intersectoral Fund Working Group - Exploring options and
models for an Intersectoral Fund.
- The second meeting of the Coordinating Committee for the Intersectoral
Healthy Living Network (IHLN) took place in Ottawa on April 7 and 8,
2005. The purpose of this meeting was to provide members with the opportunity
to contribute to specific elements of the Healthy Living Strategy.
- Federal, Provincial and Territorial Ministers of Health approved
the Integrated Pan-Canadian Healthy Living Strategy at their annual
Conference, held on October 22 and 23, 2005 in Toronto, Ontario.
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