Life Expectancy Of Aboriginal People

2373 Words5 Pages

Statistics Canada reports that in 2017, the predicted life expectancy for the total Canadian population is projected to be 79 years for men and 83 years for women. Among the Aboriginal Population, the Inuit have the lowest life expectancy of 64 years for men and 73 years for women. Metis and First Nations people have a life expectancy of 73-74 years for men and 78-80 years for women.( 2015-11-30) There is a five to fifteen years life expectancy difference for men and three to ten years life expectancy difference for women when comparing aboriginal and general populations. This indicates that the health of first nation’s people is well below that of the general population. The socio-economic factors of living on a reserve like poor housing,contaminated …show more content…

Saman Khan states that “Aboriginal people have a holistic view of mental wellness” (2008) and Khan illustrates that this means “wellness means being in a state of balance with family, community, and the larger environment”. (2008) This means that Aboriginal people in general value family value more than a typical European. Which is the difference of European models of psychiatric care, which is to according to Khan is to remove the person from their surroundings. (2008) If you think about an approach foreign to aboriginal peoples shouldn’t work with aboriginal people who have different values in life. The mistreatment of Aboriginal people is not the only thing that is affecting their health. Aboriginal people live in remote communities that health care cannot be received in time to fight the illness and …show more content…

Charles Camsell operated between the years of 1946- 1996 and Nanaimo Indian Hospital operated between the years of 1946 until 1967. These hospitals were mostly used to treat a disease called tuberculosis. Laurie Meijer Drees states in First Nations Narratives 1945 to 1955 that “In 1944, Aboriginal people had an infection rate of tuberculosis of 579.2 per 1000 people and the general Canadian Population had an infection rate of 47.9 per 1000 people.” (2010) These diseases were plaguing Aboriginal communities, so the government put it in their hands to fix this problem for Aboriginal people. According to Laurie Meijer Drees, she writes in the Canadian Bulletin of Medical History “That the severity of this disease was linked at the time to the ignorance and filth, poor housing and having an unbalanced diet. “ (Spring 2010). In the First Nations Narratives 1945 to 1955, journal article, Sainty Morris was one of the patients in the Nanaimo Indian Hospital, he was released from the hospital, however, and they did not bring him back to his family like they said they would. He was brought to a residential school, forced to work and he eventually ended up getting sick again and back in the hospital. By taking away these children far away from their families it displaced them from their homes, their culture and language. The Canadian government thought this hospital was a good

More about Life Expectancy Of Aboriginal People

Open Document