Category: Maternal and Newborn Health

Issues related to prenatal and newborn health and health promotion.

  • Best Start Resource Centre annual conference (Toronto)

    Best Start: Ontario’s Maternal, Newborn and Child Development Resource Centre (BSRC) is holding their annual conference Feb 23-25/09 in Toronto. Of interest to immigrantchildren.ca readers, these two workshops (descriptions taken from the conference website):

    Giving Birth in a New Land, with Saleha Bismilla, Toronto Public Health

    The changing demographics of Ontario have an impact for service providers such as nurses, physicians, midwives, and community workers who work in reproductive health. Women from diverse cultural backgrounds may have different needs and expectations when accessing health services. Service providers should be sensitive to these needs and can help women and their partners to prepare for having a baby in Ontario. 

    Child Language Development in Bilingual or Multilingual Environments, with Laurie-Ann Staniforth, First Words

    This concurrent session will provide an overview of normal child language development in bilingual or multilingual environments. Bilingualism in the context of language delay or disorder will also be discussed. This session will include practical considerations for service providers such as issues to consider and how to work with and support bi- and multilingual children and families.


  • TVOs Big Ideas on immigration

    TVOntario‘s Big Ideas show this weekend features Salman Ahktar, author of Immigration and Identity: Turmoil, Treatment and Transformation. Ahktar’s book, I’m told, includes much discussion on immigrant children and children of immigrants. After airing, the show uploads podcasts on its site.

  • Chronic disease among immigrants: Call for evaluations

    As posted on CLICK4HP:

    Evaluation reports/papers of chronic disease prevention and control programs/interventions targeted to immigrants and ethnocultural groups are being requested to contribute to the Canadian Public Health Agency, Chronic Disease and Prevention Best Practices Portal. Published as well as unpublished evaluations of both Canadian and international programs are welcome. Programs that may influence chronic disease are also of interest. Questions/information: Henna Aslam – henna.aslam@utoronto.ca.
  • Attending to the health of immigrant children

    aboutkidshealth.ca, the online Q&A site from the Hospital for Sick Children, posted a piece about immigrant children’s health on August 8/08. An excerpt:

    “Immigrant children may arrive with health problems that went untreated in their native country; they may speak neither English nor French; they may have different beliefs about health and illness and different expectations of the health system. Even the climate may be completely unfamiliar. For refugees, often fleeing hunger, violence, and chaos in their home countries, the challenges are still greater.

    “After they arrive in Canada, immigrant children may find themselves living in an area with high crime rates, poor public transportation, and few stores that sell familiar, affordable food. Their parents may have to work long hours for low pay, sometimes at more than one job, meaning less time spent together as a family. The family must adjust to a new school system and find health care providers they trust. In all cases, there is an intense period of adjustment in their new country during which less than optimal attention may be paid to routine health issues.

    “Despite these challenges, many immigrant children adapt and do well. But still, too often, immigrant children’s needs are not adequately met”.

    The piece is co-authored by Denis Daneman, MB, BCh, FRCP(C) and Elizabeth Lee Ford-Jones, MD, FRCP(C).

  • Sick Kids Hospital paediatric health conference

    Toronto-based Hospital for Sick Children is holding a conference on September 19th entitled Everyday Diversity: Better Paediatric Health Outcomes. Conference goals are to: increase awareness of diversity within a paediatric health care setting; identify issues that influence practice and patient outcomes; develop strategies to address diversity and enhance the quality of care for children.
    A call for posters has been issued. Poster themes are to address diversity and its influence on relations, practice and patient outcomes in relation to:

    Clinical excellence and strategies promoting: a healthy work environment; family centered care
    Education innovations addressing patient and family or staff needs
    Research innovations addressing vulnerable patient populations and staff needs
    Health policy imperatives that build capacity: for health HR; for patients and family health; for the broader health care system.

    Send 250 word maximum abstract to linda.quintal@sickkids.ca. Deadline is August 19.

  • Multi-lingual resource sheets on abuse in pregnancy

    The Perinatal Partnership Program of Eastern and Southeastern Ontario (with funding from the Ontario government and support from the Best Start Resource Centre) have released a series of information sheets for women on abuse in pregnancy. Sheets have been translated and culturally adapted and are available in: Arabic, Chinese (traditional and simplified), Cree – N Dialect, English, French, Punjabi, Severn Ojibwe, Somali, and Spanish.

  • Canadian Public Health Association conference: Sessions on immigrant children and families

    The Canadian Public Health Association is holding its annual conference this year in Halifax, Nova Scotia from June 1-4. Sessions on or related to immigrant children and families include:

    Immigrant and Migrant Health – I

    Development of a framework to examine the determinants of health among Canadian immigrants, with Marie DesMeules
    Studying intra-metropolitan health disparities in Canada: how and why globalization matters, with Ted Schrecker
    Migration, Health and equity issues for Canada in the context of global migration, with Janet Hatcher Roberts
    Using administrative data to analyze the health experience of African Nova Scotians, with Mikiko Terashima

    Focus on Children’s Health

    Children immigrants’ risk of physical inactivity according to family origin and length of residency, with Mathieu Bélanger

    Immigrant and Migrant Health – II

    Meanings of health, illness and help-seeking strategies among punjabi-speaking immigrants, with Beatrice McDonough
    Migration and perinatal health surveillance: An international DELPHI survey, with Anita Gagnon
    Migration to industrialized countries and perinatal health: A systematic review, with Anita Gagnon
    Childbearing migrant women and equal access to research participation, with Amy Low
    For more information, see the PDF program.

  • Gender, families and Latino immigration in Oregon, USA

    Latino children make up about 15 % of the population under age 18 in the US state of Oregon. Latino births account for 20 % of the total births in Oregon.

    A conference sponsored by the University of Oregon, on Gender, Families and Latino Immigration in Oregon will be held this upcoming week, May 22-23/08 in Eugene, Oregon. The conference is free and open to the public.
    The conference features panels on a range of topics of interest to the Early Childhood Working Group, including: education, changes in family dynamics, immigrant indigenous women’s organizing. It also will include a community forum on Myths and Facts about Immigration: Gender, Youth, and Family Perspectives, a plenary session on Building Alliances for Immigrant Rights, and a closing keynote panel on Lessons on Gender and Families Issues among Latino Immigrant Populations in California and Oregon.

  • Multilingual parent resource sheets from welcomehere.ca

    welcomehere.ca, (see blog entry here March 19/08), has published a series of parent resource sheets in ten languages, including: Arabic, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Hindi, Punjabi, Somali, Spanish, Tagalog, Tamil and Vietnamese.
    Topics include: Building active habits, Family routines, Parents at play, Promoting positive behaviour, and Supporting children’s play.
    welcomehere.ca is a collaboration of the Canadian Association of Family Resource Programs and settlement agencies across Canada.

  • Call for presentations: Diversity and well-being conference, Calgary

    The Calgary Health Region has issued a call for presentations for its 5th annual Diversity and Wellbeing Conference. This year’s theme is The Diverse Faces of Mental Health and will be held Nov 20-21/08 at Mount Royal College in Calgary Alberta.
    The conference brings together health researchers, practitioners, policy makers and community members/organizations to share best practices in addressing the mental health needs of individuals, families and communities. The conference is an ideal place to raise issues of immigrant/refugee children and families and acknowledge/address the conditions under which they emigrate to Canada.
    Topics welcome include:

    • innovations in mental health services to populations
    • mental health needs of diverse communities
    • the role of spirituality in mental health
    • the implications of current health policies and practices in diverse communities
    • incorporating the lived experiences of diverse populations in research and decision making.

    Deadline for submission is June 27th 2008.

    Contact diversity.services@calgaryhealthregion.ca for a copy of the application form.