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SITE MAP.....................................................................Privacy Statement Canadian Aboriginal Statistics
Population: Registered Indian Population
by Sex and Residence 2004,
First Nations and Northern Statistics Section,
Corporate Information, Management Directorate,
Information Management Branch Registered Indian Population, by Type of Residence, Age Groups and Sex, December 31, 2004 Note: "On reserve" includes on Crown land. Total Males and Females---- Total Off Reserve -----Total On Reserve --
Total Males and Females---- Total Off Reserve -----Total On Reserve -- ..........100% - 733,626.......................... 43% - 318,204 .......................57% - 415,422 Mortalitity Health Canada: First Nations Comparable Health Indicators, Source: Health Canada, 1996, Trends in First Nations Mortality, 1979 to 1993, January 2005Catalogue no. 34-79/1993E; Health Canada, First Nations and Inuit Health Branch in-house statistics.. Online article 11 Jan. 2006 <http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/pubs/gen/2005-01_health-sante_indicat/index_e.html#infant_mor> Infant mortality: - - In 2000, the infant mortality rate for First Nations was 6.4 deaths per 1,000 live births - 22% higher than the 2001 Canadian rate of 5.2. The First Nations rate has been falling steadily since 1979, when it was 27.6 deaths per 1,000 live births. Life expectancy for overall population: In 2000, life expectancy at birth for the Registered Indian population was estimated at 68.9 years for males and 76.6 years for females. This reflects differences of 8.1 years and 5.5 years, respectively, from the 2001 Canadian population's life expectancies. Life Expectancy for First Nations is calculated by Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, using data from the Indian Register. Potential years of life lost due to suicide or unintentional injury: Potential years of life lost (PYLL) due to suicide is the number of years of life "lost" from a suicide death, when a person dies "prematurely" - defined as dying before age 75. A suicide at age 25, for example, has lost 50 potential years of life. The First Nations rates include the off-reserve populations for British Columbia and Alberta. At 2571.7 PYLL per 100,000 population, unintentional injuries are one of the largest contributors to premature mortality among First Nations. This figure is almost four and a half times higher than the 2001 Canadian rate. For both unintentional injuries and suicide, males suffer a greater proportion of premature mortality than females. Health Statistics: According to the Canadian Comparable Health Indicators Report of November 2004 (1) , there are areas for improvement as it relates to the health of Aboriginal people in Canada. Mainly that:
(1) - Health Canada, Healthy Canadians: A Federal Report on Comparable Health Indicators 2004, online article, 9 Jan. 2006. <http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/media/nr-cp/2004/2004_60bk3_e.html>
- Health Canada, Healthy Canadians: A Federal Report on Comparable Health Indicators 2004, online article, 9 Jan. 2006. <http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/media/nr-cp/2004/2004_60bk4_e.html> Low birth weight: Source: Health Canada, First Nations and Inuit Health Branch in-house statistics. Low birth weight is defined here as the proportion of all live births under 2,500 grams, including those under 500 grams. Figures include the off-reserve populations for British Columbia and Alberta. Of all reported First Nations births in 2000,4.7% were classified as low birth weight. This compares favourably with the 2001 Canadian rate of 5.5%. Previous First Nations and InuitHealth Branch data (1989 to 1993) on low birth weight have shown variable rates (from 3% to 5%, approximately), with some indication of an increasing trend towards heavier babies in recent years .Incidence rate for tuberculosis: Source: Health Canada, 2001, Tuberculosis in First Nations Communities, 1999, Ottawa. In 2000, the age standardized rate of tuberculosis in First Nations was 34.0 cases per 100,000 population.
Rate standardized to 1996 Canadian population.
Rate calculation does not include Quebec figures. Chlamydia: The 2000 reported rate of genital chlamydia was very high in the First Nations population, at 1,071.5 cases per 100,000 population. This is about six times higher than the Canadian rate (178.9 per 100,000 population in 2001). First Nations females suffer disproportional rates of chalmydia infection than males. At a rate of 6,572.2 cases per 100,000 population, females aged 15 to 24 years accounted for 53.5% of all First Nations cases where age and sex were recorded.
Substance Abuse:
Health Canada: Literature Review, Evaluation Strategies in Aboriginal Substance Abuse Programs: A Discussion Online Article 11 Jan. 2006, < http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fnih-spni/pubs/ads/literary_examen_review/rev_rech_1_e.html#I> 1. Alcohol Use: Alcohol consumption has been identified as a major problem in Aboriginal communities, both through research surveys and during the RCAP consultation process. A survey conducted in 57 First Nations communities in Manitoba in 1984-85 used a rating scale from "no problem" to "major problem" to rate mental health problems. Eighty-six percent of the communities rated alcohol abuse as a major or serious problem. Solvent abuse was reported as a major problem in 7% of these communities. An indication of the magnitude of social dysfunction in these communities was suggested by the high percentage of communities reporting other problems as a concern: anxiety (72% a major concern), general violence (70% major), spousal abuse (69% serious or major) and child abuse (51% serious or major).[Rogers, D.D and N. Abas. 1988. "A survey of native mental health needs in Manitoba." Arctic Medical Research, Vol 47(suppl 1), pp. 576-80] The results of the Manitoba survey was substantiated by the 1991 Aboriginal Peoples Survey which found that 73% of Aboriginal persons on reserves and settlements thought that alcohol abuse was a problem in their community. As well, family violence was a problem in 44%, drug abuse in 59% and suicide in 35% of these responses.[Statistics Canada. 1993. Language, Health and Lifestyle Issues: 1991 Aboriginal Peoples Survey, catalogue number 89-533. (Ottawa:Statistics Canada)] An Ontario study using 1985-86 data quantified alcohol consumption in counties, and compared those counties with reserves to those without reserves.[Adrian, M., N. Payne, and R.T. Williams. 1991. "Estimating the effect of native Indian population on county alcohol consumption: The example of Ontario." International Journal of the Addictions. Vol 2, No. 5A and 6A, page 731-65] Counties with reserves had an increased alcohol consumption rate compared to the remaining counties. Using regression analysis, the presence of reserves explained 25% of the variation in alcohol consumption in the province. A further 35% of the variation was explained when adding in socio-economic and demographic variables. There was a direct relationship between decreasing income level and alcohol consumption, as every extra $1,000 in income tax per return was correlated with a 0.3 litre reduction in absolute alcohol consumption. The APS questioned Aboriginal people about their consumption of alcohol, and has provided interesting results, in that a high usage of alcohol was not reported. The survey which is based on self-reports has shown that a lower proportion of Aboriginal people than Canadians generally drink daily (2% Aboriginal versus 3% other Canadians) or weekly (35% Aboriginal versus 46% other Canadians). As well, abstinence is almost twice as common among Aboriginal people (15% Aboriginal versus 8% Canadian). Furthermore, the APS showed that alcohol consumption is highest among those with the most education and income, among men, and in the age groups younger than 55 years of age.[Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, 1996. Final Report: Volume III Gathering Strength, page 159 - 60 (Table 3.10)] Similar results in which abstinence was more common among Aboriginal people was seen in self-report surveys in the Yukon [Yukon Government, 1991. Yukon Alcohol and Drug Survey. Volume 1: Technical Report. (Whitehorse: Yukon Government Executive Council Office, Bureau of Statistics)] and in Cree communities in northern Quebec.[Santé Québec. 1994. A Health Profile of the Cree. Report of the Santé Québec Survey of the James Bay Cree, ed. Carole Daveluy et al. (Montreal: Santé Québec)] These latter two research initiatives also found that among persons who consume alcohol, heavy drinking was more common than moderate consumption. In 1984, the Federation of Saskatchewan Indians conducted a survey of alcohol and drug use among 898 adults and 385 high school adolescents, who lived either on or off reserve.[Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations. 1984. Alcohol and Drug Abuse Among Treaty Indians in Saskatchewan: Needs Assessment and Recommendations for Change] In total, 39 of 68 bands across the province were surveyed. Among the adult population, 83.9% had used alcohol in the past year, and 34.6% reported regular drinking. Binge, chronic or problem drinking was reported by 37.7%. In the adolescent population, although the usage of alcohol in the past year was high (74.2%), only half as many reported regular drinking as with the adult population (14.8%) and alcohol abuse, as measured by binge, chronic or problem drinking was seen in 11.4% of these self reports. The Northwest Territories Health Promotion Survey in 1989 which provided a grouping of Inuit and Dene respondents reported a prevalence of non-drinkers and heavy drinkers in the Aboriginal population.[Health and Welfare Canada. 1989. Health Promotion in the Northwest Territories. (Ottawa: Health and Welfare Canada)] This was confirmed in the 1996 edition of the survey, as only 60.1% of NWT Aboriginal persons stated that they had drank alcohol in the past year (compared to 85.2% among non-Aboriginal persons) and heavy drinking was reported in 33.0% of Aboriginal persons (compared to 16.7% in the non-Aboriginal population).[Northwest Territories Bureau of Statistics. 1996. 1996 NWT Alcohol and Drug Survey: Rates of use for alcohol, other drugs and tobacco. Report #1] In a similar vein, the APS found that within the Aboriginal sub-groups, Inuit were more likely to report abstinence than the Indian or Metis groups. Inuit also differed from the Indian and Metis in that they most often reported that alcohol abuse was not a problem in their communities.[Statistics Canada. 1993. Language, Health and Lifestyle Issue] Although the reason for the discrepancies between the level of concern expressed about alcohol abuse and the self-reporting of consumption that has been reported in this section is unknown, possible explanations could include drug education and treatment program success, community norms which preclude substance abuse or conversely, an under reporting of consumption by respondents. 2. Drug Use: There is little available information on the use of prescription or illicit drugs by Aboriginal people. As will be covered below under treatment centres, there appears to be an increasing use of narcotics and prescription drugs in clients admitted into treatment, however use of these substances has historically been secondary to alcohol consumption. A comprehensive and large survey on Aboriginal drug abuse was conducted in Manitoba and comprised Aboriginal (Indian and Metis residents off reserve) and non-Aboriginal adolescents.[Gfellner, B.M and J.D. Hundleby. 1995. "Patterns of drug use among native and white adolescents: 1990-1993." Canadian Journal of Public Health, March-April, pp. 95-97] The study accumulated data on four consecutive years from 1990 to 1993. In the fourteen (nonalcohol) drug groupings which were investigated, the Aboriginal group had consistently higher usage rates (expressed as percentages). In particular, these increased rates were statistically significant in either three or all four years for marijuana, non-medical tranquilizers, non-medical barbiturates, LSD, PCP, other hallucinogens and crack. For both LSD and marijuana, the four year Aboriginal average utilization was over three times higher than the corresponding non- Aboriginal utilization. The FSIN study in 1984 also looked at the issue of drug abuse among the adult and adolescent First Nations population in Saskatchewan.[Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations. 1984. Alcohol and Drug Abuse Among Treaty Indians in Saskatchewan: Needs Assessment and Recommendations for Change] In the adult population, 57.3% reported using drugs in the past year, and 26.5% used them regularly. Interestingly, the adolescent results of drug use were similar with 57.3% and 19.1% usage respectively. Drug abuse was measured at 20.7% in the adult population and 8.7% in among the youth. Street drugs and over-the counter drugs were the first and second most often used substances in both groups. Multiple drug use, as well as combined alcohol and drug use, was common. Overall, considering both alcohol and drug abuse (and cross abuse), the study concluded that chronic abuse levels (regular consumption of excessive amounts of alcohol or drugs) were 15% for the adult group and 3% for the adolescents. 3. Solvent Use: A large Canadian study on solvent abuse in Aboriginal children and youth involved 2,850 persons from 25 Manitoba Aboriginal communities and 70 Algonquin high schools from Quebec.[Unpublished report by Layne, N. 1987. Solvent use/abuse Among the Canadian Registered Indian and Inuit Population. An Overview Paper. National Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Program] Overall, 20% of Manitoba children and 15% of Quebec youth reported that they had tried solvent sniffing, with 6% of the Manitoba group and 9% of the Quebec group revealing that they had used solvents past the experimentation phase. A regular use of solvents was reported by 3% of Manitoba children and 2% of Quebec adolescents. The median age of solvent users averaged 12-13 years, in Manitoba however, children as young as 4-8 years old reported sniffing. The Manitoba study which reported drug abuse in Manitoba Metis and Indian adolescents also investigated solvent abuse. Glue sniffing was higher among the Aboriginal group compared to the non-Aboriginal groups for each of the four years (1990-1993), and glue sniffing was similarly higher in the Aboriginal group for three of the four years.[Gfellner, B.M and J.D. Hundleby. 1995. "Patterns of drug use among native and white adolescents: 1990-1993." Canadian Journal of Public Health, March-April, pp. 95-97] The 1984 FSIN study on substance abuse among First Nations in Saskatchewan reported that 18.8% of adolescents in the survey had used solvents in the previous year. Surprisingly, 11.3% of the adult population also reported using some type of solvent.[Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations. 1984. Alcohol and Drug Abuse Among Treaty Indians in Saskatchewan: Needs Assessment and Recommendations for Change] In the 1996 NWT survey which asked about a history of solvent use (the survey population was 15 years and older, therefore the survey asked about past behavior including childhood use), the percentage of Aboriginal people who had used solvents was particularly high, at 19.0% (some 24 times the national rate) compared to 1.7% among non-Aboriginal people.[Northwest Territories Bureau of Statistics. 1996. 1996 NWT Alcohol and Drug Survey: Rates of use for alcohol, other drugs and tobacco. Report #1] Profile of Solvent Users: A 1985 study by the National Association of Friendship Centres researched substance abuse among urban Aboriginal youth.[National Association of Friendship Centres. 1985. Urban Research Project, Phase I and II, Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse] The study found that almost half of solvent users began sniffing solvents when they were 4 to 11 years old. In order of prevalence, the factors reported to have an association with sniffing included alcohol and drug abuse in the home, family conflict, unemployment, malnutrition or neglect, financial hardship in the home and physical abuse. Solvent abusers have been described as being more often boys than girls (however female solvent abuse is increasing) who have started abusing at around 9-10 years (the age at onset of use appears to be decreasing), and who have come from dysfunctional families with a history of addiction, and are located in isolated communities. Furthermore, solvent abusers often suffer poor grades or drop out of school, and unemployment, illiteracy, poor housing and a history of physical/emotional/sexual abuse is associated with their sniffing.[Scott, Kim. n.d. Indigenous Canadians: Substance Abuse Profile 1995. Prepared for the Kisht Anaquot Health Research and Program Development, for the National Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Program] The 1994 First Nations and Inuit Community Solvent Abuse Survey questioned solvent abusers in Aboriginal communities. The survey found that most youth respondents began to abuse solvents when they were 4 to 11 years old (49.3%) or 12 to 15 years old (45%). These solvent abusing youth reported experiencing a number of difficulties in their lives. About half faced neglect or malnutrition (43.5%), unemployment (51.7%) and financial hardships (42.3%) at home. About two-thirds were experiencing family conflict (63.5%) or alcohol and drug abuse (67.2)%. Over three quarters of the youth respondents (78.4%) also reported using alcohol.[Kaweionnehta Human Resource Group. n.d. First Nations and Inuit Community Solvent Abuse Survey - Updated July 1994] 4. Urban Substance Abuse: There is even less information available on the rates of substance abuse among urban Aboriginal people compared to that obtained for First Nations communities. The 1985 study by the National Association of Friendship Centres found that the majority of centres did not have the capability to maintain records on substance abuse of clients as their clients were visiting the centre for other reasons (employment, housing, education). However 56 of 84 participating centres in the study did complete a questionnaire on types and levels of abuse among their communities. These respondents described severe levels of abuse among all age and target groups, with alcohol being the primary substance. Severe was classified using the NNADAP definition of "abuse is causing individuals to lose the ability to deal with the basic concerns of living - serious problems are occurring in family life, at work, with the law, etc." [National Association of Friendship Centres. 1985. Urban Research Project, Phase I and II, Alcohol, Drug and Solvent Abuse., page 34] Substance abuse was reported by centres among the following groups in their communities as follows:
5. Mortality: The most common indicator from which to indirectly measure alcohol and other substance abuse is the profile of mortality among First Nations people. Medical Services Branch of Health Canada collects annual data on deaths of Registered Indians by age, gender and cause. Although the methods of data collection and populations surveyed vary among the regions of MSB which limit inter-regional analysis, valuable information is available on national statistics and trends in First Nations mortality. [The information on mortality from the MSB database described in this section is extracted from: Lemchuk-Favel, Laurel. 1993. Trends in First Nations Mortality 1979 - 1983., Health Canada. (Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services)] An analysis of overall First Nations mortality in the MSB database from 1979 - 1993 has shown:
The prevalence of violent death in First Nations communities is regarded as one of the most visible expressions of substance abuse in this population, and is supported by statistical correlations. [Yukon Government, 1991. Yukon Alcohol and Drug Survey. Volume 1: Technical Report. (Whitehorse: Yukon Government Executive Council Office, Bureau of Statistics)] The 15 year analysis of MSB data has shown [Single, E., L. Robson and K. Scott. 1996. Morbidity and Mortality Related to Alcohol, Tobacco and Illicit Drug Use Among Indigenous People in Canada. Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse for the National Native and Alcohol Drug Abuse Program]:
A detailed analysis of injury and poisoning deaths has shown:
A recent study estimated the total number of deaths and hospitalization attributable to alcohol, tobacco and illicit drugs among Canada's Aboriginal population. [Fiddler, S. 1985. Suicides, Violent and Accidental Deaths Among Treaty Indians in Saskatchewan: Analysis and Recommendations for Change. (Regina: Federation of Saskatchewan Indians)]. The methodology for this estimation included information on the relative risk of disease associated with different levels of consumption combined with prevalence data from national surveys which was then adjusted with Aboriginal-specific information on relative risk and prevalence of alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug diseases and causes of death, and age structure of the population. It is estimated that in 1992 there were 299 deaths (205 males and 94 females) due to alcohol and 48 deaths (40 males and 8 females) due to illicit drugs among Aboriginal people in Canada. When translated to rates, these represent considerably higher rates than that seen in the general Canadian population. For alcohol related deaths, the mortality rate was estimated to be 43.7 deaths per 100,000 for Aboriginal people compared to 23.6 for the general population. The rate of death due to illicit drugs was estimated to be over twice as great: 7.0 deaths per 100,000 in the Aboriginal population compared to 2.6 in the general population. An study of violent death in Saskatchewan for the years 1978-1982 found that violent death accounted for 40% of all Registered Indian deaths.[Szabo, E.L. 1990. A Study of Mortality Related to Alcohol Use among the Status Indian Population of Saskatchewan. Presented at the 8th International Congress on Circumpolar Health, Whitehorse, Yukon, May 20-25] Extreme variability was seen in the rates from different geographic areas, with northern groups experiencing far greater mortality rates due to violence than the less isolated southern areas. Another Saskatchewan study on alcohol use among the Registered Indian population for the years 1985-1987 which was based on the injury and poisoning data from the Medical Services Branch database found that alcohol use was implicated in 92% of motor vehicle accidents, 46% of suicides in the 15-34 age group, 38% of homicide perpetrators, 50% of fire and drowning deaths, 80% of exposure deaths and 48% of deaths in the "other" category. [Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, 1996. Final Report: Volume III Gathering Strength,, pages 132 and 323 (endnote 62)] Alcohol consumption during pregnancy can result in fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), and the less severe fetal alcohol effect (FAE). The spectrum of effects of FAS include prenatal or post natal growth retardation, central nervous system abnormalities and facial abnormalities. FAE, which is a milder expression of alcohol damage to the fetus, affects mainly the neurological system, and is seen through hyperactivity, behavioral problems, learning disabilities and social dysfunction. Prenatal exposure to alcohol is now thought to be the leading cause of birth defects and intellectual disability in North America. As well, this prenatal exposure may cause subtle deficits in judgement and reasoning abilities in people with apparently normal intelligence.[Robinson, G.C., R.W. Armstrong, I. Brendle-Moczuk and C.A. Loock. 1992. "Knowledge of fetal alcohol syndrome among native Indians" Canadian Journal of Public Health, Vol 83, No. 5, pp. 337-338] The increasing use of alcohol by women of child bearing age has been attributed to the changing role of women in society, the consequences of social and cultural breakdown of Aboriginal people and marketing strategies targeted at alcohol consumption.[Burd, L. and M.E. Moffatt. 1994. "Epidemiology of fetal alcohol syndrome in American Indians, Alaskan Natives and Canadian Aboriginal Peoples: A Review of the Literature." Public Health Reports. Vol 109, No. 5, pp .688-693] Studies on FAS, and particularly on Aboriginal people are few, and even less are regarded as reliable. Nevertheless, a very high prevalence has been reported in some Aboriginal communities, and it is widely accepted that FAS and FAE among Aboriginal children in some regions are seen at rates above that seen in North American children generally. A review of 10 studies investigating the epidemiology of FAS among American Indians, Alaskan natives and Aboriginal peoples of Canada found that the prevalence of FAS in the Indigenous groups was consistently high across the 10 studies. The reviewer cautioned that the studies had significant restrictions which limited both the confidence in the rates reported and the generalizability of the findings.[Single, E., L. Robson and K. Scott. 1996. Morbidity and Mortality Related to Alcohol, Tobacco and Illicit Drug Use Among Indigenous People in Canada. Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse for the National Native and Alcohol Drug Abuse Program, Table 13] 7. Morbidity and Treatment: The above study by Single et al which estimated mortality related to alcohol and illicit drug use also provided estimates of rates of hospitalization due to these activities.[Adrian, M. n.d. Statistics on Alcohol and Drug Use in Canada and other Countries, Volume 1: Statistics on Alcohol Use - Data Available by 1988. (Toronto: Addiction Research Foundation)] Regarding alcohol use, Aboriginal persons in 1992 were hospitalized at a rate of 5.1 admissions/1,000 population compared to a rate of 3.0 for the Canadian population. Rates of admissions as a result of illicit drug use were 0.6 admissions per 1,000 population in the Aboriginal population and 0.2 in the Canadian population. A study of utilization of Ontario alcohol and drug treatment centres by Aboriginal people in 1985- 86 found that their utilization was six times higher than what would have been predicted based on the number of Aboriginal persons in the province and equal per capita use between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people.[Scott, Kim. 1994. "Substance abuse among Indigenous Canadians." In Aboriginal Substance Abuse: Research Issues - Proceedings of a Joint Research Advisory Meeting. Edited by D. McKenzie. Canadian Centre for Substance Abuse (Ottawa)] The National Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Program (NNADAP) provides prevention and treatment services to First Nations persons living on reserves. These are residential facilities operating on a psychotherapeutic model, incorporating intensive, non-medical, culturally sensitive programming lasting 4 to 6 weeks. These centres utilize a treatment activity reporting system (TARS). A review of data and published information from TARS has provided the following:[Scott, Kim. n.d. Indigenous Canadians: Substance Abuse Profile 1995. Prepared for the Kisht Anaquot Health Research and Program Development, for the National Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Program.]
A more recent review of TARS data for 1994-1995 has confirmed the above and also found: [Medical Services Branch Steering Committee on Native Mental Health. 1991. Statistical Profile on Native Mental Health: Background report #1. (Ottawa: Health Canada)]
8. Incarceration: Aboriginal persons are over represented in penal institutions in all regions of Canada when compared to their percentage in the Canadian population. In 1988-1989, a survey of Aboriginal admissions to provincial and federal custody verified this statement, and found the highest rates of incarceration in the north and in the prairie regions.[Correctional Service of Canada. 1994. Native Offender Substance Abuse Assessment: The Computerized Lifestyle Assessment Instrument. Correctional Research and Development. (Ottawa: Correctional Service of Canada)] In the Northwest Territories, these high rates (86 and 96% for provincial and federal custody respectively) are somewhat balanced by the percentages of Aboriginal people in the general population (63%), however in the Yukon, although there are 28% of Aboriginal people in the population, in federal and provincial custody, the proportion is 50 and 63% respectively. The Saskatchewan Aboriginal population presents an even more dramatic difference: 10% in the population, compared to 52-65% in federal and provincial custody respectively. In a survey by the Correctional Services of Canada on all offenders at intake, it was found that approximately 75% of Aboriginal offenders were assessed with alcohol problems of sufficient severity to warrant some level of treatment intervention. Over half of this population (53%) also evidenced a drug problem.[Health Canada 1991. Agenda for First Nations and Inuit Mental Health. Report of the Steering Committee on First Nations and Inuit Mental Health. (Ottawa: Health Canada)] 9. Homicide: Homicide can also demonstrate social pathology and thus may be used as another indirect indicator of the effects of substance abuse. In 1988, the proportion of Aboriginal peoples being charged with murder was 16.0 per 100,000, ten-fold higher than the Canadian population. Aboriginal persons were also 8 times more likely to die as homicide victims than other Canadians.[Jorgenson, Ron. 1987. Trust the Process: Naturalistic Evaluation. Nechi Institute]
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