Pension and Wealth Research Paper Series
The papers in this series are based on the Survey of Financial Security which is a study of what families own (assets) and what they owe (debts).
The papers in this series are based on the Survey of Financial Security which is a study of what families own (assets) and what they owe (debts).
This include statistics on incidence and mortality of the most common types of cancer by age, sex, time period and province for the period from 1987 to present. PDF format.
Contains statistics related to health, community care, hospital care, pharmaceutical care and utilization, primary health, spending in the health care system and workforce in the health care system. Formats vary.
The Public Health Infobase website toolkit is a series of Internet based tools to help visualize, analyze, interpret and disseminate health indicator data for chronic disease, injury, mental health, and child/maternal health.
The Community Information Database is a free web resource developed to provide communities, researchers, and governments with access to consistent and reliable socio-economic and demographic data and information for all communities across Canada.
This profile features community-level data from a number of sources including Statistics Canada's health surveys, administrative data, and the census of population.
This product presents comparable time-series data for a range of health indicators from a number of sources including the Canadian Community Health Survey, Vital Statistics, and Canadian Cancer Registry.
This study matches Canadian and US manufacturing industries at the 2-digit SIC code level for census years 1900 to 1940. Canadian figures start at 1870.
The Canada Year Book Historical Collection covers the first century of Canada's history, from 1867 to 1967, with historical text, tables, charts and maps, supplemented by interconnected learning resources for students and teachers.
Designed to encourage the use of measures of residential segregation in Canadian urban history. City Stats provides access to several measures of segregation by ethnic group, providing decennial results from 1961 to 2001 for all areas in Canada with census tracts.