Aboriginal Peoples Survey
Cross-source consensus on Aboriginal Peoples Survey from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey achieved a response rate of 70.1% from a sample of 34,176 people. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
- The analytic sample included 9,115 First Nations respondents living off-reserve, representing a weighted population of 482,066 people. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
- The survey used complex multiple-phase stratified random sampling, with weights supplied by Statistics Canada to adjust for design effects. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
- The cross-sectional design of the survey means the study can identify associations but cannot establish causation. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
- The survey excluded First Nations people living on-reserve, in institutions, and in precarious housing, which may have caused underestimation of prevalence. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey
- Cultural framing of pain and disability may have produced non-differential misclassification, potentially weakening measured associations. — Prevalence of and factors associated with pain-related disabilities among First Nations people living off-reserve in Canada in 2017: a secondary analysis of data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey