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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
editorial
. 2007 Nov 1;98(6):453–456. doi: 10.1007/BF03405437

Canadian Health Measures Survey

Brief Overview

Mark S Tremblay 15,, Sarah Connor Gorber 25
PMCID: PMC6976046  PMID: 19039881

Abstract

The Canadian Health Measures Survey (CHMS) was developed to address important data gaps and limitations in existing health information by collecting directly measured indicators of health and wellness on a representative sample of approximately 5,000 Canadians aged 6–79 years. The CHMS includes an in-home general health interview and a subsequent clinic visit where direct physical measures of health are taken (anthropometry, spirometry, blood pressure, fitness, physical activity, oral health examination, blood and urine specimens) in mobile clinics. Reference laboratories are used to analyze biological specimens for indicators of general health, chronic disease, infectious disease and environmental biomarkers and to store biospecimens for future research. This paper provides a brief overview of the survey sampling, methodological, operational, logistical, ethical, legal and social issues and procedures related to the CHMS.

MeSH terms: Research design, population, measurements, physical fitness, health promotion, oral health

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: The Canadian Health Measures Survey was developed in partnership with Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada and with the assistance of several advisory committees, stakeholders, experts, reviewers and supporters. The authors would like to acknowledge all of the CHMS staff, whose collective efforts led to the successful launch of the survey in March 2007.

Disclaimer: This paper represents a brief summary of five detailed background papers written on the Canadian Health Measures Survey and published in a supplemental issue of Statistics Canada’s journal Health Reports (Statistics Canada, Catalogue 82-003) (available at www.statcan.ca/cgi-bin/ downpub/freepub.cgi).

References

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