Titre : | Inequalities in Young people's health : Health behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) survey : international report from the 2005-2006 survey. : Inégalités de santé des jeunes : enquête comportement de santé des enfants en âge scolaire : rapport international issu de l'enquête 2005-2006. |
Auteurs : | C. CURRIE ; et al. ; S.N. GOBHAIMN ; E. Godeau ; Agence de la santé publique du Canada. (A.S.P.C.). Ottawa. CAN |
Type de document : | Rapport |
Editeur : | Copenhagen [DNK] : WHO Regional Office for Europe, 2008 |
Collection : | Health Policy for Children and Adolescents (HEPCA) , num. 5 |
ISBN : | 978-92-890-7195-6 |
Description : | 224p. / pdf, tabl., graph. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | Jeune adulte ; Adolescent ; Etat santé ; Comportement santé ; Inégalité sociale ; Facteur socioculturel ; Facteur sociodémographique ; Facteur socioéconomique ; Age ; Conduite égard toxique ; Consommation alcool ; Consommation drogue ; Consommation tabac ; Cannabis ; Activité physique ; Comportement alimentaire ; Poids corporel ; Représentation corps ; Accident ; Famille ; Politique santé ; Relation sociale ; Sociologie santé ; Promotion santé ; Santé buccodentaire ; Enquête santé ; Donnée statistique ; Europe ; Pays développé ; Etats Unis |
Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par IRDES l8R0xIGD. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. This international report is the fourth from the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study, a WHO collaborative cross-national study, and the most comprehensive to date. It presents the key findings on patterns of health among young people aged 11,13 and 15 years in 41 countries and regions across the WHO European Region and North America in 2005/2006. The report's theme is health inequalities, quantifying the gender, age, geographic and socioeconomic dimensions of health differentials. It aims to highlight where these inequalities exist, to inform and influence policy and practice and to help improve health for all young people. The report clearly shows that while the health and wellbeing of many young people give cause for celebration, sizeable minorities are experiencing real and worrying problems related to overweight and obesity, body image, life satisfaction, substance misuse and bullying. It provides reliable data that health systems in Member States can use to support and encourage sectors such as education, social inclusion and housing to achieve their primary goals and, in so doing, benefit young people's health. Policy-makers and professionals in the participating countries and regions now have an opportunity to use the data, which arise from the voices of young people, to drive their efforts to put in place the circumstances - social, economic, health and educational - within which young people can thrive and prosper. |
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