Indigenous Community Issues

high infant and youth mortality

Indigenous children are three to four times more likely to die from accidental injury that non-Aboriginal children of the same age.

high rate of suicide

The First Nations youth have five to seven times higher suicide rates than the non-Aborigional youth.

The suicide rates within these communities are exceptionally higher than the national average

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Poor Health

Indigenous people suffer disproportionately from chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease.

Indigenous children suffer from higher rates of respiratory problems due to their poor living conditions.

Low Levels of education

33.65 percent of Aboriginal people do not have a secondary school certificate

Very few of the teachers speak Indigenous languages

Crowded living conditions

Lack of housing means people are forced to live in overcrowded residences and shelters.

Flooding and other problems have reduced the number of habitable residences in indigenous communities.

excessive incarceration

Indigenous adults were 26 percent of admissions to provincial and territorial correctional services but only 3 percent of the Canadian adult population.

Federally, Indigenous adults represented 28 percent of custodial admissions.

In federal custody, females accounted for 31 percent of admissions to sentenced custody compared to 23 percent for males.

Nearly half the youth across Canada that have been incarcerated are Indigenous

High unemployment

the Indigenous Peoples employment rate has been neglected in Canada throughout history.

the unemployment rates did not increase between 2006 and 2016

Low income

there was a 25 percent income gap between the Indigenous Peoples and non-Indigenous people in 2015

A slight decrease of the income gap in 2005 was made, making the gap go from 27 percent to 25 percent.

impoverished housing

44.2 percent of the First Nations people living on-reserve lived in homes or apartments in need of repairs.