Violence Against Women
Health Canada
March 1999
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Health Canada's role is to foster good health by promoting health
and protecting Canadians from harmful products, practices and disease.
Violence against women, a prime area of concern as a health issue,
is rooted in the social, economic and political inequality of women.
Health Canada's activities through the National Clearinghouse on
Family Violence focus on synthesizing and disseminating best practices
to prevent and treat family violence, including violence against
women.
How is Violence Against Women Defined?
Acts that result, or are likely to result, in physical, sexual and psychological harm or suffering to a woman, including threats of such an act, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty whether occurring in public or private life.
The Impact of Violence on Women's Health
Violence is a major factor in women's health and well-being. The
measurable health-related costs of violence against women in Canada
exceed $1.5 billion a year. These costs include short-term medical
and dental treatment for injuries, long-term physical and psychological
care, lost time at work, and use of transition homes and crisis
centres.
Current Situation
- Statistics Canada's 1998 report Family Violence in Canada:
A Statistical Profile, which analysed data provided by 154
reporting police agencies, shows that:
- women continue to outnumber men nine to one as victims of
assault by a spouse or partner;
- in 1996 half of all family homicides involved spouses;
- between 1977 and 1996, three times as many women were killed
by their spouses as were men killed by their spouses;
- girls are at greatest risk of sexual assault by a family
member while between 12 and 15 years of age;
- in 1996 nine of ten crimes committed against older adults
by family members were physical assaults.
Promoting Women's Health
Ignoring violence as a factor in women's health and well-being
not only leads to misdiagnosis and inadequate treatment, it also
disregards the full extent of the personal and social consequences
of violence. Women will not be free from violence until they achieve
equality with men, and equality cannot be achieved until violence
and the threat of violence are eliminated from women's lives.
Federal Government Initiatives
- On behalf of the federal government, Health Canada coordinates
the Family Violence Initiative involving 12 departments
and agencies. The Initiative complements other federal government
strategies (such as the National Strategy on Community Safety
and Crime Prevention) to reduce violence in the family and in
society generally.
- To enhance treatment and prevention, Health Canada undertakes
research on the population health consequences of violence against
women and children and on abuse and neglect of older adults.
The Department also manages the National Clearinghouse on Family
Violence.
- The National Clearinghouse on Family Violence is a national resource centre for all Canadians seeking information about, and solutions to, violence within the family. It shares the latest research findings and information on all aspects of prevention, protection and treatment so Canadian communities can find solutions.
- Through the current Family Violence Initiative:
- Canada Mortgage
and Housing Corporation
(CMHC), through delivery of the Shelter Enhancement Initiative,
provides capital funds for upgrading of emergency shelters
and second stage housing to meet health, safety and security
standards, and to address the special needs of women and their
children, people with disabilities and older clients.
- The Women's Program, Status
of Women Canada,
provides support to women and other voluntary organizations
to address the causes of family violence in ways that lead
to systemic changes and the development of alternative, long-term
prevention strategies.
- Justice
Canada,
undertakes criminal legislative and policy reviews and reforms,
conducts research, provides project funding to community and
other organizations, and provides public legal education and
information support for initiatives that address the needs
of women, children and youth as victims of family violence.
- Canadian
Heritage
supports community-based projects initiated and managed by
Aboriginal women's groups off-reserve, supports programming
through ethnic broadcast media and English/French as a Second
Language organizations, and conducts research and evaluation
related to family violence
Accomplishments
- Statistics Canada's Violence Against Women Survey 1993 is
the first of its kind to collect data on violence against women.
Approximately 12,300 women over the age of 18 were randomly
selected and interviewed.
- The 1993 report of the Canadian Panel on Violence Against
Women, Changing the Landscape: Ending Violence -- Achieving
Equality 1993, provides comprehensive documentation on violence
against women in Canada from a variety of perspectives and makes
recommendations for government and private-sector action at
all levels.
- Amendments to the Criminal Code increase protection
to women and children in many contexts.
Sources:
- Changing the Landscape: Ending Violence-- Achieving Equality. Final Report of the Canadian Panel on Violence Against Women, Minister of Supply and Services, Cat. no. SW45-1/1993E, 1993.
- Family Violence In Canada: A Statistical Profile, 1998.
Statistics Canada, Cat. No. 85-224-XIE.
- The Health Care Sector's Response to Woman Abuse, Health Canada Cat. No. H72-21/122-1994E, 1994.
- The Health-Related Costs of Violence Against Women in Canada:
The Tip of the Iceberg, Tannis Day, Centre for Research on Violence against Women and Children London, Ontario, 1995.
- What Women Prescribe: Report and Recommendations from the
National Symposium Women in Partnership: Working Towards Inclusive Gender-Sensitive Health Policies, Canadian Advisory Council on the Status of Women, May 1995.
- Wife Abuse: Information from the National
Clearinghouse on Family Violence, Health Canada, Cat. No. H72-22/4-1995E, 1995.
- Wife Assault: The Findings of a National Survey, Juristat,
vol. 14, no. 9, Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, Cat. No.
85-002, Statistics Canada, March 1994. (Also available from Health
Canada.)
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