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mirjahan

Hero Member
Jul 5, 2011
650
10
Montreal
Category........
Visa Office......
Singapore
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
25-05-2011
Med's Done....
18-04-2011
Interview........
Waived
Passport Req..
07-02-2012
VISA ISSUED...
28-02-2012
LANDED..........
03-04-2012
I found some odd news on CBC
The healthy immigrant effect persists, according to a Statistics Canada study released Wednesday that found immigrants are generally healthier than Canadian-born citizens.
Although the edge in health declines for immigrants the longer they live in Canada, the mortality rate for newcomers continues to be lower than for Canadian-born residents, even after immigrants have lived here more than 20 years.
The study does not examine the reasons immigrants tend to have better health, but those are likely to include the screening that selects an inherently healthier group of people who arrive in Canada, and also those who have a healthier diet and are more physically active in their native countries.
The longer the immigrants live in Canada, the more closely they adopt the patterns and behaviours common here.
The relationship between immigration and health has become more difficult to determine, however, as the origins and demographics of immigrants to Canada have changed.
Statistics Canada's current analysis relies on the 1991-2001 Canadian mortality followup study, which examined 2.7 million people, of which 552,300, or 20 per cent, were immigrants.
Immigrants had significantly lower mortality rates than Canadian-born people: 1,006 versus 1,305 for men, and 610 versus 731 for women.
In 2006, immigrants made up 19.8 per cent of Canada's population, a proportion that is expected to increase to at least 25 per cent by 2013, Statistics Canada says.
Mortality rates differ according to the origins of immigrants, and the study suggests there is a need for more in-depth analysis of health by country of origin.

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigrants-healthier-canadian-born-citizens-140849252.html
 
Maybe I'll stay away after all.
 
This probably has a lot to do with the medical.
 
I am posting this because immigration canada stop taking parents and grand parents due to increasing medical care for elderly.
They think more elderly coming to Canada more cost the for health care and other supports. Immigrant sponsor their parents for better health care system and social benefit in Canada this is the though of Mr Kenney.
 
mirjahan said:
I am posting this because immigration canada stop taking parents and grand parents due to increasing medical care for elderly.
They think more elderly coming to Canada more cost the for health care and other supports. Immigrant sponsor their parents for better health care system and social benefit in Canada this is the though of Mr Kenney.

Although it seems unkind to exclude the elderly, it is probably unavoidable if Canada is to maintain the current standard of living for Canadians. The elderly do indeed impose a greater cost on the health care system. Higher costs necessitate higher taxes to pay for them.

The government has chosen to control costs, rather than raise taxes -- which surely must be a first for government!!