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CANADIAN INDEX OF WELLBEING [CIW] - TIME USE DOMAIN [TUD] - 10 INDICATORS
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JUNE 2010 - REPORT HIGHLIGHTS - Time Use Domain [TUD] - Trends

ANN-SYLVIA BROOKER, Ph.D.
Research Consultant

ILENE HYMAN, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Dalla Lana School of Public Health,
Research Associate, Cities Centre, University of Toronto

Bh	TIME USE DOMAIN [TUD] - 10 WELLBEING INDICATORS

 	 1	Adults working Non-Standard Hours 
	 2	Adults working Long Hours 
	 3	Adults reporting High Levels Time Pressure 
	 4	Adults providing unpaid care to Seniors
	 5	Retired Seniors engaged in Active Leisure
	 6	Retired Seniors Volunteering
	 7	Adolescents exceeding Recommended Screen Time
	 8	Children/Adolescents participating in organised activities 
	 9	Parent-Preschooler Reading Activities
	10	Adolescents eating meals with Parents at Home

B	TRENDS (8) - Time Use Domain [TUD]

a	Fewer Canadians are working long hours, but more are working non-standard
	hours.

b	More people are feeling caught in a ‘time crunch’.

c	More Canadians – especially women – are providing care to seniors.

d	The percentage of children and adolescents participating in organized, 
	extracurricular activities has stayed the same.

e	Adolescents are increasingly exceeding recommended times for TV, video 
	games and computer use. 

	Significantly fewer are having meals at home with parents.

f	The percentage of parents reading to pre-school children has remained 
	stable.

g	The percentage of retired adults 65 years of age and over engaged in 
	active leisure has remained stable.

h	Substantially more seniors are volunteering.


A	Summary (12) - Time Use Domain [TUD]

B	Trends (8) - Time Use Domain [TUD] - THIS WEB-PAGE

C	Highlights (10) - Time Use Domain [TUD]

D	Conclusions (19) - Time Use Domain [TUD]





R	THE CANADIAN INDEX OF WELLBEING NETWORK

a	Based in the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences at the University of Waterloo, 
	the Canadian Index of Wellbeing Network is an independent, non-partisan group 
	of national and international leaders, researchers, organizations, and 
	grassroots Canadians.

b	Its mission is to report on wellbeing at the national level and promote a 
	dialogue on how to improve it through evidence-based policies that are 
	responsive to the needs and values of Canadians.

c	The Network’s signature product is the Canadian Index of Wellbeing (CIW). 

d	The CIW measures Canada’s wellbeing and tracks progress in eight interconnected 
	categories.

e	It allows us, as Canadians, to see if we are better off or worse off than we 
	used to be - and why. 

f	It helps identify what we need to change to achieve a better outcome and to 
	leave the world a better place for the generations that follow.

The Honourable Roy J. Romanow, Chair

The Honourable Monique Bégin, Deputy Chair

University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON, Canada N2L 3G1
519-888-4567, ext. 31235 | ciwinfo@uwaterloo.ca | http://www.ciw.ca 

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