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La transition de l’adolescence à la vie adulte constitue une des plus importantes transitions de la vie. À ce stade, le jeune doit développer des habiletés pour être en mesure de se prendre en charge et gérer ses responsabilités académiques et financières tout en maintenant un mode de vie sain. Des études démontrent que des perturbations à ce stade de vie peuvent avoir des conséquences importantes sur la santé psychologique et l’adaptation au changement, et qu’une instabilité émotionnelle...
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The transition from adolescence to adulthood is a time of dramatic change in one’s life. At this stage, youth are developing skills to be able to support themselves and manage academic and financial responsibilities, while maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Studies have shown that disturbances at this stage may have a strong impact on one’s psychological health and ability to adapt to change; emotional instability may have repercussions on performance and psychosocial functioning. Due to...
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Introduction Substance use and impaired driving increase risk of motor vehicle crashes and deaths. Individual, socio-economic and -cultural factors are associated with these at-risk behaviors; however, little is known if differences exist between the Anglophone majority and minority Francophone populations in Canada. This article describes prevalence of substance use, impaired driving and driving practices by postsecondary student and compares Francophones and Anglophones with respect to...
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The loss of language skills is one of the most challenging aspects of living with dementia. This is particularly true for bilingual individuals, who have difficulty in maintaining fluency in more than one language. Language and culture overlap greatly, with potential implications for the well-being of people with dementia (PWD) being cared for in their ‘second’ language or culture. Our aim was to review the available relevant literature, together with an examination of the potential effects...
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Health and social service systems can be difficult to traverse, especially in the stressful situations that often necessitate accessing them. In Quebec, these difficulties are exacerbated for English speaking or limited French-proficient persons. This thesis employs a needs-based assessment to explore how linguistic-based access barriers to health and social services affect Montreal’s English-speaking Disability community, focusing on those with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities...
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Despite decades of policy aimed at the maintenance of Francophone communities in Ontario, the proportion of individuals with French as a mother tongue or who speak French most often at home has steadily declined. Research on language retention has highlighted the importance of sociodemographic and structural factors in understanding minority language practices. However, given the relationship between culture and action, this paper examines how cultural factors contribute to Franco-Ontarians’...
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