USE the Environmental Framework for Healthy Eating and Food Security to think about food and nutrition environments, and in particular your Ward. USING THE WINNIPEG FOOD ATLAS, CHOOSE A WARD: find the Food Atlas here. Click on Winnipeg Food Atlas tab at the top of the page; then scroll down to the Interactive Food Atlas … Continue reading “Healthy Eating and Food Security | My Assignment Tutor”
USE the Environmental Framework for Healthy Eating and Food Security to think about food and nutrition environments, and in particular your Ward. USING THE WINNIPEG FOOD ATLAS, CHOOSE A WARD: find the Food Atlas here. Click on Winnipeg Food Atlas tab at the top of the page; then scroll down to the Interactive Food Atlas Map and click on it to launch the Food Atlas.WARD DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE: Develop a demographic profile of your Ward using relevant indicators (i.e., related directly or indirectly to food and nutrition) from: the 2016 Census Data (accessed from the Smart Ward layer of the Food Atlas)key layers of the Food Atlas (household income, recent immigrants, North American Aboriginal)population structure pyramids (go to Demographic Dashboards on the Manitoba Collaborative Data Portal site) Complete Table 1 by entering relevant data from 2016 ward census report via the Smart Ward layer of Food Atlas. Use this to complete Part B. Use Table 1 as a template to help organize your research and data. If necessary, expand the table to landscape to make it easier to read. Bullet points are sufficient.Written description of the Ward. Analyze and synthesize the data into a 4-page textual description. Use clear, appropriate headings and sub-headings, and graphs/bar charts for key features as needed. Ward: River Height- fort Garry Table 1. Demographic Data Indicator City WardComparison to City of WinnipegImplications for Healthy Diets, Food Security and Health OutcomesTotal Population (in 2016) Population Structure Newcomers Use Canadian citizenship status, visible minority (total) and period of immigration (2011-2016) to describe newcomers in your ward Indigenous (Aboriginal) Identity (total) Age 19 and under 20-39 40-64 65 and older Household Income E.g., low-income people will have higher rates of food insecurity; may struggle to buy food in regular grocery stores, etc. E.g., high income families may have both parents working outside the home, struggle with time, etc. $150,000 Family Structure Families with Children Main Mode of Commuting