- Mar 9, 2010
- 11
- Visa Office......
- London
- NOC Code......
- 0213
- App. Filed.......
- 19-04-2010
- Doc's Request.
- 12-July-2010
- Nomination.....
- 00
- AOR Received.
- 12-July-2010
- IELTS Request
- Done
- File Transfer...
- 20-July-2010
- Med's Request
- Done on 3 Sep 2014
- Med's Done....
- Sent by E-medical System
- Interview........
- No interview
- Passport Req..
- yes, rcvd PR1
- VISA ISSUED...
- Got it
- LANDED..........
- landed 24-May2015, Decision made 22-2-2019. Next Oath
Life in Canada more deadly for immigrants?
26. October 2008 17:52
Immigrants who come to Canada seeking a better life may in fact be setting themselves up for possible premature death.
A study by Canadian researchers finds that the longer immigrants remain in Canada, the worse their cardiovascular health becomes. "The health of immigrants coming to Canada from China, South Asia, or Europe worsens with each decade they stay in the country," Heart and Stroke Foundation researcher Dr. Scott Lear told the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2008, co-hosted by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.
"We don't want people to think 'come to Canada and die,'" says Dr. Lear, a kinesiologist at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. "But there is something going on. Immigrants are very healthy when they first come to Canada, but as their time here increases, so does their cardiovascular risk." Dr. Lear and his colleagues measured atherosclerosis - or narrowing of an artery - in the carotid artery with ultrasound in more than 600 Chinese, European, and South Asian immigrants. With that as their determinant of health, the researchers found that the longer the immigrant stayed in Canada, the narrower the carotid arteries.
refrence website:
http://www.news-medical.net/news/2008/10/26/42149.aspx
26. October 2008 17:52
Immigrants who come to Canada seeking a better life may in fact be setting themselves up for possible premature death.
A study by Canadian researchers finds that the longer immigrants remain in Canada, the worse their cardiovascular health becomes. "The health of immigrants coming to Canada from China, South Asia, or Europe worsens with each decade they stay in the country," Heart and Stroke Foundation researcher Dr. Scott Lear told the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress 2008, co-hosted by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.
"We don't want people to think 'come to Canada and die,'" says Dr. Lear, a kinesiologist at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. "But there is something going on. Immigrants are very healthy when they first come to Canada, but as their time here increases, so does their cardiovascular risk." Dr. Lear and his colleagues measured atherosclerosis - or narrowing of an artery - in the carotid artery with ultrasound in more than 600 Chinese, European, and South Asian immigrants. With that as their determinant of health, the researchers found that the longer the immigrant stayed in Canada, the narrower the carotid arteries.
refrence website:
http://www.news-medical.net/news/2008/10/26/42149.aspx