The Canadian Health Survey on Children and Youth is a voluntary survey that collects information related to health status, health system utilization and health determinants for Canadian children and youth. CHSCY is conducted by Statistics Canada and is designed to provide reliable estimates across age groups and at the provincial level. Within Ontario, the survey was also designed to provide reliable estimates at the sub-LHIN level in 2019 and at the health region level in 2023.3,4
The sampling frame for CHSCY is the Canada Child Benefit file, which covers 98% of the Canadian population aged 1 to 17. Excluded from the survey are children and youth living on First Nation reserves and other Aboriginal settlements, children and youth living in foster homes and the institutionalized population.3,4
CHSCY was first conducted in 2019 and included 50,000 children and youth ages 1-17 from across Canada’s provinces and territories.3 In 2019, CHSCY was administered as a cross-sectional survey, meaning that respondents were surveyed at a single point in time. In 2023, a longitudinal component was added to the cross-sectional survey, and respondents from the previous cycle (2019) were resurveyed to assess changes in health and well-being over time.4 Children and youth ages 5-22 were included in the longitudinal component of the 2023 survey, while children and youth ages 1-17 were included in the cross-sectional component of the 2023 survey.4 The 2023 survey included 175,000 respondents (41,923 for the longitudinal component and 133,068 for the cross-sectional component).4
The information collected from CHSCY is used by Public Health to produce health indicator reports, which support program planning, evaluation, and policy development, and help to improve awareness of health issues in the community.