L’ONF s’engage à respecter votre vie privée

Nous utilisons des témoins de navigation afin d’assurer le bon fonctionnement du site, ainsi qu’à des fins publicitaires.

Si vous ne souhaitez pas que vos informations soient utilisées de cette manière, vous pouvez modifier les paramètres de votre navigateur avant de poursuivre votre visite.

En savoir plus
PASSER Accessibilité

Health Equity (Ages 15-17)

8 films
Dernière chance

Effective healthcare means more than proximity to a hospital or access to a family physician. It involves access to housing, clean drinking water, mental health support, education, and more. These films provide younger viewers with an introduction to these issues. Pour visionner cette sélection en français, cliquez ici. Films in This Playlist Include Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger Four Feet Up The People of the Kattawapiskak River The Interventionists: Chronicles of a Mental Health Crisis Team Toxic Trespass Citizens’ Medicine Hi-Ho Mistahey (Short Version) Freedom Road: Context

Prochain : The People of the Kattawapiskak River
Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
Votre location se termine le
Vous avez déjà acheté ce film.
Téléchargez-le à partir de Mes achats.
Non offert
Partager
Health Equity (Ages 15-17)

Effective healthcare means more than proximity to a hospital or access to a family physician. It involves access to housing, clean drinking water, mental health support, education, and more. These films provide younger viewers with an introduction to these issues.

Pour visionner cette sélection en français, cliquez ici.

Films in This Playlist Include
Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger
Four Feet Up
The People of the Kattawapiskak River
The Interventionists: Chronicles of a Mental Health Crisis Team
Toxic Trespass
Citizens’ Medicine
Hi-Ho Mistahey (Short Version)
Freedom Road: Context

Sélection

  • Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger
    Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger
    Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
    Alanis Obomsawin 2019 1 h 5 min

    The very timely Jordan River Anderson, The Messenger completes, on an optimistic note, the film cycle devoted to the rights of Indigenous children and peoples that began with The People of the Kattawapiskak River.

  • Four Feet Up
    Four Feet Up
    Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
    Nance Ackerman 2009 46 min

    In this personal documentary, award-winning photographer and filmmaker Nance Ackerman invites us into the lives of a determined family for a profound experience of child poverty in one of the richest countries in the world. 20 years after the House of Commons promised to eliminate poverty among Canadian children, 8-year-old Isaiah is trying hard to grow up healthy, smart and well adjusted despite the odds stacked against him. Isaiah knows he's been categorized as "less fortunate," and his short life has seen more than his share of social workers, food banks and police interventions. His parents struggle to overcome a legacy of stereotypes, abuse and dysfunction. More than anything, they want Isaiah and his siblings to have access to opportunities they never had. Ackerman spent 2 years with Isaiah and his family. As her portrait of the family unfolds with the help of Isaiah's creative input, curiosity and zest for life, so do Ackerman's own feelings about the responsibilities of Canadians to raise all children as our best investment in the nation's future.

  • The People of the Kattawapiskak River
    The People of the Kattawapiskak River
    Alanis Obomsawin 2012 50 min

    The people of the Attawapiskat First Nation, a Cree community in northern Ontario, were thrust into the national spotlight in 2012 when the impoverished living conditions on their reserve became an issue of national debate. With The People of the Kattawapiskak River, Abenaki director Alanis Obomsawin quietly attends as community members tell their own story, shedding light on a history of dispossession and official indifference. “Obomsawin’s main objective is to make us see the people of Attawapiskat differently,” said Robert Everett-Green in The Globe & Mail. “The emphasis, ultimately, is not so much on looking as on listening—the first stage in changing the conversation, or in making one possible.” Winner of the 2013 Donald Brittain Award for Best Social/Political Documentary, the film is part of a cycle of films that Obomsawin has made on children’s welfare and rights.

  • The Interventionists: Chronicles of a Mental Health Crisis Team
    The Interventionists: Chronicles of a Mental Health Crisis Team
    Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
    Katerina Cizek 2006 31 min

    Ellen is a mental health nurse. Brandon is a specially trained policeman. Together, they ride the streets of Toronto responding to 911 police calls involving “emotionally distressed persons.” Their mandate is not only to de-escalate crises, but to avoid unnecessary arrests and emergency room visits by providing appropriate referrals, services and resources within a patient's own community.

  • Toxic Trespass
    Toxic Trespass
    Barri Cohen 2007 52 min

    This feature documentary is an investigation into the effects of the chemicals we are all exposed to in our daily lives. The film begins with the filmmaker Barri Cohen’s own 10-year-old daughter, whose blood carries carcinogens like benzene and the long-banned DDT. Then, it heads out to Windsor and Sarnia: Canadian toxic hotspots, with startling clusters of deadly diseases. The film presents passionate activists working for positive change, along with doctors and scientists who see evidence of links between environmental pollution and health problems. Carried by Cohen's passion for truth and her disarming openness, this moving documentary is essential viewing for anyone concerned about the effects of pollutants on our - and our children's - very DNA.

    Toxic Trespass is accompanied by a comprehensive guidebook for educators, activists and concerned citizens, produced by the Women's Healthy Environment Network.

  • Citizens' Medicine
    Citizens' Medicine
    Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
    Bonnie Sherr Klein 1970 30 min

    In Montréal, the St. Jacques Citizens' Committee set up a community health clinic, aided by volunteer doctors, nurses, dentists and medical students. This film shows discussion, planning, and the clinic in operation, and presents its problems and advantages as seen both by medical workers and by local residents. Members of the Citizens' Committee participated in the making of the film, from original planning through filming, selecting and editing.

  • Hi-Ho Mistahey! (Short Version)
    Hi-Ho Mistahey! (Short Version)
    Nous sommes désolés, ce contenu n’est pas offert dans votre région.
    Alanis Obomsawin 2013 59 min

    In this feature-length documentary, Alanis Obomsawin tells the story of Shannen’s Dream, a national campaign to provide equitable access to education in safe and suitable schools for First Nations children. Strong participation in this initiative eventually brings Shannen's Dream all the way to the United Nations in Geneva.

  • Context
    Context
    Angelina McLeod  et  Paula Kelly 2019 15 min

    This story begins over a century ago, when the City of Winnipeg decides that the water surrounding the traditional Anishinaabe territory of what is now Shoal Lake 40 First Nation will be diverted and used as Winnipeg’s primary water source. The community, their ancient burial grounds, environment, and ways of life are forever disrupted, and access to opportunities and essential services are severed. Enforced residential schooling and a tainted water supply compound the devastating impact. Community leader and former combat engineer Daryl Redsky sheds light on how generations of complex planning, cultural preservation and mobilization have led us to the current moment—and to the construction of Freedom Road.