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The RDC Program: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement Data access for the advancement in social science and in social science and population health research in population health research in Canada Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies Peter Kitchen Ruben Mercado Anna Kata 07 January 2015 Research Data Centre at McMaster University
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The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

The RDC Program:The RDC Program:

Data access for the advancement in Data access for the advancement in social science and population health social science and population health

research in Canadaresearch in CanadaPresentation to

Offord Centre for Child Studies

Peter KitchenRuben Mercado

Anna Kata

07 January 2015

Research Data Centre at McMaster University

Page 2: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

StatCan / StatCan / SSHRC 1998SSHRC 1998Taskforce on social statisticsTaskforce on social statistics

Improve data access Improve data access (research data centres)

Promote research and trainingPromote research and training

Strengthen research-public policy linksStrengthen research-public policy links

RDC Program Origins: RDC Program Origins:

Page 3: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

What is a Research Data Centre ?What is a Research Data Centre ?

A secure Statistics Canada (StatCan) environment on university campuses

managed by an Academic Director (university faculty member)

staffed by StatCan personnel

operated under Statistics Act ( “deemed employees”)

holding StatCan micro-data (+ admin files)

fully equipped for data analysis

housed by researchers with SSHRC/CIHR /Stat Can approved project/s and security clearance

Page 4: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Continuum of data accessContinuum of data access

Data Access

Statistical Products Custom Requests Microdata

www.statcan.gc.ca

Daily releases

Cansim tables

Analytic articles

Aggregate tables

Data tabulations PUMFs (DLI)

Real Time Remote Access

Remote job submissions

Research Data Centres

Federal RDC

Deemed employee inventory

Page 5: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

University campuses with an RDCUniversity campuses with an RDC

Page 6: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Community of RDC usersCommunity of RDC users

Health….

Community Health and Epidemiology

Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Family Studies and Gerontology

Environmental Hygiene

Neurological Science Nutrition

Psychiatry Nursing

Family Medicine Dentistry

Public Health Kinesiology

Social Science….

Business and Management

Industrial relations

Political science

Sociology Economics

Anthropology Social Work

Demography Education

Geography Statistics

Psychology Administration

Page 7: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

…….in rapid expansion.in rapid expansion

Number of research projects Number of research projects (2000-08)(2000-08)

14 71181

46

280

125

373

249

449

374

572

517

703

575

845

0

300

600

900

1200

1500

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

Completed Active

Page 8: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

RDC Projects by Offord Centre ResearchersRDC Projects by Offord Centre Researchers(Past / Completed)(Past / Completed)

Project Researcher/ Project Team

Dataset/s

Impact on Child Health and Development of Socioeconomic Disadvantage Measured (2002-2005)

Michael BoyleJohn Cairney Eric Duku

NLSCY

Trajectories of Antisocial Behaviour Among Immigrant and Nonimmigrant Youth(2006-2007)

Kathy GeorgiadesMichael Boyle

NLSCY

First Nation Women's Emotional Health(2002-2004)

Harriet MacMillan NPHS

Trajectories of Conduct/ Antisocial Behaviour in Adolescence: An Examination of Risk and Protective Factors (2009-2012)

Eric DukuMichael Boyle

NLSCY (Cycles 1-7)

Page 9: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

RDC Projects by Offord Centre ResearchersRDC Projects by Offord Centre Researchers(Past / Completed)(Past / Completed)

Project Researcher/ Project Team

Dataset/s

Internalizing Symptoms and Youth Participation in Skill Development Activities: Relationships Over Time (2009-2010)

Terry Bennett NLSCY (Cycles 2,3, 4 and 5)

The Effect of Special Education Interventions on Child Emotional and Behavioural Functioning (2004-2007)

Kathryn Bennett NLSCY

Trajectories of oppositional and internalizing symptoms in childhood (2006-2010)

Khrista Boylan NLSCY

Single-Parent Mothers and Outpatient Mental Health Care Service Utilization: An Examination of Predisposing, Enabling and Need Factors (2002-2003)

John Cairney NPHS

Family processes in neighborhood context: Influences on externalizing behavior problems in children and adolescents (2006-2007)

Kathy Georgiades NLSCY

Page 10: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

RDC Projects by Offord Centre ResearchersRDC Projects by Offord Centre Researchers(Past / Completed)(Past / Completed)

Project Researcher/ Project Team

Dataset/s

Emotional and behavioural problems in childhood and obesity later in life (2011)

Ryan Van LieshoutKathy GeorgiadesMichael Boyle

NLSCY

Effects of Maternal Diabetes Mellitus during Pregnancy and Fetal Anthropometrics on Neurobehavioral Development and Psychological Functioning in Children and Adolescents (2008-2012)

Ryan Van Lieshout, Michael Boyle

NLSCY

The Impact of Living Arrangements of Lone Mothers on Child Outcomes (2005-2006)

Ellen Lipman Eric Duku

NLSCY

The influence of sex and immigrant status on risk for Intimate Partner Violence (IPV): Evidence from the Canadian General Social Survey (2011-2014)

Melissa Kimber GSS Cycle 23 (2009)

Page 11: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

RDC Projects by Offord Centre ResearchersRDC Projects by Offord Centre Researchers(Current)(Current)

Project Researcher/ Project Team

Dataset/s

Modeling the Influences of Chronic Illness and Family Environment on the Self-concept and Mental Health Outcomes of Adolescents(2012-2015)

Mark FerroMichael BoyleLaura Duncan

NLSCY

Psychiatric comorbidity in adolescents with chronic illness (2013-2017)

Mark Ferro CCHS 2012 (Mental Health)

Page 12: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Microdata Files Available for Access in the RDCs Microdata Files Available for Access in the RDCs (as of December 2014)(as of December 2014)

Data Type / Status Active Inactive One Time

Pilot

Longitudinal 2 7 0 0

Cross-sectional 20+ Focus content CCHS = 6GSS = 8 + 1 historical database (1986-2006)

17 18 0

Administrative 3 0 0 4

Census data Census short formNHS

Census long form 0 0

Active Surveys that continue to be conducted on a regular basis.

Inactive Surveys that have been discontinued.While new data collection has stopped, the original files are available in the RDC.

One Time Surveys that were conducted at a particular time for a specific purpose.

Pilot These are usually associated with administrative data sets that are made available to a few researchersin order to assess data quality, establish and refine data confidentiality rules and address other related data issues.The data sets may be made available for regular access in the RDC after the pilot phase.

Page 13: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Longitudinal microdataRelevant Longitudinal microdata

National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY: 1994-2009)Long-term study of Canadian children that follows their development and well-being from birth to early adulthood.

Factors influencing a child's social, emotional and behavioural development and impact on child's development over time

Youth in Transition Survey (YITS: Cycles1-6 --1998–2009)YITS aims to provide policy-relevant information on educational and labour market pathways of Canadian youth --- transitions in education, training and work

A longitudinal survey of two groups: ages 15 and 18-20, surveyed every two years.

Content includes formal education and labour-market experiences and influencing factors such as family background, school experiences, achievements, aspirations, expectations and employment experiences.

Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada (LSIC 2001, 2003, 2005)Information on factors that facilitate or hinder integration of new immigrants to life in Canada in terms of education, housing, language, employment

Study focus: Population 15+ who arrived in Canada in 1999/2000.

Page 14: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Longitudinal microdataRelevant Longitudinal microdata

Ontario Child Health Study (OCHS: 1983, 1987, 2000) StatsCan - McMaster study in Ontario to evaluate the impact of early childhood experiences and development in later health, quality of life and functioning.

Original data –1983; OCHS 1987/2000 – longitudinal survey based on 1983 data.

Longitudinal and International Study of Adults * (New) (LISA: 2012- Wave 1; 2014 – Wave 2 – data being processed)

Monitors Canadian households in the four key domain variables: education, employment, training, and family and personal characteristics.

“Longitudinal” – follows the same households every two years; children aged 0-14 in each household at the time of survey will be asked questions in later waves when they turn 15 years old.

Survey data linked to tax data (income, pension, etc.)

At wave 1, LISA was integrated with the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC), (also known as the International Study of Adults (ISA)). The two surveys share a portion of their samples and the data collection activities were integrated.

Page 15: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS:2001-2013)Information related to health status, health care utilization and health determinants for the Canadian population

Coverage: 12 years of age and older for analysis at health regional level

Focus content on mental health (2002; 2012); on nutrition (status, eating habits– 2004); neurologic conditions (2010/2011) and vitamin supplement use (2013); nutrition (2015)

Additional questions on neighborhood environment (e.g. satisfaction) (2011)

General Social Survey (GSS: 1986-2012)Monitor changes in the living conditions and well-being of Canadians over time

Provide information on specific social policy issues of current or emerging interest

Covers ages 15+ ; Focus content – Family, Caregiving, Time Use, Victimization, Social Network, Health, ICT Use, Education, Work

Communities Survey (CS – 2004, 2005; NLSCY – 1999-2001)Information about a sample of kindergarten children living in selected communities, using same questionnaires and direct measure instruments developed for the NLSCY.

Additional data using the Early Development Indicator (EDI), a questionnaire developed and administered by the Canadian Centre for Children at Risk at McMaster University (renamed the Offord Centre!)

Page 16: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Canadian Health Measures Survey (CHMS: Available Cycle 1 (2007-09); Cycle 2 (2009-11); Cycle 3 (2012-13); Cycle 4 (2014-15)

Household interview on health and direct physical measures of individuals 3-79 years old at a mobile examination centre (MEC) – a mobile clinic.

Physical: blood pressure, height, weight and physical fitness, blood and urine samples to test for chronic and infectious diseases, nutrition and environment markers.

Household interview: nutrition, smoking habits, alcohol use, medical history, current health status, sexual behaviour, lifestyle and physical activity, the environment and housing characteristics, as well as demographic and socioeconomic variables.

Information can help create national baseline data on obesity, hypertension, cardio-vascular disease, exposure to infectious diseases, and environmental contaminants. Allows determination of relationships between disease risk factors and health status, and to explore emerging public health issues

Microdata file: @5,600 participants per collection cycle with 5 CHMS age groups: 6-11; 12-19; 20-39; 40-59; 60-79.

Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey (CTADS 2013 soon ; CTUMS 2002-2008 – already available)

CTADS = CTUMS + alcohol and drug use among ages 15-19 and 20-24

CTADS= biennial survey to measure freq. of cigarette smoking, amount smoked, related behaviors, prevalence and frequency of alcohol use, drug use and the extent of harm.

Microdata file: CTUMS 2008 = @23,000 household records; @9,700 individual records

Page 17: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Childhood National Immunization Coverage Survey (New) (CNICS: 2013)

Every two years, collects information on national immunization coverage for childhood vaccines (publicly-funded); also assess knowledge, attitudes, and awareness of vaccines including safety, sources of information, reasons for not immunizing, etc.

Covers girls and boys aged 2, 7, 17 and girls 12-14 years old, living in the 10 provinces and three territories; Respondents were randomly selected from an administrative file available at Statistics Canada. Stratified by age and by province and territory to ensure representative sample while remaining efficient. The sampling unit is the child, but the respondent is their parent or guardian; the design prohibits two children from the same household from being selected for the sample.

Microdata file @2,800 records;

Survey of Approaches to Educational Planning (SAEP: 2013, 2002)

How parents are preparing their children (ages 0-17) for post-secondary education – primarily financial saving strategies (e.g. RESP, etc. ) + parents/guardians' attitudes and values regarding post-secondary education + child's commitment to education

Coverage: SAEP is a supplement survey of the Labour Force Survey (LFS). Coverage was modified to include only those households with at least one child aged 17 (in SAEP 2002 – ages 0-18) and under and, within those households, only one randomly selected child.

Microdata file @9,200 records for SAEP 2013

Page 18: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Canadian Survey on Disability (CSD: 2012)Canadians aged 15 + with disabilities reflecting social model of disability (vs. medical)

Information on type and severity of disability, use of aids and assistive devices, help received or required, educational attainment, labour force status, experiences and accommodations at school or work, and ability to get around the community.

Similar content to PALS (2006, 2001) and HALS (1991, 1986) BUT streamlined and updated; corrected weaknesses in question wording; better identification of persons with

mental/ psychological, cognitive and “other” types of disabilities using Disability Screening Questions (DSQ);

Should not be analytically compared to PALS and HALS

Microdata file: with disability based on DSQ @21,000 records; false positive – reported not limited but could be @8,600 records; with long-term health condition but did not meet DSQ @3,100 records

Canadian Internet Use Survey (CIUS: 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012)to assess the availability of internet to households and individuals 16yo + in Canada

to understand how individuals use the Internet, including their frequency and intensity of usage, and demand for specific online activities (e.g. entertainment, study, work, social networking, etc.)

Microdata file: @30,000 household records; @22,000 individual records

Page 19: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA: 2000, 2003, 2006, 2009, 2012)

Developed and implemented by OECD countries, survey assess whether 15 year-olds approaching end of compulsory education acquired the knowledge and skills essential for full participation in society.

Covers three domains: reading literacy, mathematical literacy and scientific literacy; 2/3 of each cycle focus on “major” domain

Every three years; new 15 years old sample every cycle;

Microdata file has @21,500 records for PISA 2012

Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC 2012; IALSS 2003; IALS 1994)

OECD- initiated survey to provide information regarding change in the distribution of skills (reading and math) over the years including problem solving in technology-rich environments to inform decisions on the composition and content of remedial skill development course and adult education.

Canadian adults aged 16 to 65 not residing in institutions or on Aboriginal reserves;

Microdata file has 27,000 records for PIAAC 2012 wherein @11,200 are <20 years old

Page 20: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Cross-sectional Relevant Cross-sectional microdatamicrodata

Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS: 1991, 2001, 2006, 2012)Key statistics to inform policy and programming activities aimed at improving the well-being of Aboriginal Peoples (First Nations people living off reserve, Métis and Inuit aged 6+)

Funding provided by Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, Health Canada and Employment and Social Development Canada (formerly HRSDC)

Collected every five years; Data on the social and economic conditions of Aboriginal people in Canada in terms of education, employment, health, language, income, housing and mobility.

Collects unique and detailed data on education, employment and health data not available from any other source.

Coverage: 2006 APS = Aboriginal identity only 2012 APS = Aboriginal identity + Aboriginal-ancestry

Content: 2011 NHS = level of education and on major field of study; 2012 APS = number of schools attended, exposure to Aboriginal languages, school climate and support, frequency of reading, participation in extra-curricular activities, peer influences and plans for further schooling.

Microdata file has @28,400 records for APS 2012

Page 21: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant One Time Survey Relevant One Time Survey MicrodataMicrodata

Aboriginal Children's Survey (ACS: 2006)

Early development of Aboriginal children and the social and living conditions in which they are learning and growing.

Covers data about Aboriginal (Métis, Inuit, and off-reserve First Nations) children under 6 years of age in urban, rural, and northern locations.

Microdata: 12,800 records with relatively equivalent number of sample for ages 0-1, 2-3, 4-5

Maternity Experiences Survey (MES: 2006)Sponsored by the Canadian Perinatal Surveillance System of the Public Health Agency of Canada, the goal was to gain information that could help improve the health and well-being of pregnant women, mothers and infants in Canada.

Information on pregnancy, labour, birth and postpartum experiences.

Covers women who had a single birth at time of survey; at least 15 years of age at the time of baby's birth; baby was born in Canada and lived with the mother at least one night per month.

Microdata: @8,500 women.

Page 22: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

International Youth Survey (IYS: 2005-06)Canadian portion of the International Self-Report Delinquency Study (ISRD) involving youth in Grades 7 to 9 in @30 countries, Europe, US and Canada.

comprehensive information about delinquency and misbehavior of young people. Data can be analyzed within the context of school policies and programs, local crime problems, and the socio-demographic make-up of local communities.

Microdata file : @3200 grades 7-9 students belonging to the Toronto District School Board or a private school in the Toronto Metropolitan Area, at the time of collection

Information and Communications Technologies in Schools Survey (ICTSS: 2003-2004)

Provides a benchmark data on the integration of ICT in education - current ICT infrastructure in schools; location and time students can access computers; types of internet and intranet connections; teacher skills and training in ICT; capabilities in regards to online courses and videoconferencing; attitudes toward ICT; ICT challenges.

Surveyed 6,676 of the 15,541 schools (43% response rate); includes elementary and secondary schools (except Catholic schools) as well as trade/vocational schools, schools in aboriginal communities, social service centres.

Relevant One Time Survey Relevant One Time Survey MicrodataMicrodata

Page 23: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Administrative Relevant Administrative Microdata Microdata

Vital Statistics DataThrough the Canadian Vital Statistics system, all provincial and territorial vital statistics registries in Canada now supply microfilm or optical images of vital statistics registration forms to Statistics Canada

Vital Statistics – Births (VSD Births: 1974-2011)Microdata provide all live births in Canada linked by socio-economic and geographic

characteristics

Allows for fertility studies (i.e. age-specific fertility rates, parity, birth types, infant health / mortality, seasonality of birth occurrences, etc.) in relation to socio-economic (i.e. immigrant / Canadian born, cultural diversity, living arrangements and risk of conception, etc.) and geographic variables through usual place of residence of mother

Place of birth and place of residence of mother are based on census geographic codes where distance could be a proxy to measure access to health facilities

Vital Statistics – Deaths (VSD Deaths: 1974-2011)Microdata provide all deaths in Canada linked by geographic characteristics

Allows for mortality studies using demographic and medical (cause of death) information relative to locality of death and/or usual place of residence of the deceased

The cause of death variable is classified according to the WHO "International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems" (ICD).

Page 24: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Relevant Administrative Relevant Administrative Microdata Microdata

Canadian Cancer Registry (CCR: 1992- 2010; 2011, 2012); 2013 upcoming)Patient based database collected from all provincial and territorial cancer registries (PTCRs); Data documents both the individual with the cancer and the characteristics of the cancer.

Great authoritative source to provide a solid baseline about cancer incidence among children and youth (kind and number of new cases diagnosed in a year); studies on cancer survival, cancer mortality / death, descriptive and analytical epidemiological studies to plan, monitor and evaluate broad range of cancer control programs (e.g. screening, etc.), identifying risk factors for cancer, research in health services and economics

Each year, approximately 180,000 new primary cancer records are loaded into the CCR database.

Page 25: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Pilot Projects – Relevant Pilot Projects – Relevant

Incident-based Uniform Crime Reporting Survey (UCR: cases collected from 2007-2011)

Incidence and characteristics of police-reported crime in Canada (collected from provincial police authorities); useful for crime analysis, policy and legislative development, administrative planning and international comparisons.

Three microdata files: 1) Incident; 2) Accused/Charged; 3) Victim

Incident-based or population based (e.g. child / youth) crime studies

Not intended / statistically reliable for trend analysis

Homicide Survey (HS: cases collected from 1961-2006)Police-reported data on the characteristics of all murder incidents, victims and accused persons since 1961 and all homicides (including murder, manslaughter and infanticide) since 1974.

Three microdata files: 1) Incident; 2) Accused/Charged; 3) Victim

Information received by the Homicide Survey is compared to the data reported to the UCR Survey

Page 26: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Pilot Projects – Relevant Pilot Projects – Relevant

Ontario Social Assistance Data (OSAD: 2003-2013)Ontario social assistance data derived from the Ontario Works Program and the Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP)

Data would include de-identified Ontario income support microdata of benefit unit (family), member, pay detail (benefit), income / deduction information and skills.

Monthly time-series data on Ontario Works and ODSP provincial caseloads from 1990 to 2013 could be made available.

Page 27: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

McMaster RDC McMaster RDC WebsiteWebsite InformationInformation

PUMF vs. Microdata

Microdata files available (updated regularly)

Select Survey presentations

McMaster RDC Newsletter

How to Apply / Types of Data Access How to Apply / Types of Data Access

Faculty researchFaculty research

Masters or Doctoral research

Program of Research

Academic course

Unaffiliated academic research (fee-for-service)

Page 28: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

23-04-18Statistics Canada • Statistique Canada28

The proposalThe proposal

Project Title

Name and Affiliation of Investigators

Project Objectives

Description of the Methods

Data Requirements (including justification for microdata)

Critical Dates

Page 29: The RDC Program: Data access for the advancement in social science and population health research in Canada Presentation to Offord Centre for Child Studies.

Contact informationContact information

Academic Director: Byron Spencer ([email protected])

Analysts: Peter Kitchen ([email protected]) 905-525-9140 ext. 27968Ruben Mercado ([email protected]) 905-525-9140 ext. 27967Extended Hours: Anna Kata ([email protected]) 905-525-9140 ext. 27968

LOCATION

Mills Memorial Library, Rm 217

McMaster University

1280 Main Street West

Hamilton ON, L8S 4L6

CRDCN Website: rdc-cdr.caMcMaster RDC Website: McMaster RDC