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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Historical dataset of population level and growth rate for the Ottawa-Gatineau, Canada metro area from 1950 to 2025.
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TwitterAnnual population estimates as of July 1st, by census metropolitan area and census agglomeration, single year of age, five-year age group and gender, based on the Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2021.
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TwitterEstimated number of persons by quarter of a year and by year, Canada, provinces and territories.
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TwitterCanada's largest metropolitan area is Toronto, in Ontario. In 2022. Over 6.6 million people were living in the Toronto metropolitan area. Montréal, in Quebec, followed with about 4.4 million inhabitants, while Vancouver, in Britsh Columbia, counted 2.8 million people as of 2022.
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TwitterComprehensive demographic dataset for Ottawa, ON, CA including population statistics, household income, housing units, education levels, employment data, and transportation with year-over-year changes.
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TwitterEstimated number of persons on July 1, by 5-year age groups and gender, and median age, for Canada, provinces and territories.
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Twitterhttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario
Data includes: board and school information, grade 3 and 6 EQAO student achievements for reading, writing and mathematics, and grade 9 mathematics EQAO and OSSLT. Data excludes private schools, Education and Community Partnership Programs (ECPP), summer, night and continuing education schools.
How Are We Protecting Privacy?
Results for OnSIS and Statistics Canada variables are suppressed based on school population size to better protect student privacy. In order to achieve this additional level of protection, the Ministry has used a methodology that randomly rounds a percentage either up or down depending on school enrolment. In order to protect privacy, the ministry does not publicly report on data when there are fewer than 10 individuals represented.
The information in the School Information Finder is the most current available to the Ministry of Education at this time, as reported by schools, school boards, EQAO and Statistics Canada. The information is updated as frequently as possible.
This information is also available on the Ministry of Education's School Information Finder website by individual school.
Descriptions for some of the data types can be found in our glossary.
School/school board and school authority contact information are updated and maintained by school boards and may not be the most current version. For the most recent information please visit: https://data.ontario.ca/dataset/ontario-public-school-contact-information.
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TwitterTen-Year Population Change for different age groups
Geography: Counties and Regions in Eastern Ontario
Format: DataTable in Excel
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TwitterProjected population according to various scenarios, age groups and gender, Canada, provinces and territories.
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Twitterhttps://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0
Effective June 7th, 2024, this dataset will no longer be updated.This file contains data on:
Cumulative count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by episode date (i.e. the earliest of symptom onset, testing or reported date), including active cases and resolved cases.
Cumulative count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 who died by date of death.
Daily count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by reported date and episode date.
Daily count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by outbreak association and episode date.
Daily count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 newly admitted to the hospital, currently in hospital, and currently in the intensive care unit (ICU).
Cumulative rate of confirmed COVID-19 for Ottawa residents by age group and episode date.
Cumulative rate of confirmed COVID-19 for Ottawa residents by gender and episode date.
Daily count of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by source of infection and episode date.
Data are from the Ontario Ministry of Health Public Health Case and Contact Management Solution (CCM).
Accuracy: Points of consideration for interpretation of the data:
The percent of cases with no known epidemiological (epi) link, during the current day and previous 13 days, is calculated as the number of cases with no known epi link among all cases. The percent of cases with no known epi link is unstable during time periods with few cases.
Source of infection is based on a case's epidemiologic linkage. If no epidemiologic linkage is identified, source of infection is allocated using a hierarchy of risk factors: related to travel prior to April 1, 2020 > part of an outbreak > close or household contact of a known case > related to travel since April 1, 2020 > unspecified epidemiological link > no known source of infection > no information available.
Data are entered into and extracted by Ottawa Public Health from the Ontario Ministry of Health Public Health Case and Contact Management Solution (CCM). The CCM is a dynamic disease reporting system that allows for ongoing updates; data represent a snapshot at the time of extraction and may differ from previous or subsequent reports.
As the cases are investigated and more information is available, the dates are updated.
A person’s exposure may have occurred up to 14 days prior to onset of symptoms. Symptomatic cases occurring in approximately the last 14 days are likely under-reported due to the time for individuals to seek medical assessment, availability of testing, and receipt of test results.
Confirmed cases are those with a confirmed COVID-19 laboratory result as per the Ministry of Health Public health management of cases and contacts of COVID-19 in Ontario. March 25, 2020 version 6.0.
Counts will be subject to varying degrees of underreporting due to a variety of factors, such as disease awareness and medical care seeking behaviours, which may depend on severity of illness, clinical practice, changes in laboratory testing, and reporting behaviours.
Data on hospital admissions, ICU admissions and deaths are likely under-reported as these events may occur after the completion of public health follow up of cases. Cases that were admitted to hospital or died after follow-up was completed may not be captured in iPHIS or local health unit reporting tools.
Cases are associated with a specific, isolated community outbreak; an institutional outbreak (e.g. healthcare, childcare, education); or no known outbreak (i.e., sporadic).
The distribution of the source of infection among confirmed cases is impacted by the provincial guidance on testing.
Surveillance testing for COVID-19 began in long term care facilities on April 25, 2020.
Source of infection is allocated using a hierarchy: Related to travel prior to April 1, 2020 > Close contact of a known case or part of a community outbreak or source of infection is an institutional outbreak > Related to travel since April 1, 2020 > No known source of infection > Missing.
The percent of cases with unknown source, during the current day and previous 13 days, is calculated as the number of cases with no known source among cases who source of infection is not an institutional outbreak. Calculated over a 14 day period (i.e. the day of interest and the preceding 13 days). The percent of cases with no known source is unstable during time periods with few cases.
Update Frequency: Wednesdays
Attributes: Data fields:
Data fields:
Date – Date in format YYYY-MM-DD H:MM. The date type varies based on the column of interest and could be:
- Episode date – Earliest of
symptom onset, test or reported date for cases;
- Date of death – The date
the person was reported to have died
- Reported date – Date the
confirmed laboratory results were reported to Ottawa Public Health
- Hospitalization date
Cumulative Cases by Episode Date – cumulative number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by episode date. Cumulative Resolved Cases by Episode Date – cumulative number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 that have not died and are either (1) assessed as ‘recovered’ in The CCM or (2) 14 days past their episode date and not currently hospitalized. Cumulative Active Cases by Episode Date– cumulative number of Ottawa residents with an active COVID-19 infection. Calculated as the total number of Ottawa residents with COVID-19 excluding resolved and deceased cases. Cumulative Deaths by Date of Death - cumulative number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 who died by date of death. Deaths are included whether or not COVID-19 was determined to be a contributing or underlying cause of death. Daily Cases by Reported Date – number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by reported date 7-Day Average of Newly Reported Cases by Reported Date – number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by reported date. Calculated over a 7 day period (i.e. the day of interest and the preceding 6 days). Daily Cases by Episode Date - number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 by episode date. Daily Cases Linked to a Community Outbreak by Episode Date – number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 associated with a specific isolated community outbreak by episode date. Daily Cases Linked to an Institutional Outbreak – number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 associated with a COVID-19 outbreak in a healthcare, childcare or educational establishment by case episode date. Healthcare institutions include places such as long-term care homes, retirement homes, hospitals, other healthcare institutions (e.g. group homes, shelters). Daily Cases Not Linked to an Institutional Outbreak (i.e. Sporadic Cases) – number of Ottawa residents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 not associated to an outbreak of COVID-19. Cases Newly Admitted to Hospital – Daily number of Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 admitted to hospital. Emergency room visits are not included in the number of hospital admissions. Cases Currently in Hospital – Number of Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 currently in hospital, includes patients in intensive care. Emergency room visits are not included in the number of hospitalizations. Cases Currently in ICU - Number of Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 currently being treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). It is a subset of the count of hospitalized cases. Cumulative Rate of COVID-19 by 10-year Age Groupings (per 100,000 pop) and Episode Date – The number of Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 within an age group (e.g. 0-9 years) divided by the total Ottawa population for that age group. This fraction is then multiplied by 100,000 to get a rate of COVID-19 per 100,000 population for that age group. Cumulative Rate of COVID-19 by Gender (per 100,000 pop) and Episode Date – The number of Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 of a given gender (e.g. female) divided by the total Ottawa population for that gender. This fraction is then multiplied by 100,000 to get a rate of COVID-19 per 100,000 population for that gender. Source of infection is travel by episode date: individuals who are most likely to have acquired their infection during out-of-province travel. Number of cases with missing information on source of infection by episode date: assessment for source of infection was not completed. Number of cases with no known epidemiological link by episode date: individuals who did not travel outside Ontario, are not part of an outbreak, and are not able to identify someone with COVID-19 from whom they might have acquired infection. The assessment for source of infection was completed, but no sources were identified. Source of infection is a close contact by episode date: individuals presumed to have acquired their infection following close contact (e.g. household member, friend, relative) with an individual with confirmed COVID-19. Source of infection is an outbreak by episode date: individuals who are most likely to have acquired their infection as part of a confirmed COVID-19 outbreak. Source of Infection is Unknown by Episode Date: Ottawa residents with confirmed COVID-19 who did not travel outside
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TwitterAs of July 1, 2022, there were approximately 13.87 million males and 14.13 million females living in metropolitan areas across Canada. This statistic breaks down this figure by metropolitan area. Toronto was the most populated city in the country, counting over 3.2 million males and 3.4 million females.
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TwitterThis table contains 13 series, with data for years 1926 - 1960 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2000-02-18. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (13 items: Canada; Newfoundland and Labrador; Prince Edward Island; Nova Scotia ...).
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Date created: Data first uploaded to Open Ottawa on August 11, 2021.Update frequency: Every 4 weeksAccuracy - Points of consideration for interpretation of the data:Data extracted by Ottawa Public Health from COVaxON, the Ontario provincial repository for vaccinations administered in Ontario and to residents of Ontario, using intellihealth Ontario. COVaxON is a dynamic system that allows for continuous updates. Because these data are a snapshot in time and reflect the most accurate information that OPH has at the time of reporting, the data presented may differ from previous and subsequent reports. A vaccinated individual is attributed to an Ottawa Neighbourhood Study (ONS) neighbourhood based on their postal code and, if postal code is missing, on their address, if available. Residents with a postal code that straddles more than one neighbourhood are allocated to neighbourhoods based on the relative size of the population residing in each of the straddled neighbourhoods. If there is no postal code or address information for an individual believed to reside in Ottawa, the resident is not attributed to a neighbourhood. For this reason, the number of first doses administered by neighbourhood does not sum to the total number of first doses administered among all Ottawa residents. In rural settings, the geographic boundaries of postal codes may span multiple health units. Since a client cannot be shared between health units, each postal code is attributed to a specific health unit by the Ministry of Health. This can cause artificially higher or lower vaccination rates in rural neighbourhoods as some non-Ottawa residents will be attributed to rural Ottawa neighbourhoods and some rural Ottawa residents will be attributed to other health units (i.e., excluded from our Ottawa resident counts. For these reasons, we are continuously monitoring and reviewing neighbourhood attributions in rural neighbourhoods using a client’s residential address, when available, and working with neighbouring health units to identify incorrectly attributed clients.Estimates of the number of residents 5 years of age and older (5+) and 18 years of age and older (18+), by ONS neighbourhood, are based on data provided by ICES using the Registered Persons Database (RPDB), which has basic demographic information for anyone who has an Ontario health card number and had contact with the health care system within 9 years or contact within 3 years for individuals 65 years and older. These estimates reflect the neighbourhood populations as of September 1, 2021.Estimation of these neighbourhood populations was provided by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES), which is funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health. Parts of this material are based on data and information compiled and provided by Ontario Ministry of Health, the Canadian Institute for Health Information and Public Health Ontario. The analyses, conclusions, opinions and statements expressed herein are solely those of the authors and do not reflect those of ICES, the OHDP, the funding or data sources; no endorsement is intended or should be inferred.The total 2020 5+ and 18+ population for Ottawa is based on the 2020 estimate from the 2016 Canadian Census and was downloaded from IntelliHealth, Ontario Ministry of Health, on November 29, 2021. Because of the different population data sources, neighbourhood populations and vaccinations will not sum to the totals for Ottawa.Rates with smaller populations are less stable and should be interpreted with caution.Attributes - Data fields:ONS_ID: Ottawa Neighbourhood Study neighbourhood ID number ONS_NAME: Ottawa Neighbourhood Study neighbourhood nameICES_POP_5plus: Number of residents 5 years of age or olderNum_dose1: Number of residents 5 years of age or older who have received at least one dose of vaccinePerc_eligible_dose1: Percent of residents 5 years of age or older who have received at least one dose of vaccineNum_fullyvacc: Number of residents 5 years of age or older who are fully vaccinated (i.e., have received two doses of a two-dose series or a single Johnson & Johnson vaccine)Perc_eligible_fullyvacc: Percent of residents 5 years of age or older who are fully vaccinated (i.e., have received two doses of a two-dose series or a single Johnson & Johnson vaccine)ICES_POP_18plus: Number of residents 18 years of age or olderNum_booster: Number of residents 18 years of older who have received a booster dose of vaccine Perc_eligible_boostervacc: Percent of residents 18 years of age or older who have received a booster doseAuthor: OPH Epidemiology Team & Ottawa Neighbourhood Study TeamAuthor email: OPH-Epidemiology@ottawa.caMaintainer Organization: Epidemiology & Evidence, Ottawa Public Health
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Accuracy: Points of consideration for interpretation of the data:Data are extracted from COVaxON using intellihealth Ontario. COVaxON is a dynamic system that allows for ongoing updates. For this reason, data represent a snapshot at the time of extraction and may differ from previous or subsequent dashboard updates.Intellihealth Ontario returns only records for clients who receive their vaccination in Ottawa or who have an Ottawa address.Data include all Ottawa residents vaccinated in Ontario, regardless of whether their vaccine was administered in Ottawa.Residency is based on client address. However, address information in COVaxON is not always complete. Clients who provide an Ottawa address are counted as Ottawa residents, clients who provide address information that indicates they live outside Ottawa are not considered to be Ottawa residents, and clients who do not provide address information are considered to be Ottawa residents if they were vaccinated in Ottawa.The counts include individuals who have received at least one, two, or three doses of vaccine. Update Frequency: Monday Attributes: Data fields:Year of birth (Age range in years) – Age groups based on an individual’s year of birth. The range of ages, in years, is provided in parenthesis.Vaccinated in Ottawa (Y/N) – Indicate whether an individual was vaccinated in Ottawa or not. Number of Ottawa residents that have received at least 1 dose – The number of Ottawa residents who have received one dose for each age group and for individuals vaccinated in or outside of Ottawa. Number of Ottawa residents that have received at least 2 doses – The number of Ottawa residents who have received two doses of vaccine for each age group and for individuals vaccinated in or outside of Ottawa.Number of Ottawa residents that have received at least 3 doses – The number of Ottawa residents who have received three doses of vaccine for each age group and for individuals vaccinated in or outside of Ottawa.Number of Ottawa residents that have received at least 4 doses – The number of Ottawa residents who have received four doses of vaccine for each age group and for individuals vaccinated in or outside of Ottawa.% of Ottawa residents that have received at least 1 dose – the percent of the population in each age group that has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.% of Ottawa residents that have received at least 2 doses – the percent of the population in each age group that has received at least two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.% of Ottawa residents, that have received at least 3 doses – the percent of the population in each age group that has received at least three doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. % of Ottawa residents, that have received at least 4 doses – the percent of the population in each age group that has received at least four doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. Contact: OPH Epidemiology Team | Epidemiology & Evidence, Ottawa Public Health
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TwitterApache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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A dataset comprising the price, address, number of bathrooms, number of bedrooms, city, and province of real estate listings for Canada's top 45 most populous cities, according to the 2021 census.
Variables:
This dataset can be used for basic linear regression problems or for basic exploratory data analysis.
Data is currently representative of prices as of October 29th 2023. Future updates will occur monthly.
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TwitterDifferences in the number and proportion of persons with and without disabilities, aged 15 years and over, by census metropolitan areas.
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TwitterLong-run estimates of economic variables for the provinces and territories. Estimates relate to prices, income and population. The data were originally compiled for the following research paper: M. Brown and R. Macdonald, 2015, Provincial Convergence and Divergence in Canada, 1926 to 2011, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11F0027M, Ottawa, Ontario, Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 096.
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TwitterObjectives: The main objective of the survey is to provide information about Canadian adults whose daily activities are limited because of a long-term condition or health-related problem. This information will be used to plan and evaluate services, programs and policies for adults with disabilities to help enable their full participation in Canadian society.
Information from the CSD will be used by all levels of government, as well as associations for persons with disabilities and researchers working in the field of disability. Data may be used to plan and evaluate policies and programs for Canadian adults with disabilities to help enable their full participation in society. In particular, information on adults with disabilities is essential for the effective development and operation of the Employment Equity Program. Data on disability are also used to fulfil Canada's international agreement relating to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Reference Period: 2013-01-13
Periodicity of Data Collection: Quinquennial
Whole country
Individuals
Population groups: 15 years and over
Total population covered: All
Economic activities: All economic activities
Sectors covered: All sectors
Labor force status: Employed persons, unemployed persons, persons outside labour force
Status in Employment: Employees, employers, own-account workers, contributing family workers, members of producers' cooperatives
Establishments: NR
Other limitations: Survey covers all age groups 15 years and over, the employment statistics cover only those aged 15 to 64
Classifications: Sex, age, level of education, other personal characteristics, type of living arrangements, status in employment, occupation (classification system: NOC), economic activity (classification system: NAICS), type of disability
Cross-classification: Na
Sample survey data [ssd]
Periodicity of Data collection: Quinquennial
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TwitterVulnerable seniors are those who face additional barriers to fully participating in their communities.The maps in this application allow exploring the distribution of factors contributing to vulnerability of senior population in rural neighbourhoods of Ottawa: --Seniors Living Alone--Seniors Living on Low Income--Seniors who are still Working--Seniors who are of a Racialized Groups--Seniors who are New to their neighbourhood--Seniors who are Immigrants
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TwitterThis table presents income shares, thresholds, tax shares, and total counts of individual Canadian tax filers, with a focus on high income individuals (95% income threshold, 99% threshold, etc.). Income thresholds are geography-specific; for example, the number of Nova Scotians in the top 1% will be calculated as the number of taxfiling Nova Scotians whose total income exceeded the 99% income threshold of Nova Scotian tax filers. Different definitions of income are available in the table namely market, total, and after-tax income, both with and without capital gains.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Historical dataset of population level and growth rate for the Ottawa-Gatineau, Canada metro area from 1950 to 2025.