July 9, 2025 from HRD Canada
Canadians Are Generating More Health Data Than Ever—But It’s Not Helping
From wearable trackers to virtual health portals, Canadians now have access to more health information than any previous generation. But new research suggests that access doesn’t always equal action.
According to a report from NiaHealth, 88% of Canadians have at least one treatable health issue that remains undetected. The problem isn’t data collection—it’s interpretation.
“We’re entering an era where we have the data. What we’re missing is the interpretation,”
said Sameer Dhar, co-founder and CEO of NiaHealth. Without clinical guidance, health data becomes “just more noise,” not a path to better outcomes.
The Disconnect Between Perception and Reality
NiaHealth’s review of 100,000 anonymized biomarker results from more than 2,000 members revealed some surprising findings:
- 41.4% showed early signs of kidney strain
- 23% were at risk for diabetes but didn’t know it
- Nearly 50% had suboptimal vitamin D levels
Despite this, most participants believed their health was “very good” or “excellent.”
Clinical director Tanya ter Keurs explained that many patients feel like they’re doing everything right—tracking symptoms, Googling conditions, scheduling tests—yet still missing the full picture. Keurs stated,
“What Canadians need isn’t more health data. They need a trusted way to make sense of it.”
Health Misinformation Is Making It Worse
Compounding the issue is the sheer amount of misinformation. NiaHealth found that 62% of Canadians had encountered false or misleading health content, and 43% said it caused them stress or delayed them from seeking care.
With so many conflicting messages, even proactive patients can become paralyzed by uncertainty. The report emphasized that when data is combined with clinical interpretation and coaching, outcomes improve dramatically. One NiaHealth cohort that followed a care plan for a year saw a:
- 45% improvement in cardiovascular scores
- 37% improvement in kidney function
- 27% improvement in metabolic markers
A Missed Opportunity in the Workplace
These findings have direct implications for workplace health and wellness programs. Workers want help navigating care—not just insurance. According to GreenShield data, 75% of employees want easier access to health professionals and simplified claims.
Right now, though, Canadians are reportedly spending 2.5 times more effort navigating benefits than actually receiving care. “Support for employees has to go beyond simply offering coverage. said Joe Blomeley, EVP of GreenShield Health. “It needs to reflect who people are.”
Wellbeing Shouldn’t End at the Office Door
Creating a culture of wellbeing means paying attention to what’s happening outside of work. HR professionals and leaders have a role to play here.
“Awareness of an employee’s well-being can help identify when he or she is overwhelmed before it turns into burnout, absenteeism, or turnover,”
said Robert Sakayo, HR assistant at UR Home International. He cautioned, however, that support must respect professional boundaries. It is important to create a space for employees where they don’t feel obligated to share, but can. Sakayo believes this ensures “their support is within professional boundaries.”
It’s Not Just About Having the Data
Canada doesn’t have a data problem—it has an interpretation problem. If employers, clinicians, and benefit providers can work together to make health information understandable and actionable, more Canadians will be able to take meaningful steps toward better outcomes.
And for workplaces, that means healthier, more supported, and ultimately more productive teams.
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