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Gender sensitivity and gender politics in health care

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Title: Gender sensitivity and gender politics in health care


1
Gender sensitivity and gender politics in health
care
  • Lesley Doyal

2
What do we mean by gender equity?
  • Cannot give everyone equal health
  • can only ensure equal right to optimise
    whatever potential for health individuals may
    have

3
How to promote gender equity
  • eliminate unfair and avoidable inequalities in
    health outcomes between women and men through
    ensuring that both groups have equal access to
    the resources needed to realise their potential
    for health

4
Putting this definition into practice equity and
equality
  • Promoting equality means treating all individuals
    the same
  • But not appropriate if they have different needs
  • Women and men have many needs in common
  • But also have different needs for both biological
    and social reasons
  • Also face different constraints on meeting those
    needs
  • Policies should therefore be based on principle
    of equity
  • Means design of specific services to optimise the
    health outcomes/realise the health potential of
    each group

5
Preliminary agenda for gender equity in health
care
  • Promote universal access to effective,
    appropriate and gender-sensitive sexual and
    reproductive health care
  • Reshape all health services through gender
    mainstreaming strategies
  • Promote gender equity in wider economic and
    social policies

6
Sexual and reproductive health care
  • Many gaps in available services leading to global
    inequalities and harm to health of poorest women
  • Reflected in high maternal mortality and
    morbidity rates and incidence of STIs in both
    women and men

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8
Major inequalities in access to health care in
pregnancy
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11
Obstacles to meeting sexual and reproductive
needs of poor women
  • availability
  • affordability
  • acceptability
  • accountability
  • (framework from Sen et al (2007)
  • http//www.ids.ac.uk/ghen/resources/index.html

12
Also need to include men
  • Crucial to meet needs of men as well as women
  • Important in promotion of mens own health (eg
    prevention of HIV and other STIs)
  • But also central to promotion of womens health
    in sexual /reproductive arena
  • In SA NGOs such as Men as Partners (MAP) well
    known for working with men on HIV and violence
    and other gender issues in health
  • For discussion of men and reproductive health in
    South African context see http//www.hst.org.za/up
    loads/files/chap9_06.pdf
  • For systematic analysis of effectiveness of
    gender sensitivity in reproductive health
    interventions see WHO/IDGG report
    http//www.who.int/gender/documents/SoWhatReportSe
    pt.05.pdf

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14
gender mainstreaming across health sector
  • Integration of gender issues into planning,
    formulation and monitoring of all health (and
    other) policies, programmes and services to
    reduce the inequalities in outcomes between women
    and men

15
The emergence of concept of gender mainstreaming
  • Importance of gender issues in health care first
    identified by women who campaigned locally and
    globally for their interests to be taken more
    seriously
  • Led to strategy of gender mainstreaming in
    Cairo (1994) Beijing (1995) and at other UN
    conferences
  • Based on principles of equity as part of wider
    strategy to integrate women into development
  • Spread very quickly as policy framework
    especially in international organisations and
    NGOs
  • Last few years attention increasingly paid to
    mens sex and gender specific needs

16
Dimensions of gender mainstreaming
  • Analysis of health care needs of women and men as
    part of planning process
  • Building capacity of health care workers to
    deliver gender sensitive care (knowledge and
    attitudes)
  • Provision of protocols and other resources to
    facilitate sex and gender-sensitive diagnosis and
    treatment
  • Promotion of equal opportunities policies in
    health care labour force
  • Development of appropriate monitoring and
    evaluation strategies to measure gender
    sensitivity of policies
  • For related policies in South African public
    health sector see http//www.doh.gov.za/docs/facts
    heets/guidelines/gender/chap3.pdf

17
Health care and gender inequalities political
perspectives
  • Pursuit of gender equity not just a technical
    issue but a political one
  • Interventions may be gender blind and reinforce
    existing inequalities
  • Gender sensitive policies ensure women and men
    are treated the same/different as appropriate to
    meet their immediate needs
  • Gender transformative interventions use
    policies/programmes to empower women and change
    gender relations

18
Illustrations from HIV /AIDS policies
  • Gender sensitive policies provide appropriate
    services for women and men according to different
    needs, desires, material circumstances, cultural
    expectations, status and power
  • But gender transformative policies challenge
    typical male roles especially those associated
    with violence and sexual demands
  • Need to be linked to wider polices that give
    women greater power socially and economically
  • South Africa has developed important innovations
    in this area through work of NGOs (eg MAP and
    Stepping Stones)
  • For report on randomised controlled trial
    of Stepping Stones in South Africa see
    http//www.mrc.ac.za/policybriefs/steppingstones.p
    df

19
Link to wider global equity goals through MDGs
20
But is there a political will to change gender
relations?
  • Need changes in gender division of labour
  • More equality between women and men in access to
    resources
  • Greater freedom for women and men from
    constraints of gender roles
  • Can these changes be achieved in health care in
    wider society and if so how?
  • And very importantly, how does this fit into SA
    policies/politics of transformation?

21
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