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Essay, 2003, 20 Seiten
Autor: Birgit Noack
Fach: Gesundheitswissenschaften
Details
Institution/Hochschule: University of London (Institute of Education)
Tags: Aspiration, Southern, Sudan, Basisgesundheitswesen, Entwicklungslaendern
Jahr: 2003
Seiten: 20
Note: A (1,0)
Literaturverzeichnis: ~ 36 Einträge
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN (E-Book): 978-3-638-25675-9
Dateigröße: 400 KB
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Textauszug (computergeneriert)
University of London
Aspiration for health - How can a focus on gender
bring change in Southern Sudan
by
Birgit Noack
Table of Figures
Definition of terms and abbreviations 4
Introduction 5
A gender approach towards health and development 7
Gender empowerment reconsidered 9
Gender focussed PHC in an environment of war and natural disaster 10
Conclusion 15
Introduction
Three years after the Primary Health Care (PHC) goal of ′health for all′ should have come into effect, research still reveals ever-increasing socio-economic disparities in global health (Bravemen & Tarimo, 2002). Concurrently, the profound gender inequity of the world′s resource distribution, a key determinant of health, contiues:
"Women are half the world′s population, yet they do two-thirds of the world′s work, earn one-tenth of the world′s income, and own less than one-hundredth of the world′s property
(UN, 1985:337)"
This is true particularly in low-income countries, where the majority of girls and women are deprived of adequate health care, education and decision-making power, leading to illiteracy, malnutrition, abuse, chronic illness and premature death (The World Bank, 1994; UN, 2000). Current news headlines echo this problem: African women are 175 times more likely to die in childbirth and pregnancy than Westerners are (BBC news, 20 October 2003).
Sudan, a country marked by extreme poverty due to chronic civil war, compounded by natural disasters, also reflects these gender inequities. The few statistics available show a lower primary education enrolment ratio for girls (41.9); a high maternal mortality ratio of 1500 (per 100 000 live births) and only 10% of parliament seats are taken up by women (UN, 2003).
The denial of women′s equity and health rights has profound consequences upon the health, development and survival of children. Research across the developing world indicates that, after maternal death, more than 95% of infants died within one year, with a girl child having an even less chance of survival than a boy (The World Bank 1994; Winikoff, 1988).
Clearly, girls and women need to be the focus of all PHC initiatives if public health is to be enhanced.
Focussing upon women in order to improve health is not a recent notion, but has been promoted since the UN sponsored Women′s Decade in 1976-85 (Moser, 1993). Thus, the question arises why only minor success appear to be noticeable, and how this conceptual framework can be applied into the context of a complex emergency like in Sudan.
Therefore, this essay will firstly outline the evolution of a gender approach towards health and development, elucidating its underlying principles, objectives and achievements. It will briefly explicate the socio-economic and cultural context of a Dinka community in Southern Sudan through a ′gender lens′ and critically reflect upon PHC programmes, with reference to the author′s personal work experience.
A gender approach towards health and development
“Development aid is less effective when women are not participating on an equal footing.”
(Oxfam Council, 1993:338)
In recent decades, a focus upon gender, which refers to the social construction of male and female relationships and their roles in society, has been pursued in order to achieve PHC’s goal of equity in health1 outcomes (Porter et al, 1999; Evans et al, 2002). In order to achieve this, PHC stresses the shift away from the medical model of health towards a multi-sectoral approach (McDonald, 1993). However, what does a gender approach involve?
[...]
1 The Alma-Ata declaration reaffirms the broader definition of health as a state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease, and highlights the interplay of multiple socio-economic and cultural factors that determine public health (Hall & Taylor, 2003).
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