Journal Article

Health Research Policy and Systems 16.58

Gendered Health Systems: Evidence from Low- and Middle-Income Countries

Published on 12 June 2018

Gender is often neglected in health systems, yet health systems are not gender neutral. Within health systems research, gender analysis seeks to understand how gender power relations create inequities in access to resources, the distribution of labour and roles, social norms and values, and decision-making.

This paper synthesises findings from nine studies focusing on four health systems domains, namely human resources, service delivery, governance and financing. It provides examples of how a gendered and/or intersectional gender approach can be applied by researchers in a range of low- and middle-income settings (Cambodia, Zimbabwe, Uganda, India, China, Nigeria and Tanzania) to issues across the health system and demonstrates that these types of analysis can uncover new and novel ways of viewing seemingly intractable problems.

Authors

Linda Waldman

Director of Teaching and Learning

Publication details

published by
BMC
authors
Kate Hawkins
journal
Health Research Policy and Systems, volume 16, issue 58
doi
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-018-0338-5
language
English

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