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UN: Health Care for Women Still Below Need |
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New York
Nov 9 2009 9:10AM
Many of the world’s countries continue to fail to meet the health-care needs of women at key stages of their lives, such as when they reach adolescence or when they are elderly, a new United Nations report has found.
The report, issued today by the
World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/en/) in Geneva, said urgent action
is required to improve the health and lives of women,
despite considerable progress in recent
decades.
Sexual and reproductive health services tend
to focus exclusively on married women in too many countries,
according to the report, noting that in those societies few
services are made available to unmarried women and
adolescents, and even fewer to marginalized groups such as
sex workers, intravenous drug workers, ethnic workers and
rural women.
Up to 80 per cent of all health care
worldwide takes place in
the home, and is almost always provided by women, who are
often unsupported and unremunerated in these
activities.
Launching the report, WHO Director-General
Margaret Chan
<"http://www.who.int/dg/speeches/2009/women_health_report_20091109/en/index.html">said
it was “time to pay girls and women back, to make sure
that they get the care and support they need to enjoy a
fundamental human right at every moment of their lives –
that is, their right to health.”
Dr. Chan
questioned: “If women are denied a chance to develop their
full human potential, including their potential to lead
healthier and at least somewhat happier lives, is society as
a whole really healthy? What does this say about the state
of social progress in the 21st century?”
The report
observed that HIV, tuberculosis and pregnancy-related
conditions remain the major killers of women aged between 15
and 45, but that as women age, non-communicable diseases –
such as heart attacks and strokes – become leading causes
of death and disability.
However, in many countries
heart attacks and strokes are considered “male”
problems, leading to an under-diagnosis of heart disease in
women.
Females are also hampered from their lower
socio-economic status, with a lack of access to education,
income and decision-making positions limiting women’s
ability to protect their health.
This is particularly
true in the case of the HIV and AIDS pandemic, where
cultural pressures mean many women lack basic knowledge
about HIV and how to negotiate safer sex
practices.
“We will not see significant progress as
long as women are regarded as second-class citizens in so
many parts of the world,” Dr. Chan said.
“In so
many societies, men exercise political, social and economic
control. The health sector has to be concerned. These
unequal power relations translate into unequal access to
health care and unequal control over health
resources.”
The WHO report, entitled Women and
health: today’s evidence tomorrow’s agenda, outlines
proposals for reform to help women.
These include
strengthening health systems so they can better meet
women’s needs, changing public policy to deal with the
social and economic factors that adversely impact women’s
health and identifying mechanisms to promote women’s
leadership in health
care.
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