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1.
Rev Panam Salud Publica ; 11(5-6): 327-34, 2002.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12162830

ABSTRACT

This piece describes the conceptual framework and the objectives that guided a research initiative in the Region of the Americas that was called "Gender, Equity, and Access to Health Services" and that was sponsored in 2001 by the Pan American Health Organization. The piece does not summarize the results of the six projects that were carried under the initiative, whose analyses have not all been completed. Instead, the piece discusses some of the foundations of the initiative and provides a general introduction to the country studies that were done. The six studies were done in Barbados/Jamaica, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. The primary objective of the initiative was to stimulate the use of existing quantitative information in the countries, with the goal of starting a process of systematically documenting two things: 1) the unfair, unnecessary, and avoidable inequalities between men and women in their access to health care and 2) the linkages between those inequalities and other socioeconomic factors. The concept of gender equity that guided this examination of health care was not the usual one calling for the equal distribution of resources. Rather, it was the notion that resources should be allocated differentially, according to the particular needs of men and of women, and that persons should pay for health services according to their economic ability rather than their risk level. The starting point for the initiative was the premise that gender inequities in utilizing and paying for health care result from gender differences in the macroeconomic and microeconomic distribution of resources. The piece concludes that achieving equity in health care access will require a better understanding of the gender needs and gender barriers that are linked to social structures and health systems.


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Prejudice , Socioeconomic Factors , Women's Rights , Barbados , Brazil , Chile , Colombia , Developing Countries , Ecuador , Female , Health Services/economics , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Needs and Demand/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Insurance, Health/statistics & numerical data , Jamaica , Male , Models, Theoretical , Peru , Reproductive Medicine/statistics & numerical data
4.
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 11(5/6): 454-461, maio-jun. 2002.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-323696

ABSTRACT

The Governing Bodies of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) have mandated that the Organization apply a gender perspective in all aspects of the Organization's activities and its technical cooperation in the area of health out the need to eradicate unjust gender differences that affect the right and access to health care that is appropriate for women. The piece explains the differences between equity and equality and between gender and sex, and how gender equity should come about in the state of health, in health care, and in all people's efforts to engender health. It is hoped the piece will contribute to a better understanding of the situation, thus helping to eliminate inequities that are due to sex, socioeconomic factors, and the distribution of power


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Women's Health
5.
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 11(5/6): 435-438, maio-jun. 2002.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-323703

ABSTRACT

Gender equity is increasingly being acknowledged as an essential aspect of sustainable development and more specifically, of health development. The Pan American Health Organization's Program for Women, Health, and Development has been piloting for a year now a project known as Equidad de género en las políticas de reforma del sector de salud, whose objective is to promote gender equity in the health sector reform efforts in the Region. The first stage of the project is being conducted in Chile and Peru, along with some activities throughout the Region. The core of theproject is the production and use of information as a tool for introducing changes geared toward achieving greater gender equity in health, particularly in connection with malefemale disparities that are unnecessary, avoidable, and unfair in health status, access to health care, and participation in decision-making within the health system. We expect that in three years the project will have brought about changesin the production of information and knowledge, advocacy, and information dissemination, as well as in the development, appropriation, identification of intersectoral mechanisms that will make it possible for key figures in government and civil society to work together in setting and surveying policy on gender equity in health


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform , Latin America , Caribbean Region
6.
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 11(5/6): 327-334, maio-jun. 2002.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-323715

ABSTRACT

This piece describes the conceptual framework and the objectives that guided a research initiative in the Region of the Americas that was called "Gender, Equity, and Access to Health Services" and that was sponsored in 2001 by the Pan American Health Organization. The piece does not summarize the results of the six projects that were carried under the initiative, whose analyses have not all been completed. Instead, the piece discusses some of the foundations of the initiative and provides a general introduction to the country studies that were done. The six studies were done in Barbados/Jamaica, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. The primary objective of the initiative was to stimulate the use of existing quantitative information in the countries, with the goal of starting a process of systematically documenting two things: 1) the unfair, unnecessary, and avoidable inequalities between men and women in their access to health care and 2) the linkages between those inequalities and other socioeconomic factors. The concept of gender equity that guided this examination of health care was not the usual one calling for the equal distribution of resources. Rather, it was the notion that resources should be allocated differentially, according to the particular needs of men and of women, and that persons should pay for health services according to their economic ability rather than their risk level. The starting point for the initiative was the premise that gender inequities in utilizing and paying for health care result from gender differences in the macroeconomic and microeconomic distribution of resources. The piece concludes that achieving equity in health care access will require a better understanding of the gender needs and gender barriers that are linked to social structures and health systems


Subject(s)
Health Services , Equity in Access to Health Services , Latin America
10.
La Paz; OPS/OMS; 2001. 15 p. tab, graf.
Monography in Spanish | LIBOCS, LIBOSP | ID: biblio-1304310

ABSTRACT

El objetivo de este documento es presentar los fundamentos éticos y empíricos del mandato OPS de "incorporación de la perspectiva de género en las políticas y estrategias de salud". Dicho mandato apunta a la indentificación y corección de las inequidades de género que vulneran el ejercicio ciudadano del derecho a la salud por parte de mujeres y hombres. El acento en género no es de nimguna manera, reduccionista. Por el contrario, esta visión parte del reconocimiento esencial de que las desigualdades de género se articulan y potencian con otras desigualdades de poder. Lo que se pretende resaltar es, precisamente, que un análisis de la salud que no integre la dimensión de género no puede dar cuenta cabal de la realidad. Y, más aén, que desde una perspectiva de justicia social, no es de ninguna manera suficiente ni coherente enfrentar las desigualdades entre grupos económicos o étnicos, sin que paralelamente se aborden dentro de tales grupos, las desigualdedes injustas entre hombres y mujeres.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Women's Health , Bolivia
11.
Washington, D.C; Organización Panamericana de la Salud; mar. 2001. 12 p.
Monography in Spanish | PAHO | ID: pah-226372
12.
Washington, D.C; Organización Panamericana de la Salud; mar. 2001. 12 p.
Monography in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-381659
13.
Washington, D.C; Pan American Health Organization; Jan. 2000. 28 p.
Monography in English | PAHO | ID: pah-245206
14.
Washington, D.C; Pan Américan Health Organization; Jan. 2000. 28 p.
Monography in English | LILACS | ID: lil-381416
19.
In. Anon. Health conditions in the Caribbean. Washington, D.C, Pan American Health Organisation, 1997. p.131-57, tab.
Monography in English | MedCarib | ID: med-563
20.
Washington, D.C; Pan American Health Organization; Jun. 1994. 53 p. tab. (PAHO/PWD/94-003).
Monography in English | PAHO | ID: pah-18808
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