Need for and Access to Health Care and Medicines: Are There Gender Inequities?

Published By: PLoS ONE | Published Date: March, 07 , 2013

Differences between women and men in political and economic empowerment, education, and health risks are well-documented. Similar gender inequities in access to care and medicines have been hypothesized but evidence is lacking. It analyzed 2002 World Health Survey data for 257,922 adult respondents and 80,932 children less than 5 years old from 53 mostly low and middle-income countries. We constructed indicators of need for, access to, and perceptions of care, and we described the number of countries with equal and statistically different proportions of women and men for each indicator. Using multivariate logistic regression models, we estimated effects of gender on our study outcomes, overall and by household poverty. These cross-country results do not suggest a systematic disadvantage of women in access to curative care and medicines for treating selected chronic conditions or acute symptoms, or to preventive services among boys and girls.

Author(s): Anita K. Wagner, Amy J. Graves, Zhengyu Fan, Saul Walker, Fang Zhang, Dennis Ross-Degnan | Posted on: Nov 26, 2014 | Views(449)


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