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Have Policies Tackled Gender Inequalities in Health? A Scoping Review.

Nuria Crespí-LlorénsIldefonso Hernández-AguadoElisa Chilet-Rosell
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2021)
Gender is recognized as one of the most relevant determinants of health inequalities. This scoping review sought to identify and analyse policies, either implemented or formulated as proposals, which aimed to reduce gender inequalities in health. We searched Medline, Web of Science, and Scielo. Of 2895 records, 91 full text articles were analysed, and 33 papers were included. Of these papers, 22 described the process of formulation, implementation, or evaluation of policies whose aim was to reduce gender inequalities in health; six focused on recommendations, and the remaining five dealt with both issues. Our review showed that the policies aimed at reducing gender inequalities in health, either implemented or formulated as proposals, are scarce. Moreover, despite some success, overall progress has been slow. The studies show failures in design and particularly in the implementation process. We found a lack of awareness and capacity in the policy-making progress, under-financing, bureaucratization, shortage of relevant data, and absence of women's participation in decision-making. Therefore, an emphasis on the design and implementation of gender-sensitive policies seems essential to advance gender equality in health. This scoping review gathers evidence to support the design of such policies and recommendations that can facilitate their implementation.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • decision making
  • type diabetes
  • quality improvement
  • pregnant women
  • skeletal muscle
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • smoking cessation
  • big data
  • human health