Gender perspective on the determinants of health outcomes in selected Southern African countries

Q2 Social Sciences Humanities and Social Sciences Letters Pub Date : 2024-02-22 DOI:10.18488/73.v12i2.3654
O. Jemiluyi, Leward Jeke
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Abstract

Recurring global health concerns such as the COVID-19 pandemic served as perfect examples of the "health is wealth" discussion and contributed to a growing understanding of the strong relationships between multiple risks to global socioeconomic success and poor health. Another development is the inclusion of gender-specific health goals   in the SDGs which have highlighted the critical role of    women’s health   in attaining global health and ending the cycle of poverty. This study aims at examining factors influencing women's health in two Southern African countries namely South Africa and Eswatini affected by a significant burden of disease. The regression outcomes show that female economic participation, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), female education, teenage pregnancy, income and urbanization have varying effects on female health outcomes in both countries using gender specific socioeconomic factors within the framework of Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL). This research engages policy makers and strategists in the health sector on the need to address gender disparities in formulating health policies. Moreover, policies and strategies aimed at fostering better health outcomes by solving national priority health challenges in particular the HIV/AIDS epidemic and health-risk behaviours should be prioritized.
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从性别角度看选定的南部非洲国家卫生成果的决定因素
反复出现的全球健康问题,如 COVID-19 大流行病,是 "健康就是财富 "讨论的最佳例证,并促使人们日益认识到全球社会经济成功所面临的多重风险与健康状况不佳之间的密切关系。另一项进展是在可持续发展目标中纳入了针对不同性别的健康目标,强调了妇女健康在实现全球健康和结束贫困循环中的关键作用。本研究旨在探讨影响南非和埃斯瓦提尼这两个疾病负担沉重的南部非洲国家妇女健康的因素。回归结果表明,在自回归分布滞后(ARDL)框架内,利用特定性别的社会经济因素,女性经济参与、人体免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)、女性教育、少女怀孕、收入和城市化对这两个国家的女性健康结果有着不同的影响。这项研究让卫生部门的决策者和战略家认识到,在制定卫生政策时需要解决性别差异问题。此外,应优先考虑旨在通过解决国家优先卫生挑战,特别是艾滋病毒/艾滋病流行和健康风险行为,来促进更好的卫生成果的政策和战略。
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来源期刊
Humanities and Social Sciences Letters
Humanities and Social Sciences Letters Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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