Ano de publicação: 2009
Gender differences in health and in how well health systems and health care
services meet the needs of women and men are well known:
in Europe, there
are variations in terms of life expectancy, the risk of mortality and morbidity,
health behaviours and in the use of health care services. There is also increasing
research evidence demonstrating the importance of a number of different social
determinants of health, and these interact with gender inequalities in ways that
can magnify the impact on health.
Additionally, there has also been an increasing recognition that health policy
may exacerbate gender inequalities when it fails to address the needs of either
men or women, and that health systems must address gender equity. This
forms part of good stewardship, as well as meeting the needs of the
populations served. Gender equity objectives have also been identified in
position statements from WHO, the United Nations and the European Union
(EU). For the purposes of this policy brief, the ‘policy problem’ is the way in
which health systems might address gender equity in order to reduce the health
gap between men and women and to improve efficiency. This document
identifies some of the main approaches used to address gender equity in health
systems, elaborating on three examples in order to suggest how these methods
might be developed in the context of health policies across Europe.
The underlying causes of the gender gap in health which might be addressed
by health systems and health care services include differences between women
and men in their use of preventive health care, their health behaviours and in
their access to health care and treatment – all of which affect health outcomes
for women and men. It is difficult to calculate the exact proportion of the
gender gap that can be attributed to gender inequality in the planning and
delivery of health services. However, the consequences of not addressing
gender are likely to include persistent excess mortality among men, underuse,
and inefficient use, of health resources, poor user satisfaction and, for some
countries, perhaps, a widening gender gap in health.