Abstract

The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and pledge to leave no one behind have raised the importance of ensuring equitable health outcomes and healthcare delivery. Multisectoral approaches to tackling neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), including prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and healthcare, have had a limited focus on gender. Yet, gender roles and relations shape vulnerability to NTDs, access to prevention and treatment, and experience of living with NTDs [1]. Understanding the similarities and differences of disease vulnerability and experience between genders can support NTD actors to deliver equitable prevention, diagnosis, and treatment services. The NTD community, including researchers and practitioners, needs to better understand these dynamics and take action to advance gender equality, meet the NTD roadmap 2020 goals, and contribute towards the SDGs and universal health coverage (UHC). The UHC movement is advocating for clear action to address the gender determinants of health. This viewpoint synthesizes evidence from a discussion paper [2] developed by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and TDR (Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases sponsored by UNICEF, UNDP, World Bank, and WHO) in partnership with the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine to support governments and nongovernment organizations to understand how to recognize and address gender inequities within NTD programs and improve delivery through gender analysis.

Highlights

  • Kim OzanoID1*, Laura Dean1, Mami Yoshimura2, Eleanor MacPherson3, Natalia Linou2, Mariam Otmani del Barrio4, Christine M

  • Providing training and supportive supervision structures would help community drug distributers (CDDs) reflect on how they promote gender equity in their work and to consider which coverage improvement strategies will be most appropriate in different contexts [5]

  • Understanding neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)-related stigma and how it is affected by gender norms will help to minimize the negative impact of stigma, reduce discrimination, support social acceptance, improve disease control and knowledge, and prevent disability [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Kim OzanoID1*, Laura Dean1, Mami Yoshimura2, Eleanor MacPherson3, Natalia Linou2, Mariam Otmani del Barrio4, Christine M. Understanding the similarities and differences of disease vulnerability and experience between genders can support NTD actors to deliver equitable prevention, diagnosis, and treatment services.

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