Doyal Lesley, Das-Bhaumik Raja G
University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, UK.
BMJ Open Ophthalmol. 2018 Sep 1;3(1):e000135. doi: 10.1136/bmjophth-2017-000135. eCollection 2018.
Four-fifths of all blind or vision impaired people live in middle-income and low-income countries with the African region and parts of Asia and the Middle East bearing the heaviest burden. At the same time, we know that around two thirds of all blind people in the world are female. Hence, the poorest (and usually the oldest) women are most likely to have their lives limited by visual impairment. While recent strategies have focussed on international variations in eye health, very few have paid attention to the gender differences that are an inextricable element in these inequalities. This review will explore possible explanations for the advantage of men in the exercise of one of the most basic of human senses. It will show that this cannot be understood through the use of a biomedical approach alone. Broader social perspectives will also be needed in order to create an appropriate knowledge base for tackling global inequalities in blindness.
全球五分之四的盲人或视力受损者生活在中低收入国家,非洲地区以及亚洲和中东部分地区负担最为沉重。与此同时,我们知道全球约三分之二的盲人是女性。因此,最贫困(通常也是年龄最大)的女性最有可能因视力障碍而使生活受限。尽管近期的策略聚焦于眼健康的国际差异,但很少有人关注性别差异,而性别差异是这些不平等现象中不可分割的因素。本综述将探讨男性在人类最基本的感官之一的运用上具有优势的可能原因。它将表明,仅通过生物医学方法无法理解这一现象。还需要更广泛的社会视角,以便为解决全球失明不平等问题建立适当的知识基础。