PhD Candidate, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada; Centre de recherche en santé publique, Université de Montréal et CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, Montreal, Canada.
Associate Professor, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, School of PublicHealth, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada; Centre de recherche en santé publique, Université de Montréal et CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, Montreal, Canada.
Sex Reprod Health Matters. 2020 Dec;28(2):1772654. doi: 10.1080/26410397.2020.1772654.
The 2030 Sustainable Development Goals committed to "Leave No One Behind" regardless of social identity. While access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services has improved globally, people with disabilities continue to face enormous barriers to SRH, infringing on their SRH rights (SRHR). Uganda adopted pro-disability legislation to promote the rights of people with disabilities. Despite these legal instruments, SRHR of people with disabilities continue to be violated and denied. To address this, we sought to understand and document how people with disabilities perceive the relationships between their use of SRH services, legislation, and health policy in three districts of the post-conflict Northern region of Uganda. Through an intersectionality-informed analysis, we interviewed 32 women and men with different types of impairments (physical, sensory and mental) and conducted two focus groups with 12 hearing and non-hearing disabled people as well as non-participant observations at seven health facilities. We found that disabled people's access to SHR services is shaped by the intersections of gender, disability, and violence, and that individuals with disabilities experienced discrimination across both private-not-for-profit and public health facilities. They also encountered numerous physical, attitudinal, and communication accessibility barriers. Despite policy implementation challenges, people with disabilities expected to exercise their rights and made concrete multi-level recommendations to redress situations of inequity and disadvantages in SRH service utilisation. Intersectionality revealed blind spots in policy implementation and service utilisation gaps. Universal health coverage can be operationalised in actionable measures where its universality meets with social justice.
2030 年可持续发展目标承诺“不让任何人掉队”,无论其社会身份如何。虽然全球范围内获得性与生殖健康(SRH)服务的机会有所改善,但残疾人在获得 SRH 方面仍然面临巨大障碍,侵犯了他们的 SRH 权利(SRHR)。乌干达通过了有利于残疾人的立法,以促进残疾人的权利。尽管有这些法律文书,但残疾人的 SRHR 仍然受到侵犯和剥夺。为了解决这个问题,我们试图了解和记录残疾人如何看待他们在使用 SRH 服务、立法和卫生政策方面的关系,在乌干达北部冲突后地区的三个地区进行了研究。通过交叉性分析,我们采访了 32 名不同类型残疾(身体、感官和精神)的妇女和男子,并与 12 名听力和非听力残疾人和 7 个卫生设施的非参与者观察进行了两次焦点小组讨论。我们发现,残疾人获得 SHR 服务的机会受到性别、残疾和暴力的交叉影响,残疾人在私营非营利和公共卫生设施中都受到歧视。他们还遇到了许多身体、态度和沟通方面的无障碍障碍。尽管政策执行面临挑战,但残疾人希望行使自己的权利,并提出了具体的多层次建议,以纠正在 SRH 服务利用方面的不平等和不利情况。交叉性揭示了政策执行和服务利用差距中的盲点。全民健康覆盖可以通过具有社会正义的可操作措施来实现。