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人道主义背景下基于性别的暴力与传染病:从埃博拉、寨卡和新冠疫情中吸取的经验教训,为共病政策制定提供参考

Gender-based violence and infectious disease in humanitarian settings: lessons learned from Ebola, Zika, and COVID-19 to inform syndemic policy making.

作者信息

Meinhart Melissa, Vahedi Luissa, Carter Simone E, Poulton Catherine, Mwanze Palaku Philomene, Stark Lindsay

机构信息

Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis, One Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1196, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA.

UNICEF, Public Health Emergencies, Geneva Avenue de la Paix 5 - 7, 1202, Genève, Switzerland.

出版信息

Confl Health. 2021 Nov 20;15(1):84. doi: 10.1186/s13031-021-00419-9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The impacts of infectious disease outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics are not gender neutral. Instead, infectious diseases and gender-based violence (GBV) mutually reinforce each other. Women and girls in humanitarian settings are disproportionately impacted as crises exacerbate gender inequality, violence, and community transmission. A syndemic model of infectious disease and GBV draws attention to their critical linkage, enabling more effective approaches to address both infectious disease transmission and GBV prevalence.

MAIN BODY

Implementation of infectious disease control measures have been consistently absent of critical gender considerations in humanitarian settings. We drew learnings from Ebola, Zika, and COVID-19 to highlight how women and girls living in humanitarian settings have faced bi-directional syndemic vulnerabilities between GBV and infectious disease. Our findings indicate that Ebola, Zika, and COVID-19 exacerbated GBV risk and experience of GBV increased community transmission of these infectious diseases. Moreover, we identified a failure of existing policies to address this mutually deleterious linkage. Thus, we advocate for policymakers to ask three foundational questions: (i) What are the gendered bi-directional risk pathways between infectious disease and GBV?; (ii) How can we act on the gendered risk pathways?; and, (iii) Who should be involved in designing, implementing, and evaluating gender-sensitive policies?

CONCLUSION

Our syndemic policy framework challenges existing thinking on a neglected issue that disproportionally impacts women and girls. By offering foundational guidance to address and thwart the syndemic of infectious disease and GBV in humanitarian settings, we endeavor to proactively and holistically address the reinforcing linkage between GBV and current or emergent infectious diseases.

摘要

背景

传染病爆发、流行和大流行的影响并非性别中立。相反,传染病和基于性别的暴力(GBV)相互强化。人道主义环境中的妇女和女孩受到的影响尤为严重,因为危机加剧了性别不平等、暴力和社区传播。传染病与GBV的共病模型凸显了它们之间的关键联系,使应对传染病传播和GBV流行的方法更有效。

主体

在人道主义环境中,传染病控制措施的实施一直缺乏对性别问题的关键考量。我们从埃博拉、寨卡和新冠肺炎疫情中吸取经验教训,以突出生活在人道主义环境中的妇女和女孩如何在GBV和传染病之间面临双向共病脆弱性。我们的研究结果表明,埃博拉、寨卡和新冠肺炎疫情加剧了GBV风险,而GBV经历又增加了这些传染病的社区传播。此外,我们发现现有政策未能解决这种相互有害的联系。因此,我们主张政策制定者提出三个基本问题:(i)传染病和GBV之间的性别双向风险途径是什么?;(ii)我们如何针对性别风险途径采取行动?;以及,(iii)谁应该参与设计、实施和评估对性别问题敏感的政策?

结论

我们的共病政策框架挑战了对一个被忽视问题的现有思维,该问题对妇女和女孩的影响尤为严重。通过提供基础指导来应对和阻止人道主义环境中传染病和GBV的共病,我们努力积极、全面地解决GBV与当前或新出现的传染病之间的强化联系。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ee5b/8606047/9e31f1722dfe/13031_2021_419_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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