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按性别分类的数据很重要:追踪新冠疫情对男性和女性健康的影响。

Sex-disaggregated data matters: tracking the impact of COVID-19 on the health of women and men.

作者信息

Hawkes Sarah, Pantazis Athena, Purdie Anna, Gautam Abhishek, Kiwuwa-Muyingo Sylvia, Buse Kent, Tanaka Sonja, Borkotoky Kakoli, Sharma Sneha, Verma Ravi

机构信息

Institute for Global Health, UCL, and Global Health 50/50, 30 Guilford Street, London, WC1N 1EH UK.

Independent Consultant To Global Health 50/50, Maseru, Lesotho.

出版信息

Econ Polit (Bologna). 2022;39(1):55-73. doi: 10.1007/s40888-021-00254-4. Epub 2022 Jan 20.

Abstract

Sex and gender matter to health outcomes, but despite repeated commitments to sex-disaggregate data in health policies and programmes, a persistent and substantial absence of such data remains especially in lower-income countries. This represents a missed opportunity for monitoring and identifying gender-responsive, evidence-informed solutions to address a key driver of the pandemic. In this paper we review the availability of national sex-disaggregated surveillance data on COVID-19 and examine trends on the testing-to-outcome pathway. We further analyse the availability of data according to the economic status of the country and investigate the determinants of sex differences, including the national gender inequality status (according to a global index) in each country. Results are drawn from 18 months of global data collection from over 200 countries. We find differences in COVID-19 prevention behaviours and illness outcomes by sex, with lower uptake of vaccination and testing plus an elevated risk of severe disease and death among men. Supporting and maintaining the collection, collation, interpretation and presentation of sex-disaggregated data requires commitment and resources at subnational, national and global levels, but provides an opportunity for identifying and taking gender-responsive action on health inequities. As a first step the global health community should recognise, value and support the importance of sex-disaggregated data for identifying and tackling an inequitable pandemic.

摘要

性别对健康结果至关重要,但尽管在卫生政策和项目中一再承诺提供按性别分类的数据,但此类数据仍然持续大量缺失,尤其是在低收入国家。这是一个错失的机会,无法监测和确定基于性别的、循证的解决方案,以应对这一疫情的关键驱动因素。在本文中,我们回顾了关于新冠疫情的国家按性别分类的监测数据的可得性,并研究了检测到结果路径上的趋势。我们还根据国家的经济状况分析了数据的可得性,并调查了性别差异的决定因素,包括每个国家的国家性别不平等状况(根据一个全球指数)。结果来自对200多个国家18个月的全球数据收集。我们发现,新冠疫情的预防行为和疾病结果存在性别差异,男性的疫苗接种和检测率较低,重症疾病和死亡风险较高。支持并维持按性别分类的数据的收集、整理、解读和呈现,需要在地方、国家和全球层面做出承诺并投入资源,但这为识别和采取针对性别的行动来解决健康不平等问题提供了机会。作为第一步,全球卫生界应认识到、重视并支持按性别分类的数据对于识别和应对不公平疫情的重要性。

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