UNICEF Pakistan, St. 5., Diplomatic Enclave, Islamabad, Pakistan.
College of Public Health, Medicine, and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2022 Apr 18;21(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s12939-022-01657-w.
Recent surveys, studies and reviews in urban areas of Pakistan have highlighted the impacts of social inequities on access of women and children to health services for women and children in Pakistan.
The Urban Slum Profiles and coverage surveys were conducted between 2017 and 2019. The objective of the profiles was to obtain an updated listing of slums and other underserved areas, and to better understand current vaccination and health service coverage in these areas. Utilising findings from these studies, this paper aims to better understand the gender and social determinants of health that are giving rise to health inequalities in the slums.
The Urban Slum Profiles adopted a mixed methods approach combining both qualitative and quantitative methods. The study was comprised of two main survey approaches of Urban Slum Profiles and Immunisation Coverage Survey in 4431 urban poor areas of the 10 most highly populated cities of Pakistan.
Findings are classified into six analytic categories of (1) access to health services, (2) female workforce participation, (3) gender-friendly health services, (4) access to schools and literacy, (5) social connections, and (6) autonomy of decision making. Out of a national sample of 14,531 children in urban poor areas of 10 cities, the studies found that just over half of the children are fully immunised (54%) and 14% of children had received zero doses of vaccine. There are large shortages of health facilities and female health workforce in the slums, with significant gaps in the quality of health infrastructure, which all serve to limit both demand for, and supply of, health services for women and children. Results demonstrate low availability of schools, low levels of female literacy and autonomy over decision making, limited knowledge of the benefits of vaccination, and few social connections outside the home. All these factors interact and reinforce existing gender norms and low levels of health literacy and service access.
The Urban Slum profiles and coverage studies provide an opportunity to introduce gender transformative strategies that include expansion of a female health workforce, development of costed urban health action plans, and an enabling policy environment to support community organisation and more equitable health service delivery access.
巴基斯坦城市地区的最近调查、研究和综述强调了社会不平等对妇女和儿童获得妇女和儿童保健服务的影响。
城市贫民窟概况和覆盖范围调查于 2017 年至 2019 年进行。这些概况的目的是获得贫民窟和其他服务不足地区的最新清单,并更好地了解这些地区当前的疫苗接种和卫生服务覆盖情况。利用这些研究的结果,本文旨在更好地了解导致贫民窟健康不平等的性别和社会决定因素。
城市贫民窟概况采用了结合定性和定量方法的混合方法。该研究由城市贫民窟概况和免疫接种覆盖范围调查两项主要调查方法组成,调查范围涵盖巴基斯坦 10 个人口最多城市的 4431 个城市贫困人口地区。
调查结果分为六个分析类别:(1)获得卫生服务的机会,(2)女性劳动力参与率,(3)性别友好型卫生服务,(4)获得学校和扫盲教育的机会,(5)社会联系,(6)决策自主权。在来自 10 个城市的城市贫困地区的全国抽样调查中,共有 14531 名儿童,研究发现,只有一半以上的儿童完全接种了疫苗(54%),14%的儿童没有接种过任何疫苗。贫民窟中卫生设施和女性卫生工作者严重短缺,卫生基础设施质量存在很大差距,这都限制了妇女和儿童对卫生服务的需求和供应。结果表明,学校数量有限,女性识字率和决策自主权水平低,对疫苗接种益处的认识有限,家庭以外的社会联系很少。所有这些因素相互作用,加强了现有的性别规范以及低水平的健康素养和服务获取。
城市贫民窟概况和覆盖范围研究提供了一个机会,可以引入性别变革策略,包括扩大女性卫生工作者队伍、制定有成本效益的城市卫生行动计划以及支持社区组织和更公平的卫生服务提供的有利政策环境。