Archive for the ‘Gender’Category

Why Invest in Women?

The following infographic from USAID graphically illustrates the ways in which investments in females have wide-reaching and significant impacts.

In what ways do you think that investments in females can have an impact?

USAID-women

11

01 2012

Maternal and Child Health Questions Answered

The following question and answer session was originally posted on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s Blog Impatient Optimists January 9. 2011 as part of an ongoing and upcoming commitment to family planning and contraception for women in developing countries. Stay tuned for Part 2 of the conversation coming soon!

Melinda Gates and Nick Kristof Answer Your Questions

MELINDA FRENCH GATES

Melinda recently returned from a three-day trip to Bangladesh. She, along with Nick Kristof, agreed to answer readers’ questions about development issues focusing on that part of the world. Here is the first installment of the Q&A session reposted from Kristof’s  New York Times blog “On the Ground.”

Q. How can a “small” person without a lot of financial resources help the women of the world? What can each of us do to reach out to the women in Africa, Haiti, South America and the Far East? I feel so helpless and it really hurts. –JEANIE, New York City

A. MELINDA: That’s a great question, Jeanie. I believe that each of us can do important and meaningful work to make the world a better place. It’s not about the money. It’s about using whatever resources you have at your fingertips to try to improve the world.

A group of Bangladeshi women learning about childhood health and nutrition at a clinic that they visit five days a week for five months, as part of an initiative sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
A group of Bangladeshi women learning about childhood health and nutrition at a clinic that they visit five days a week for five months, as part of an initiative sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

I think that real giving starts with caring about others and wanting to learn more. I encourage everyone to become a student of the causes they care about. And if you are interested in learning about what you can do to help women in developing countries lead healthy and productive lives, you can go to the websites of organizations such as UNICEFUN WomenCARE, and Save the Children that support programs focused on women. At Nothing But Nets you can purchase a bed net for just $10 to protect a mother and her children from getting malaria.

One thing that touches me the most when I travel is the fact that so many of the women I meet don’t have a voice—not in their government, often not even in their own household. They want to be able to deliver their babies in a clinic or get their children immunized, but there is no place for them to be heard. They go to incredible lengths to take care of their children, like the group of women I met with today who were at the clinic learning about health and nutrition. This is something they will do for five days a week for five months, to make sure their children are properly fed, thanks to a program put together by the Foundation.

By supporting programs like this, we in the developed world can use our voices to demand that those women have the same basic health services we do.

This is the reason why I’ve started using Twitter and Facebook to share stories and communicate with people who are making a difference—as well as those who are eager to make a difference. I’m a big believer in the power of social networks, whether they are local networks of women working together to improve newborn health in rural Bangladesh, or online networks. Use your own network to spread the word about challenges that these women face or successful organizations that you learn about so others can also become engaged.

A. NICK: Two suggestions for Jeanie’s good question. First, you don’t have to be wealthy to make a difference. Even modest donations do make a difference. For less than $1 a day, for example, you can sponsor a child through PLAN USA (I have a PLAN child in Dominican Republic, whom I visited a few years ago). Or you can browse Kiva.org or GlobalGiving.org and probably find a better use for $25 than you could find at the mall.

But even if you don’t have $25 to spare, there are other steps you can take – such as lobbying for good programs, or for change in bad ones. The CARE action network, for example, suggests who to send emails or letters to on humanitarian causes. Many other organizations have similar online campaigns. You can even introduce your child to freerice.com and, through educational game play there, support food donations. So sure it helps to be a billionaire, and Jeanie is unlikely to affect as many people as Melinda. But I’ll bet that Jeanie or anyone else can affect one or two people or more in ways that are transformative. If you see a girl who can go to school, for example, because someone has paid her school fees through Camfed, and who as a result now has an entirely different future – well, that’s the most gratifying feeling in the world.

Q. I’d like to thank the Gates, and I would like to ask how they factor in the unintended consequences which may result from their work. For example, earlier efforts to use vaccinations and other means to reduce child mortality were extremely successful in the Third World, but the consequence was very rapid and substantial population growth. I’m not suggesting that saving lives is bad; it is the most noble act a person can perform. My question is how does the Gates Foundation estimate the results of their programs, and do you plan additional efforts to ensure that the results of your work, such as population growth, are effectively managed as well? Thank you. –MARSHALL GOLDBERG

A. MELINDA: This is a question that we think a lot about. The foundation is data-driven in everything we do, from making grants to estimating and evaluating their impact. For example, here in Bangladesh, we are funding several research studies to better understand which viruses and bacteria cause the most cases of pneumonia. Only by generating solid data will we be able to make well-informed decisions. And, of course, we need to know if our work is having impact. Measurement and evaluation is built into every single grant so we can analyze the results of programs that we fund.

I want to share with you something that surprised Bill and me when we first started learning about global health. Like many people, we thought that if you made advancements in global health, rapid population growth would result. But, in fact, the opposite is true. When the health of a population improves, family size starts to decrease and population goes down. If a mother knows that her children are going to make it through to adulthood, she will have fewer children. She will have an easier time feeding those children and sending them to school. Life for her family starts to get better by every measure.

I encourage everyone to become a student of the causes they care about.Melinda Gates

But in order for this to happen, family planning is critical. More than 215 million women want to use modern contraceptives but don’t have access. That’s a crime. We need to make sure that every woman is able to choose how many children she wants to have and when she wants to have them.

A. NICK: People often push back at me when I talk about saving lives and say, in effect: There’s no point. Those people who are saved will just have more children until everyone is starving again. That’s a canard. In fact, it’s increasingly understood that one reason people have large families is because they expect some children to die. If they can be assured that their children will live, they’ll have fewer kids (after a lag). That’s why birth rates are already dropping in poor countries. Indians, for example, now have just 2.6 babies – down from almost 6 in 1950. Bangladeshis average just 2.3 babies.

The bottom line is this: the way to deal with population pressures is to support family planning, not to let children die of disease.

Q. I attended a talk once with the British economist Benny Dembitzer. He thinks that too much money is spent on the fight against malaria and other diseases, believing that a child may be saved from malaria today but could die from diptheria tomorrow. Instead, he’d rather see that money spend on primary education. As a molecular biologist, I think that the fight against insect transmitted diseases can be won, but I can understand the argument. Do you think that a point might be reached at which we have to say: Enough’s enough. Let’s give everyone bed nets and we can fight malaria through bringing people out of poverty? –ROBERT JONES

A. MELINDA: I hear that question a lot, and I don’t think it is either or. We have to do both. It is incredibly important not only to invest in health, but also to invest in efforts that stimulate economic growth, expand access to opportunity, and help the poor raise themselves out of poverty. Take agriculture, for example. We invest in agriculture because we believe that if smallholder farmers, the majority of whom are women, had access to better information and higher yielding and more resilient crops, they could better feed their families, earn higher incomes, and become self-sufficient.

On the health front, we’ve learned that in addition to causing some children to die, infectious diseases take a massive toll on those who get sick but survive. For instance, some studies have shown that children who suffer from cerebral malaria have more trouble paying attention and remembering information. The same holds for children suffering from diarrhea and for those who are undernourished, especially newborns and infants. Over 80 percent of calories in the first year of a baby’s life goes towards brain development. If that energy is used instead to fight malaria or diarrhea, the brain may not develop properly. And then children can’t live up to their full potential, no matter how good a primary education they receive. Good health is fundamental to breaking the cycle of poverty.

Just this morning, I met a beautiful little girl named Shrabonti in Mirpur, a slum in the Northwest of Dhaka, while visiting a study site exploring the link between intestinal infections, nutrition, and cognitive development. Shrabonti, who shares her name with the rainy season, looked fairly normal, until I realized that she was already 20 months old.

Melinda Gates met a 20 month-old and her mother in Mirpur, a slum in the Northwest of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Melinda Gates met a 20 month-old and her mother in Mirpur, a slum in the Northwest of Dhaka, Bangladesh.

She only weighed 19lbs, the size and weight of a healthy nine-month-old. Shrabonti had already been sick 27 times in her short life, including seven bouts of diarrhea. I was left thinking—life shouldn’t be so hard for her. How do we make sure that all children like Shrabonti have the greatest chance of living up to their full potential?

A. NICK: Should American presidents focus on the economy or on national security? Obviously, the answer is both. We have many priorities and we’re fated to juggle them all. In the same way, combating malaria is important not only to save lives but also to promote economic development – but education is also critically important to build skills and transform economies and societies. So I agree with Melinda that we don’t have the luxury of picking and choosing a single target; to make a difference, we have to be jugglers.

That said, I think Robert is right that we have to scrutinize the challenges and figure out where we can be more cost-effective. One of the things that the development community has gotten better at doing is introducing metrics and rigor to see what kinds of interventions get the most bang for the buck. I do think that the evidence is pretty good that work in both education and public health tend to be highly cost-effective, and also are mutually supportive. Deworm kids and give them bed nets, and they’ll miss less school. And as they become better educated, they’ll become more concerned with their own health and will have fewer children whose health they’ll take better care of. We’re already seeing this virtuous cycle in action right now, which is why Africa is economically the fastest growing part of the world today.

10

01 2012

Confronting Gender-Based Violence

On demand online recordings of the Confronting Gender-Based Violence live webcast are now available from Johns Hopkins University. Presentations include:

Check out the Johns Hopkins Center for Clinical Global Education for more webcasts and resources.

27

12 2011

World Contraception Day 2011

Today, September 26, 2011, marks the 5th annual World Contraception Day. This multinational campaign aims to draw awareness to the need for contraception access globally, targeting teenagers between the ages of 15 and 19, as they are often the most inexperienced in using contraception. This year’s theme is “Live Your Life, Know your rights, Learn about contraception” strives to bring attention to the right of young people to access accurate and unbiased information about contraception in order to prevent an unplanned pregnancy or sexually transmitted infection (STI) As USAID states, “every individual that wants them should have access to contraceptives and condoms for family planning and for HIV/AIDS prevention.”

26

09 2011

Gender, Power, and Health: A free course

As part of its Certificate in Maternal and Child Health, Unite for Site is offering a free, online course exploring Gender, Power and Health. This course looks at the ways in which family, gender and power dynamics influence health and health outcomes worldwide. This course is one of three in the curriculum for the Maternal and Child Health Certificate which is designed to provide a comprehensive understanding about maternal and child health for students and professionals in health-related fields. In addition to Gender, Power, and Health Online Course, the other online courses include Complexities and Realities of Global Health and The Health of Women and Children Online Course.

25

05 2011

Women Deliver 100

In anticipation of the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day on March 8, 2011, Women Deliver announced their list of the hundred most inspiring people who have contributed to advancing the plight of females around the world. The list recognizes both well-known advocates for women and girls as well as lesser known honorees who have navigated the front lines to expand rights for women from diverse backgrounds and circumstances. The 100 honorees not only strive to change the lives of females, but go further to innovate and battle for more inclusive societies in which women can thrive and enhance their own communities. According to Michelle Bachelet, the Executive Director of UN Women and Chair of the Women Deliver 2010 Conference, “They both understand and defy current power structures–and they will stop at nothing to make changes that improve the daily existence of women everywhere.”The honorees, selected from hundreds of potential global innovators, are a diverse group, with varied cultural, geographic and personal backgrounds. The list includes men and women from the fields of human rights, politics, health, economics, education, philanthropy and journalism from widely diverse global locations. Twenty-six honorees are from Sub-Saharan Africa, 20 from the Middle East and Northern Africa, 19 from  North America, 15 from Asia and 11 from Latin America and the Caribbean.

We can be inspired by both the work that these world leaders are accomplishing and by the fact that, in today’s modern society, a global list such as this exists to recognize and honor the work being done to improve girls’ and women’s lives throughout the world. Not only is this a reflection of what forward-thinking, hard-working, intelligent minds can accomplish, but it is also an indication of the progress which has been made in the recent decades towards acknowledging the injustice which exists amongst the world’s females and the vast potential which women and girls have to create positive change in the world.
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Below are just a few of the 100 inspirational individuals, each with a unique story and an innovative approach to bettering the lives of females:

  • Somaly Mam, Cambodia: as an orphan during the Khmer Rouge, Mam survived forced prostitution, later escaping to France before returning home to start a network of sanctuaries to aid other survivors of human trafficking across South East Asia.
  • Chief Kwataine, Malawi: after learning of the high maternal death rate in 89 Malawian villages under his traditional authority, Chief Kwataine launched a community-wide, grassroots effort to educate women and assist them with getting to hospitals to give birth. The success of his efforts is reflected in a drastic change in statistics, with no local mothers dying in childbirth in the last three years.
  • Christiane Amanpour, UK: as a prominent journalist at CNN, and more recently at ABC News, Amanpour brought attention to many injustices facing women globally in the past two decades.
  • Melinda Gates, USA: as co-Chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates has prioritized the wellbeing of girls and women around the world while advocating for the importance of investing in females, supporting practical solutions and much-needed funding.
  • Michelle Bachelet, Chile: Bachelet a physician, the Executive Director of UN Women and the Former President of Chile, was the first woman in Latin America to be appointed as Minister of Defense and has been an ardent advocate of women’s political and reproductive rights worldwide. She has strove  to increase the UN’s efforts on gender equality and female empowerment worldwide.
  • Tatiana Therosme, Haiti: Therosme is one of too few psychologists in Haiti. She has worked to help women recover from the trauma of the 2010 earthquake as well as the epidemic of physical and sexual abuse, depression and anxiety which occurred in the aftermath.
  • Jill W. Sheffield, USA: Sheffield is the Founder and President of Women Deliver, and Co-founder of Family Care International and has worked as a champion of maternal health and rights. Her efforts have targeted the 350,000 lives lost each year during pregnancy and childbirth.
  • Heads of State: Jens Stoltenberg, Norway – Prime Minister of Norway; José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, Spain – Prime Minister of SpainTarja Halonen, Finland – President of FinlandEllen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia – President of Liberia: these world-leaders are working to advance the cause of gender equality while leading their nations.
The complete list of these individuals is available from Women Deliver along with highlights of their groundbreaking and inspiring stories.

02

03 2011

The Practice of Female Genital Mutilation Across the Globe

The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies female genital mutilation (FGM) into four types, ranging from partial to total removal of the external female genitalia. The first type is known as clitoridectomy and involves the partial or total removal of the clitoris. The second type is referred to as excision and involves the partial or total removal of the clitoris, labia minora, with or without the excision of the labia majora. The third type is called infibulation, requiring the narrowing of the vaginal opening through the creation of a covering seal by cutting and repositioning the inner or outer labia with or without removal of the clitoris.  The fourth type has no official designation and involves all other harmful procedures to the female genitalia for non-medical purposes such as pricking, piercing, incising, scraping and cauterizing the genital area.

It is estimated that about 140 million women worldwide have been subjected to FGM and a further two million are at risk every year. FGM takes place in about 40 countries (28 of them in Africa) such as Egypt, Democratic Republic of Congo, Yemen, Kurdistan, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Australia and Canada.

The procedure is not limited to a single religion and is heavily influenced by the desire to conform to tradition.    Many girls are compliant with the procedure because they believe they will be outcasts if they are not circumcised.   In Sudan for example, it is prevalent in Muslim communities while in Kenya, it is common among Christians. Neither the Qu’ran nor the Bible endorse the practice.  FGM predates both the Qu’ran and the Bible and possibly Judaism, appearing in the 2nd century BC.

Typically, it is the parents of girls aged 5-14 who initiate the FGM process because they believe that it will preserve virginity, communicate status, and even protect them from rape. Despite the medical implications involved, many mothers believe that they are doing the best for their daughters.  It is also believed that FGM will decrease sexual desire in women, increase male pleasure during intercourse and maintain fidelity within a marriage.

The procedure is often done on the pretense that the child will be receiving a special gift, going on a vacation or will be “becoming a woman”.  A young girl would visit a trusted older female relative who lacks medical training in a different town or distant village. One day during that visit, she would be taken to a location where she would be restrained by adults who would hold her down to the ground as she endures the extremely painful procedure that is carried out using a knife or some other cutting tool. In some cases, instruments such as tin can lids are used to cut and thorns are used to stitch the victims up.  Only in rare cases is this carried out with anesthetic or in a clinical environment.

Read the rest of this entry →

06

09 2010

AMSA Opportunity: Apply to the International Women’s Health Leadership Institute

This is a guest post by Vanessa Coleman, coordinator of the International Women’s Health Leadership Institute and the International Women’s Health Working Group.

This New Year as you set down and make resolutions, we at AMSA urge you to make another one. Ghandi once said “Be the change you want to see in the world.” Imagine how much of a difference we could make in our practices, medical schools and in our communities if each of us 30,000 AMSA members made this resolution? Apply for AMSA’s inaugural International Women’s Leadership Institute and BE THE CHANGE.

Read on for details. Read the rest of this entry →

05

01 2010

CEDAW, 20 Years Later

Between World AIDS Day (Dec. 1) and International Human Rights Day (Dec. 10), PHR is gathering 10,000 signatures asking the U.S. Senate to ratify the Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women in 2010.

Conceived as a “Bill of Rights for Women,” CEDAW sets a common international definition for gender-based discrimination, and establishes an agenda for ending it. States ratifying CEDAW are required to institutionalize gender equality through domestic legislation, repeal and replace all discriminatory provisions in their laws, and establish public institutions of recourse for women who require protection against discrimination.

Discrimination is bad. Women should have equal rights. Surely this is something we can agree on? Not so fast. Read further for the controversial stuff. Read the rest of this entry →

07

12 2009

World AIDS Day: Mother to Child Transmission

As part of World AIDS Day efforts to educate the public about the HIV/AIDS pandemic, Global Fund Ambassador for the protection of mothers and children against AIDS and first lady of France, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy released a series of interviews “talking about and letting the world know that a woman who is expecting a child can make sure that this child can have a healthy life,” Ms Bruni-Sarkozy told the BBC. She recalled her experience meeting mothers in Burkina Faso and cited this experience as showing her that progress can and must occur in the fight against mother-to-child transmission of HIV. She renewed a call to eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV by 2015 through a focus on educating women and increasing their access to means to fight and prevent the disease. This has been a focus area of the Global Fund, UNAIDS, UNICEF, WHO and UNFPA.

This is an important effort given the impact of mother-to-child transmission of the virus.

  • Currently, over 45% of HIV-infected pregnant women receive ARV prophylaxis (up from 10% in 2004)
  • Only 15% of children born to mothers infected with HIV in reporting low- and middle-income countries were tested for the virus within the first two months of life
  • Only 38% of the over 730,000 children in low- and middle-income countries in need of ARV treatment in 2008 received these medications

For more on these efforts, see press coverage of the Global Fund’s World AIDS Day activities.

01

12 2009