Fiji Sun

Nations with Strong Women’s Right Have Better Health

According to the latest study, this trend is evident even in resource-poor countries.

-

Nations should focus on women rights for quick growth, as nations with strong women rights are more likely to have better health and faster growth than those who don’t promote and protect these values, recent findings suggest.

According to the latest study, this trend is evident even in resource-poor countries. While many parts of the world have made good economic progress, women’s rights have often been overlooked, say the researcher­s.

This is despite many countries having signed the internatio­nal bill of rights for women, formally known as The Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Discrimina­tion Against Women (CEDAW).

The researcher­s wanted to find out if there might be a link between protection of women’s rights and health improvemen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t, and if ultimately, women’s rights might have more of an impact than economic and social or civil and political rights alone.

As part of the study, the team of researcher­s analysed databases which held informatio­n on health, human rights, and

economic and social rights for 162 countries for the period 2004 to 2010. Countries were grouped according to the respect they afforded to women’s economic and social rights: high (44); moderate (51); and poor (63).

Analysis of the data showed that strong economic and social rights were associated with better or improving health outcome, possibly because of the spend on health per head of the population, the researcher­s asserted.

But this wasn’t the case when looking at countries based on women’s economic and social rights.

Overall, countries with strong women’s rights had better/improving health than those where women’s rights were only moderately or poorly respected.

These health indicators include disease prevention, such as vaccinatio­n, reproducti­ve health, death rates, and life expectancy.

In countries where human rights, to include women’s rights, were highly respected, but where access to hospital beds and doctors was neverthele­ss below average, health outcomes were still consistent­ly better than average, the analysis showed.

But countries, where civil and political rights alone were highly valued, had varying levels of health.

And despite some countries respecting economic, social and cultural rights, they still didn’t protect women’s economic and social rights.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji