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Join IAPBThe Fred Hollows Foundation is partnering with UN Women to launch a landmark policy brief that calls for urgent action to address the gender gap in eye health.
The joint policy brief āNo Woman Left Behind: Closing the Gender and Inclusion Gap in Eye Healthā, launched in New York on 19 September, provides clear evidence of gender disparities in eye health and highlights the barriers women face in accessing eye care.
The Foundationās Global Advocacy Executive Director Jennifer Gersbeck said the brief revealed a major public health concern and development issue that impacts 609 million women and girls globally.
āWomen and girls make up 55 per cent of the worldās blind and vision impaired,ā Ms Gersbeck said.
āWe know that gender inequality can increase womenās susceptibility to blindness and vision impairment ā and in turn, womenās blindness and vision impairment can reinforce and help perpetuate gender inequality.
āWe need to break this cycle.ā
Key barriers facing women include care responsibilities which make it difficult to prioritise their own health and gender norms that can limit a womanās mobility in communities where they rely on men to chaperon them.
Women also have a lack of representation in eye health services, with World Health Organization data showing that they comprise 70 percent of the global healthcare workforce but hold less than 25 percent of senior roles.
Ms Gersbeck said that, together with UN Women, The Foundation called for greater voice, leadership representation, resourcing and rights-based policies to accelerate gender equity in health.
āBetter access to health services for all women and girls is necessary, but it is not enough,ā she said.
āWe must challenge and remove the barriers that stop women from occupying seats at the decision-making table.
āMeeting womenās health needs and eliminating gender inequality are moral imperatives and fundamental human rights.ā
Ms Gersbeck, along with Australiaās ambassador for Regional Health Security Dr Stephanie Williams and Dr Ciku Mathenge, one of Africaās leading ophthalmologists trained by The Foundation, will speak at the policy launch.
The joint policy brief is supported by the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP).
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