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- W1910779169 abstract "Women and health, not women's health. The distinction is important. It is important because unless the contribution women make to society is recognised, the new post-2015 global goal of sustainability will be little more than a distant utopia. The idea of women and health therefore carries some urgency. The reproductive rights of women are too often marginalised in global health, especially the rights and needs of adolescent girls and older women. But the argument of this Lancet Commission on Women and Health 1 Langer A Meleis A Knaul FM et al. Women and Health: the key for sustainable development. Lancet. 2015; (published online June 5.)http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60497-4 Google Scholar is that the global health and development community needs to go beyond sexual and reproductive health and rights. And here, one faces a difficult challenge. There is little evidence about women and health from the point of view of their productivity rather than their reproductivity—as producers of health and health care, as part of the labour force, within communities and families. This is the gap Ana Langer and Afaf Meleis, Chair and Co-Chair of this Lancet Commission, aimed to fill. Promoting women's health for sustainable developmentAs the world reflects on the progress made in the two decades since the International Conference on Population and Development Programme of Action1 and the Beijing Platform of Action2 and prepares to adopt the Sustainable Development Goals, the report of the Lancet Commission on Women and Health3 is a powerful reminder that much work remains to be done. The Commission's extensive review of the evidence and compelling synthesis should serve as an important reference point for policy makers and practitioners as they begin to implement the post-2015 development agenda. Full-Text PDF Valuing the health and contribution of women is central to global developmentDuring my mother's four pregnancies, her health was viewed as a way to improve the wellbeing of her children. Between the time that my mother had her children and I had mine, more attention was paid to the health of women themselves—and particularly their survival. This concern with maternal health and survival, especially for women in low-income countries, led to the launch of the Safe Motherhood Initiative in 1987, the first global effort to focus the world's attention on maternal health. Since then, women's health has expanded to encompass sexual and reproductive health and, more recently, the complex interplay of factors throughout the life course, which are explored in the Lancet Commission on Women and Health. Full-Text PDF Women and Health: the key for sustainable developmentGirls' and women's health is in transition and, although some aspects of it have improved substantially in the past few decades, there are still important unmet needs. Population ageing and transformations in the social determinants of health have increased the coexistence of disease burdens related to reproductive health, nutrition, and infections, and the emerging epidemic of chronic and non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Simultaneously, worldwide priorities in women's health have themselves been changing from a narrow focus on maternal and child health to the broader framework of sexual and reproductive health and to the encompassing concept of women's health, which is founded on a life-course approach. Full-Text PDF" @default.
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- W1910779169 date "2015-09-01" @default.
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- W1910779169 title "Making women count" @default.
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- W1910779169 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(15)60964-3" @default.
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