Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/11439
Title: Women and health: the key for sustainable development
Authors: Langer, Ana 
Meleis, Afaf 
Knaul, Felicia M 
Atun, Rifat 
Aran, Meltem 
Arreola-Ornelas, Hector 
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A 
Binagwaho, Agnes 
Bonita, Ruth 
Caglia, Jacquelyn M 
Claeson, Mariam 
Davies, Justine 
Donnay, France A 
Gausman, Jewel M 
Glickman, Caroline 
Kearns, Annie D 
Kendall, Tamil 
Lozano, Rafael 
Seboni, Naomi 
Sen, Gita 
Sindhu, Siriorn 
Temin, Miriam 
Frenk, Julio 
Keywords: Adolescence;Adulthood;Caregiver;Cause Of Death;Child Health;Clinical Research;Compensation;Death;Demography;Disability;Education;Environmental Change;Environmental Health;Environmental Protection;Epidemiological Data;Female;Financial Management;Health;Health Care;Health Care Access;Health Care Cost;Health Care Personnel;Health Care Policy;Health Hazard;Human;Investment;Population Growth;Priority Journal;Review;Risk Factor;Senescence;Sex Difference;Social Determinants Of Health;Social Norm;Social Protection;Sustainable Development;Wellbeing;Women'S Health;Developing Country;Economic Development;Health Care Disparity;Trends;Conservation Of Natural Resources;Healthcare Disparities
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Lancet Publishing Group
Abstract: Girls' 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. This expanded vision incorporates health challenges that affect women beyond their reproductive years and those that they share with men, but with manifestations and results that affect women disproportionally owing to biological, gender, and other social determinants.
URI: https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/11439
ISSN: 0140-6736
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60497-4
Appears in Collections:2010-2019

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