The Programme of Action agreed at the
1994 International Conference on Population and Development states that,
"In the coming years.. programmes should expand and upgrade formal
and informal training in sexual and reproductive health care and family
planning."
"Operationalizing Cairo and Beijing" is the
title of a training initiative in gender and reproductive health that has
developed as a result of cooperation between the WHO Department of
Reproductive Health and Research, Witwatersrand University in South
Africa, and the Harvard School of Public Health in the USA. The goals of
the training initiative are two-fold, namely:
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to build institutional capacity in training centres
throughout the world so that they can offer regionally-appropriate
training in gender and reproductive health covering aspects of research,
service delivery and policy development; and
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to increase the number of programme managers,
planners, policy-makers and trainers with both a gender perspective on
health and the technical skills needed to contribute to increasing access,
quality and comprehensiveness of gender-sensitive reproductive health
policies and programmes.
The training initiative has developed a core curriculum
and is supporting its adaptation in different regions. The core curriculum
features practical examples of how an understanding of gender can change
the way people view the determinants of ill-health and the way research is
designed and evaluated. The draft curriculum was pilot-tested in
Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1997, at a course for 32 programme
managers, policy-makers and trainers from Botswana, Kenya, Mozambique,
Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
The core curriculum on gender and reproductive health
is designed for a three-week course and has six modules: determinants of
health and illness, gender, reproductive rights, research, policy, and
health services. Each module comprises a range of teaching and learning
sessions that include lectures, case studies, participatory exercises,
field projects, and planning and research exercises.
The module on the determinants of health and illness
introduces the concept of social determinants of health to show how health
is more than a medical issue; the module identifies gender as one of these
social determinants and promotes an understanding of how gender can shape
policies and interventions. The module on gender explains how gender
concepts are built, maintained and reinforced, and how they influence
development and health in general and reproductive health in particular.
The training module on reproductive rights helps
participants to understand what sexual and reproductive rights are, how
they can be applied to analysis and action, how they can be ensured by
strengthening national and regional partnerships, how their implementation
can be monitored and evaluated, and how individuals and institutions can
be held accountable for them. The module promotes the ability to use the
framework of human rights in improving sexual and reproductive health, and
to use a reproductive rights approach to shape research, interventions,
services and policy.
The module on research enables participants to apply a
gender analysis to health research, to identify data that can be used to
improve gender equity in reproductive health, to recognize gender bias in
reproductive health research, and to understand international ethical
norms for research. The module on policy identifies critical approaches
that must be used to make policy decisions as effective as possible while
also promoting equality, including gender equality. The module on health
systems focuses on the different elements of health systems and how they
inter-relate, shows how the way that a health system functions affects the
quality of care, and explores the impact of gender relations on planning
and organization.
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Pilot courses in four centres
The training course is being adapted to be run in four
regional training centres in 1999: (i) Key Centre for Women's Health in
Society, Melbourne, Australia (5–23 July); (ii) Centre for the Study of
State and Society (CEDES), Buenos Aires, Argentina (30 August –11
September); (iii) Yunnan Reproductive Health Research Association,
Kunming, China (6–24 September); and (iv) the Centre for African Family
Studies, Nairobi, Kenya (4–22 October 1999). Based on the experience of
these four courses and the South African course which has now been run
three times, an international and regional Core Curriculum on Gender and
Reproductive Health will be produced and published in the year 2000. The
Curriculum will be published in English, and eventually in Chinese,
French, and Spanish.
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Programme activities in the WHO Eastern
Mediterranean Region
"Women's needs and gender perspectives in
reproductive health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region" was the
title of a meeting between women's health advocates, researchers, service
providers and policy-makers which took place in Casablanca, Moroco, in
November 1997. Participants agreed on a number of key topics for research,
and ways of incorporating reproductive rights into reproductive health
policies and practices. In particular, they called for a review of
existing laws and regulations, formal and customary, as well as
traditional, harmful and other practices related to reproductive health.
The Programme is currently identifying existing reviews of laws and
practices affecting reproductive health with a view to making this
information more widely available.
The report (document
No.WHO/FRH/WOM/98.2) of this meeting is now available from the Programme
on request. Please write to Editor, Progress, HRP, World Health
Organization, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland.
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