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See: http://www.newhealth.govt.nz/toolkits.htm
for the Government toolkits for each area of the strategy.
Other health strategy resources are listed here
We have identified
reources for each area of the strategy. They are listed on the pages
below.
General gender
resources are listed on the Gender
pages. These include general gender resources, gender and health, gender
analysis tools and gender related papers and events.

Health
Strategy information
The Ministry's
toolkits are available here: http://www.newhealth.govt.nz/toolkits.htm
More general information
can be obtained from:
New
Zealand
- The Women's
Health Strategy Discussion Document (Ministry of Women's Affairs):
http://www.mwa.govt.nz/new.html
- Status
of Women: Non-Maori NGO Report for CEDAW, September 2002
National
Council of Women co-ordinated NGO contributions to this report which
comments on New Zealand progress towards implementing the CEDAW convention.
(CEDAW -Convention on the Elimination of Descrimination Against Women.)
The 50 page Report covers progress since the last report and includes
status summaries in the areas covered by the 16 articles. While all
Articles are included, the quality of information differs across Articles
depending on the level and quality of input. The Articles are:
- Article
1 : Discrimination Against Women
- Article
2 : Anti-discrimination measures
- Article
3 : The Development and Advancement of Women
- Article
4 : Acceleration of equality between women and men
- Article
5 : Sex Roles and Stereotyping
- Article
6 : Suppression of Exploitation of women
- Article
7 : Political and Public Life
- Article
8 : International Representation and Participation
- Article
9 : Nationality
- Article
10 : Equality in Education
- Article
11 : Employment
- Article
12 : Health
- Article
13 : Economic and Social Life
- Article
14 : Rural women
- Article
15 : Equality before the law and in civil matters
- Article
16: Marriage and Family Life
- The Report is
available for $25 from National Council of Women but the Executive
Summary is free. Link to Executive Summary of CEDAW Report at http://www.ncwnz.co.nz/framemenus/fcedaw.htm
From Women's
Health Action publications
- See
Gender Analysis Tools
page for guidelines in using gender as a determinant in health research
- See the gender
pages and related pages for more gender-specific tools and information
Maori
and Pacific
- Pacific Health
Dialogue (PHD) Journal of Community Health and Clinical Medicine for
the Pacific
The medical journal devoted to Pacific health. March 1995. Vol. 2
No. 1 Population, Women and Development, Issue Editor
Dr. Sitaleki Finau. Details available: http://www.resourcebooks.co.nz/phd/back_issues/phd1995mar.htm
- PACIFIC RESEARCH
DATABASE is available from the PacificHealth Research Centre at Whitireia
Polytechnic. Contact them at: http://www.whitireia.ac.nz
- No specific to Pacific Women.
-
Te Puni Kokiri
has compiled a trend sheet about Maori health Tikanga
Oranga Hauora (PDF 332KB) and statistics about Maori
smoking patterns.
The trend sheet identifies key Maori health issues and notes the
strong correlation between socio-economic factors and health. We
highlight: Significant
behaviours that affect health and may be influenced by socio-economic
status, including:
- more likely
than non-Maori to have ever smoked regularly
- Tobacco
smoking,
- Alcohol
consumption,
- and Physical
activity.
- The incidence
of health conditions such as diabetes and obesity, which are predicted
to reach epidemic proportions this century.
- Persistant
health inequalities in New Zealand, pointing out that there is
some evidence that these are linked to socio-economic factors.
- Maori health
status levels, which are considerably lower than those of non-Māori
across a range of health indicators, eg, life expectancy.
- Ngai Tahu Mäori
Health Research Centre Overview The Ngai Tahu Mäori Health Research
Unit is a partnership between Te Runanga o Ngai Tahu and the Dunedin
School of Medicine of the University of Otago. The Unit collects,
collates, interprets and publishes information, data and statistics
on Mäori health issues - an essential part of Mäori health
development. The research focuses for the Unit are: hauora rangatahi
(young people's health); hauora wahine (Mäori women's health)
and oranga niho (dental health). The Unit has collaborative research
projects with the Injury
Prevention Research Unit, New
Zealand Environmental and Occupational Health Research Unit, and
The
Christchurch Health and Development Study. The Unit also assists
other research groups with aspects of Mäori health research that
may be part of their respective projects. Further information Mr John
Broughton, Director, Ngai Tahu Mäori Health Research Unit, Department
of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, PO
Box 913, Dunedin, Tel 64 3 479 7268, Fax 64 3 479 5611, Email john.broughton@stonebow.otago.ac.nz
- Coupe, N.M.,
Millar, J.M., Godinet, S.3, Zu Bentheim, W.3 Investigating the
Needs of Mäori Women from National Womens hospital.
Prepared for National Womens Hospital, Auckland, 2000.
- Tomlins Jahnke,
H. (2002). Towards a secure identity: Maori women and the home-place.
Women's Studies International Forum, 25 (5), 503-513
- Durie, M., Fitzgerald,
E., Kingi, Te K., McKinley, S., Stevenson, B. (2002). Maori specific
outcomes and indicators. Ministry of Maori Development, June.
- Dowden, A.,
& Taite, S. (2001). Aukati Kai Paipa 2000 evaluation. Aukati
Maori Health Providers, March 22, Taipa Bay, NZ.
- Dowden, A.,
& Taite, S. (2001). Aukati Kai Papa 2000 evaluation. Aukati
Maori Health Providers, June 17, Kokiri Marae, Wellington, NZ.
- Dowden, A.,
Yardley, G., Gilhooly, B., Kalafatelis, E., Taite. S., Te Kani, F.,
Cunningham, C. (2001). Aukati Kaipapa 2000 Evaluation Report (confidential).
(BRC #1836) 1-95. Wellington, NZ: BRC Marketing & Social Research.
- Jahnke, H.T.
(1997). Towards a Theory of Mana Wahine. He Pukenga Korero: A Journal
of Maori Studies, 3 (1), 27-36.
- Taiapa, J. (1999).
Te Hoe Nuku Roa: The project. August 5, Indigenous Women's Organisation
Representatives, Holoi, Hawai'i, USA.
- Love, C.M. (2000).
Wahine Maori; Whanau Maori; maximising potentials. Address to staff
of Nelson College for Girls, July 27, Parents and Primary Teachers
Association and New Zealand Association for Counsellors, Nelson,
NZ
- DP No 6 Maori Mortality Patterns in
the New Zealand Economic Reform Period. Brown C M., May 1998,
21 pp.
International
- What Evidence
Is There About The Effects Of Health Care Reforms On Gender Equity,
Particularly In Health?
Health Evidence Network, 2005
In most countries the pressure for health care reform is aimed at
improving the efficiency, equity and effectiveness of the health sector.
Emerging evidence shows that health care reforms can affect men and
women differently, as a consequence of their different positions as
users and producers of health care. This review assesses the impact
of four key health care reforms - decentralization, financing, privatization
and priority setting - on gender equity in health. More available
here: http://www.euro.who.int/HEN/Syntheses/genderEquity/20051027_2
- Eldis/HRC Health
Resource Guide - http://www.eldis.org/health/index.htm
Published by ELDIS, the aim of these online resource guides is to
bring together information from their databases and to present it
for quick access. Each of the guides is overseen by an editor or editorial
team. Each of their subject-focused guides is meant to offer quick
access to key documents, organisations, research themes, discussions
and other key resources.
- Gender, Health,
and Development in the Americas 2003 , The Population Reference Bureau
Full
text available in PDF (PDF: 198KB) (January 2004)
This data sheet profiles gender differences in health and development
in 48 countries in the Americas, focusing on women's reproductive
health, access to key health services, and major causes of death.
Its objective is to raise awareness of gender inequities in the region
and to promote the use of sex-disaggregated health statistics for
policies and programs. The data sheet also provides basic population
and development indicators and information on other factors that influence
health, including education, employment, political participation,
and risk factors. Staff of the Pan American Health Organization and
the Population Reference Bureau compiled this information using data
from official national sources as well as data collected by specialized
international agencies.
- Society
for Women's Health Research - Sex based Biology
Sex-based biology is the study of biological and physiological differences
between men and women.
Scientists have long known of the anatomical differences between the
sexes, but only within the past decade have they begun to uncover
significant biological and physiological differences between the sexes.
Sex differences have been found everywhere from the composition of
bone matter and the experience of pain to the metabolism of certain
drugs and the rate of neurotransmitter synthesis in the brain.
Sex-based biology has revolutionized the way that the scientific community
views the sexes. The evidence is overwhelming, and as researchers
continue to find more and more biological differences, they are gaining
a greater understanding of the biological and physiological composition
of both sexes.
An April 2001 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, "Exploring
the Biological Contributions to Human Health," confirmed that
differences between the sexes exist in the prevalence and severity
of a broad range of diseases, disorders and conditions.
For additional information, please view:
Women
and Men: Ten Differences That Make A Difference, a brief summary
of sex-based biology, or
Just
the Facts: Sex Differences in Women’s Health Research, a
comprehensive fact book of sex differences across the disease spectrum
- What Counts
and Who’s Counted in Women’s Health Research? Centres
of Excellence for Women's Health Bulletyin, Winter 2002, Vol2, No3.
Download
the PDF (395 KB, 20 Pages)
Contents: What Counts in Health Research? 1. What Counts and Who's
Counted in Women's Health Research?, A Full Measure: Women's Occupational
Status and Health, Towards Gender-sensitive Health Indicators, Silent
Measures: Disability in the Canadian Biotechnology Strategy, The Challenges
of Studying the Health of Women Working in Call Centres, Research
as a Spiritual Contract: An Aboriginal Women's Health Project, Gender-Based
Analysis: Beyond the Red Queen Syndrom, How to Make Research Count
- Guide to producing
national health accounts: with special applications for low-income
and middle income countries. World Health Organization - ISBN 92 4
154607 7 - 2003 Available
online as PDF file [330p.]
National health accounts are practical tool for policy-makers interested
in evaluating and restructuring their nation's health care financing
and in developing and assessing financial interventions to improve
people's health. This Guide to producing national health accounts,
with special applications for low-income and middle- income countries
provides practical help in developing this socioeconomic information.
As the global community seeks better ways to alleviate world poverty
and to ensure better health in low-income and middle-income countries,
NHA provide a basis for tracking external resources contributed to
the health sector. Health accounts can facilitate monitoring the implementation
of resources within initiatives such as the Poverty Reduction Strategy
Plan, and they can help track use of resources to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals and other global initiatives. National health accounts
are designed to answer precise questions about a country's health
system. They provide a systematic compilation and display of health
expenditure. They can trace how much is being spent, where it is being
spent, what it is being spent on and for whom, how that has changed
over time, and how that compares to spending in countries facing similar
conditions. They are an essential part of assessing the success of
a health system and of identifying opportunities for improvement.
In the long term, a country can institutionalize the health accounts
process and produce a time series of standardized tables, permitting
a more thorough assessment of the progress being made toward national
goals for the health system...."
- The Nova Scotia
Provincial Health Council has now completed work on the Determinants
of Health Indicator Project.
Beginning in October 2001, the Council began forming committees of
interested members of the public and experts from various fields to
develop 10-12 indicators for each of the Determinants. The indicators
agreed upon by the committees were communicated a series of reports.
The indicators were intended to provide the starting point for comprehensive
data collection in the areas of population health, social conditions
and measures of the effectiveness of health promotion initiatives,
and to illustrate the effects of the Determinants of Health on the
Nova Scotian population on an ongoing basis.
Data collection resulting from indicator development was explicitly
mandated to be from publicly available sources, and the information
was to be free or inexpensive to collect. The indicator collection
process will result in the creation of a health status indicators
database, which will provide provincial, national and international
comparisons of the health status of citizens of the Province of Nova
Scotia. As a result, the Health Council, in its role as advisor to
the Nova Scotia Government, will have on hand a large volume of information
with which to support the policy development process.
The Council has now completed the indicator development project, having
generated a total of 150 indicators on a wide variety of topics that
influence health. These indicators will serve as a basis for a series
of health status reports based on the life cycle. The first of these
reports will be released provincewide in early April, 2004. The Council
and the staff are very proud of the work we have accomplished, and
we hope you will take the time to examine our work. The final determinants
report will be posted to the website, www.healthcouncil.ns.ca
, in early February, after the final few revisions are completed.
- "Children from
socioeconomically disadvantaged families (previous generations' socioeconomic
status as well as current socioeconomic status) begin their lives
with a poorer platform of health and a reduced capacity to benefit
from the economic and social advances experienced by the rest of society.
Journal: Social Science and Medicine ISSN : 0277-9536 Volume : 58
Issue : 6 Date : Mar-2004
The generational transmission of socioeconomic inequalities in child
cognitive development and emotional health J.M. Najman, R. Aird, W.
Bor, M. O'Callaghan, G.M. Williams, G.J. Shuttlewood pp 1147-1158
Full text via ScienceDirect : http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?
- search under title.
Socioeconomic inequalities in the health of adults have been largely
attributed to lifestyle inequalities. The cognitive development (CD)
and emotional health (EH) of the child provides a basis for many of
the health-related behaviours which are observed in adulthood. There
has been relatively little attention paid to the way CD and EH are
transmitted in the foetal and childhood periods, even though these
provide a foundation for subsequent socioeconomic inequalities in
adult health.The Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy
(MUSP) is a large, prospective, pre-birth cohort study which enrolled
8556 pregnant women at their first clinic visit over the period 1981-1983.
These mothers (and their children) have been followed up at intervals
until 14 years after the birth.The socioeconomic status of the child
was measured using maternal age, family income, and marital status
and the grandfathers' occupational status. Measures of child CD and
child EH were obtained at 5 and 14 years of age. Child smoking at
14 years of age was also determined.
Family income was related to all measures of child CD and EH and smoking,
independently of all other indicators of the socioeconomic status
of the child. In addition, the grandfathers' occupational status was
independently related to child CD (at 5 and 14 years of age). Children
from socioeconomically disadvantaged families (previous generations'
socioeconomic status as well as current socioeconomic status) begin
their lives with a poorer platform of health and a reduced capacity
to benefit from the economic and social advances experienced by the
rest of society.
- New CDC Online
Journal: Preventing Chronic Disease
The currentl issue of Preventing Chronic Disease is now available
at www.cdc.gov/pcd
where you will find downloadable articles and more information.
- A New Guide
to Gender and Health is now available
The Health Policy and Communications Branch, Health Canada is pleased
to announce the release of Exploring Concepts of Gender and Health,
a new guide for the implementation of gender-based analysis (GBA)
for health research and policy. Developed by the Women's Health Bureau,
in consultation with GBA contacts across the department, the guide
provides an overview of key concepts in gender and health and suggests
how to integrate GBA into the research-policy-program development
cycle. It also includes case studies and a comprehensive listing of
information and resources related to gender and health.
This document is available online at: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/english/women/exploringconcepts.htm
- "A Profile of
Women's Health Indicators in Canada" The Women's Health Bureau, of
Health Canada, has released a new gender-based inventory of health
indicators report. "A Profile of Women's Health Indicators in Canada"
is now available online at: http://www.gpiatlantic.org/publications/health.shtml#women.
- along with other women's health specific reports

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