eSahha Project- Towards Gender Equitable Access to Health Services in Rural and Refugee Settings: Lessons Learnt from the First mhealth Project in Lebanon

dc.date.accessioned2020-06-22T10:46:46Z
dc.date.available2020-06-22T10:46:46Z
dc.description.abstractTowards Closing the Gender Gap in Data and Digital Health Lessons Learned from the Field Linking to the SDGs this panel will present distinct experiences and strategic insights from HIS and CRVS systems related to why considerations of gender in data and digital health need to be integrated early and revisited often Exploring gender dimensions meaningfully starts within counting men women girls and boys and extends to analyzing issues of differential power access and opportunity By making the invisible visible we can begin to address some of the deep rooted injustices that lead to people being left behind Some of the key lessons that emerge include i making the invisible visible by addressing real time data challenges ii HIS and CRVS systems having their own gender dynamics iii Transforming gender dynamics involves women men and the entire community and iv Privacy and confidentiality of information affects gender and power relations Presented by Nour El Arnaout Global Health Research Officer Global Health Institute American University of Beirut
dc.identifier.urihttps://lib.digitalsquare.io/handle/123456789/77036
dc.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dc.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dc.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dc.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dc.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum
dc.subjectHypertension
dc.subjectDiabetes
dc.subjectPregnancy Complications
dc.titleeSahha Project- Towards Gender Equitable Access to Health Services in Rural and Refugee Settings: Lessons Learnt from the First mhealth Project in Lebanonen
dcterms.abstractTowards Closing the Gender Gap in Data and Digital Health Lessons Learned from the Field Linking to the SDGs this panel will present distinct experiences and strategic insights from HIS and CRVS systems related to why considerations of gender in data and digital health need to be integrated early and revisited often Exploring gender dimensions meaningfully starts within counting men women girls and boys and extends to analyzing issues of differential power access and opportunity By making the invisible visible we can begin to address some of the deep rooted injustices that lead to people being left behind Some of the key lessons that emerge include i making the invisible visible by addressing real time data challenges ii HIS and CRVS systems having their own gender dynamics iii Transforming gender dynamics involves women men and the entire community and iv Privacy and confidentiality of information affects gender and power relations Presented by Nour El Arnaout Global Health Research Officer Global Health Institute American University of Beirut
dcterms.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dcterms.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dcterms.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dcterms.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum Presentations
dcterms.subjectGlobal Digital Health Forum
dcterms.subjectHypertension
dcterms.subjectDiabetes
dcterms.subjectPregnancy Complications
dcterms.titleeSahha Project- Towards Gender Equitable Access to Health Services in Rural and Refugee Settings: Lessons Learnt from the First mhealth Project in Lebanonen
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