Literature DB >> 20203142

Review article: Globalisation and women's health in Sub-Saharan Africa: would paying attention to women's occupational roles improve nutritional outcomes?

Rene Loewenson1, Lexi Bambas Nolen, Sarah Wamala.   

Abstract

AIM: This paper explores, through a review of literature, the link between globalisation and nutritional outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa, focusing on the pathways of women's occupational roles on the food produced, consumed, and secured for households.
METHODS: Following a framework linking globalisation and health, we drew evidence from peer reviewed, cross-national or large scale studies, official sources, reviews, online scientific databases, and case studies, published between 1990 and 2009.
RESULTS: Publications cite improved technology, information, know how, normative commitments to and resources for human development, returns from access to investment in agriculture for low-income women producers, and urban employment opportunities reducing social discrimination and improving opportunities for household food security, particularly if access to these benefits is reinforced by national policy. However, many more publications cite negative consequences, including in falling national and local food self-sufficiency, livelihood and nutritional losses, widening inequalities, and in declining or insecure access to production inputs, markets, incomes, local foods, and healthcare. These effects are documented to increase time and resource burdens for women, with negative consequences for their own and their families' health and nutrition.
CONCLUSIONS: The evidence suggests that globalisation-related economic and trade policies have, on balance, been associated with shifts in women's occupational roles and resources that contribute to documented poor nutritional outcomes in Africa. These trends call for public policies that address such positive and negative effects for women and for improved monitoring of such gender and socio-economic trends, especially at the household and community level, in the tracking of the Millennium Development Goals.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20203142     DOI: 10.1177/1403494809358276

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Public Health        ISSN: 1403-4948            Impact factor:   3.021


  6 in total

1.  Differential returns from globalization to women smallholder coffee and food producers in rural Uganda.

Authors:  J M Kanyamurwa; S Wamala; R Baryamutuma; E Kabwama; R Loewenson
Journal:  Afr Health Sci       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 0.927

2.  Determinants of Access to Health Care Among Women in East African Countries: A Multilevel Analysis of Recent Demographic and Health Surveys from 2008 to 2017.

Authors:  Amare Minyihun; Zemenu Tadesse Tessema
Journal:  Risk Manag Healthc Policy       Date:  2020-09-30

3.  Gendered negotiations for research participation in community-based studies: implications for health research policy and practice.

Authors:  Dorcas M Kamuya; Catherine S Molyneux; Sally Theobald
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2017-06-07

Review 4.  Analyzing the impacts of global trade and investment on non-communicable diseases and risk factors: a critical review of methodological approaches used in quantitative analyses.

Authors:  Krycia Cowling; Anne Marie Thow; Keshia Pollack Porter
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2018-05-24       Impact factor: 4.185

5.  Agricultural trade policies and child nutrition in low- and middle-income countries: a cross-national analysis.

Authors:  Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo; Sebastian Vollmer; Mauricio Avendano; Kenneth Harttgen
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2019-03-15       Impact factor: 4.185

6.  Trade liberalization, social policies and health: an empirical case study.

Authors:  Courtney McNamara
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2015-10-12       Impact factor: 4.185

  6 in total

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