| Literature DB >> 27724961 |
Suzanne Day1, Robin Mason2,3, Stephanie Lagosky2, Paula A Rochon2,4.
Abstract
Both sex (biological factors) and gender (socio-cultural factors) shape health. To produce the best possible health research evidence, it is essential to integrate sex and gender considerations throughout the research process. Despite growing recognition of the importance of these factors, progress towards sex and gender integration as standard practice has been both slow and uneven in health research. In this commentary, we examine the challenges of integrating sex and gender from the research perspective, as well as strategies that can be used by researchers, funders and journal editors to address these challenges. Barriers to the integration of sex and gender in health research include problems with inconsistent terminology, difficulties in applying the concepts of sex and gender, failure to recognise the impact of sex and gender, and challenges with data collection and datasets. We analyse these barriers as strategic points of intervention for improving the integration of sex and gender at all stages of the research process. To assess the relative success of these strategies in any given study, researchers, funders and journal editors would benefit from a tool to evaluate the quality of sex and gender integration in order to establish benchmarks in research excellence. These assessment tools are needed now amidst growing institutional recognition that both sex and gender are necessary elements for advancing the quality and utility of health research evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Equity; Health research; Quality; Reporting; Research design; Sex and gender
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27724961 PMCID: PMC5057373 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-016-0147-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) definitions of sex and gender [24]
| Variable | Definition |
|---|---|
| Sex | The biological and physiological characteristics that distinguish males from femalesa |
| Gender | The socially constructed roles, expectations, relationships, behaviours, relative power, and other traits that societies ascribe to women, men and people of diverse gender identitiesb |
aIt should, however, be recognised that the assumption that the population can be divided neatly into male/female categories does not accurately reflect the full diversity of human biology, given that approximately 1.7% of the population is intersex [45]; hence the concept of sex as a male/female binary is, itself, a social process [46]
bThere is a need in health research to move beyond static, binary categorisations of gender, given that gender exists on a continuum and is dynamic in varying over time and across cultures [36]. Researchers are cautioned to examine their tools and analyses for potentially reproducing the gender binary and rendering invisible the experiences of persons for whom binary categorisations may be insufficient, including transgendered persons [47]
Web-based resources for sex and gender inclusion in health research
| Resource | Description |
|---|---|
| The Gender Awakening Tool [ | Provides a checklist to determine whether relevant sex and gender considerations have been included in life sciences research |
| Gendered Innovations [ | Provides methods for integrating sex and gender into each stage of the research process, from design to knowledge translation |
| Sex and Gender in Systematic Reviews: Planning Tool [ | Provides a step-by-step guide for asking questions about sex and gender when planning a systematic review |
| Toolkit Gender in EU Funded Research [ | Provides guidance in conducting gender-sensitive scientific research |