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Seeking women's voices: Setting the context for women's health interventions in two rural counties in Yunnan, China

Glenn C. Wong, Virginia C. Li, Mary Ann Burris and Yueping Xiang

Social Science & Medicine, 1995, vol. 41, issue 8, 1147-1157

Abstract: If interventions to improve health are truly to benefit women, they must be developed from the start with a critical understanding of women's own perceptions of their health problems and needs, and how these concerns are linked to other facets of women's lives. To obtain such understanding, it is crucial for health planners to seek out women in the communities where they live, to encourage them to speak in their own voices about their health and lives, and to be genuinely committed to listening to what the women have to say. This paper presents results of focus group discussions with village women in two rural counties in Yunnan, China. The data are derived from 28 focus group discussions conducted by the Women's Reproductive Health and Development Program in Yunnan as part of a comprehensive assessment of reproductive health needs in poorer, more remote areas of the two counties. The discussions were held to ascertain what village women themselves feel to be their most pressing health problems, and how these relate to work, family, social status and their use of health services. Results show how women's health and their use of health services are rightly interwined with their labor roles, harsh environmental conditions and oppressive poverty. Widespread breakdowns in the village-level primary health care network lead village women to express a profound lack of confidence in local health services. The findings have several implications for planning and implementation. Demands on women's scarce time need to be explicitly considered when designing health education activities and health service delivery. The tight intertwining of women's health, labor, poverty and harsh environmental conditions call for integrating reproductive health strategies with other efforts to improve women's social status, increase their educational and occupational opportunities, and alleviate their labor burdens.

Keywords: women's; health; China; health; interventions (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1995
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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