World Health Organization
منظمة الصحة العالمية
Organisation mondiale de la Santé

Gender, Equity and Human Rights

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Situation Updates: 

The status of Afghan women remains one of the lowest in the world: According to AfDHS 2015, 52% of ever-married women have suffered from spousal violence, whether physical (46%), sexual (6%), or emotional (34%) and 53% of women have experienced physical violence after the age of 15. Further, 16%of women aged 15–49 reported that they had experienced violence during pregnancy, and 80% of ever-married women and 72% of ever-married men believed that a husband is justified in beating his wife under certain circumstances.

 

Health indicators for women remain poor though women and men experience different vulnerabilities and risks. Despite an increase in the number of women health workers, women face challenges in accessing services due to gender norms and poor infrastructure. Over the past decades, Afghanistan has made progress in setting up a coherent framework to eliminate gender inequality and social exclusion by establishing the Ministry of Women’s Affairs (2002) and ratifying the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW, 2003). The Gender Unit within the MoPH Reproductive Health Directorate was established in 2006 and in 2013 promoted to the Gender and Human Rights Directorate.

 

Gender-based violence (GBV) in Afghanistan is concerning. A 2015 WHO Afghanistan baseline assessment showed major weaknesses in health service provision to survivors. Only 10% of facilities are well prepared to address GBV: only a quarter of the 280 health facilities surveyed had private examination rooms and only 2% had a protocol in place for GBV care. The assessment also showed major gaps in health care providers’ knowledge and attitudes about the health consequences of GBV and the role of health care providers in helping survivors. The results also point to a need to strengthen coordination and linkages with other non-health service providers, and to properly equip and organize health facilities and address cultural and social barriers to GBV. 

Achievements:

Programme Risks and Challenges:

Way Forward:

Related links

GBV treatment protocol for health care providers in Afghanistan 

Increasing access to health care services in Afghanistan with gender-sensitive health service delivery 

National gender and health strategy of Afghanistan