Gender and palliative care: a call to arms

There has been a systematic and largely unconscious neglect of gender in palliative care research, practice and policy. This is despite significant, although previously uncollated, evidence that gender influences almost all aspects of end-of-life preferences, experiences and care. The social situati...

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Main Authors: Merryn Gott, Tessa Morgan, Lisa Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:Palliative Care and Social Practice
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2632352420957997
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spelling doaj-8baccab2553f412d87c3e1de5d7e3bf92020-11-25T04:01:58ZengSAGE PublishingPalliative Care and Social Practice2632-35242020-10-011410.1177/2632352420957997Gender and palliative care: a call to armsMerryn GottTessa MorganLisa WilliamsThere has been a systematic and largely unconscious neglect of gender in palliative care research, practice and policy. This is despite significant, although previously uncollated, evidence that gender influences almost all aspects of end-of-life preferences, experiences and care. The social situations of women, transgender people and men often differ from one another while also intersecting in complex ways with sex differences rooted in biology. If palliative care is to meet its aspiration of providing universal benefit, it urgently needs to address a range of gender inequalities currently (re)produced at the level of the laboratory all the way through to government departments. In this call to arms, we spotlight specific instances where gender inequalities have been documented, for example, regarding end-of-life caregiving, end-of-life intervention and palliative care access and benefit. We highlight how gender inequalities intersect with other social determinants of health including ethnicity and economic status to exacerbate situations of marginality. We conclude by offering some practical steps that can be taken to support the discipline to adopt a more critical gender lens to support more equitable research, policy and practice.https://doi.org/10.1177/2632352420957997
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Merryn Gott
Tessa Morgan
Lisa Williams
spellingShingle Merryn Gott
Tessa Morgan
Lisa Williams
Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
Palliative Care and Social Practice
author_facet Merryn Gott
Tessa Morgan
Lisa Williams
author_sort Merryn Gott
title Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
title_short Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
title_full Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
title_fullStr Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
title_full_unstemmed Gender and palliative care: a call to arms
title_sort gender and palliative care: a call to arms
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Palliative Care and Social Practice
issn 2632-3524
publishDate 2020-10-01
description There has been a systematic and largely unconscious neglect of gender in palliative care research, practice and policy. This is despite significant, although previously uncollated, evidence that gender influences almost all aspects of end-of-life preferences, experiences and care. The social situations of women, transgender people and men often differ from one another while also intersecting in complex ways with sex differences rooted in biology. If palliative care is to meet its aspiration of providing universal benefit, it urgently needs to address a range of gender inequalities currently (re)produced at the level of the laboratory all the way through to government departments. In this call to arms, we spotlight specific instances where gender inequalities have been documented, for example, regarding end-of-life caregiving, end-of-life intervention and palliative care access and benefit. We highlight how gender inequalities intersect with other social determinants of health including ethnicity and economic status to exacerbate situations of marginality. We conclude by offering some practical steps that can be taken to support the discipline to adopt a more critical gender lens to support more equitable research, policy and practice.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2632352420957997
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