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Sexual and reproductive health of women with disability in the Philippines: Building evidence for action. W-DARE aim and major research questions. Aim: to improve access to quality SRH programs for women with disability in the Philippines
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Sexual and reproductive health of women with disability in the Philippines: Building evidence for action
W-DARE aim and major research questions Aim: to improve access to quality SRH programs for women with disability in the Philippines • What are the experiences of women with disability in accessing SRH programs in Quezon City and Ligao City? How do these differ from women without disability? • What are the SRH service and information needs and priorities of women with disability? • What interventions are effective in improving access to quality SRH programs for women with disability?
Action research in partnership • Nossal Institute for Global Health, and Centre for Health Equity (University of Melbourne) • Social Development Research Center (De La Salle University) • WOWLEAP • PARE • Likhaan Center for Women’s Health • Center for Women’s Studies (University of the Philippines) • UNFPA Philippines Country Office
Baseline picture – data sources Top: Donna (CBR worker) collecting household survey data in LC; Below: Completed surveys ready for data entry and analysis Household survey with 3051 adults (data on prevalence, well-being and participation restrictions) Women with functional limitation (and matched controls) completed a SRH questionnaire (253 women in total) 37 in-depth interviews with women and girls with disability 8 focus group discussions (partners, parents, women without disability) 20 key in-depth interviews with SRH service providers
Early analysis • Prevalence of functional limitation: • Quezon City is 7.15% (95% CI: 6.15, 8.29) • Ligao City is 14.04% (95% CI: 11.52, 17.00) • Disability associated with increased age; lower levels of education; unemployment or economic dependence
Access to SRH services Barriers • related toservice providers (attitudes, behaviours, knowledge and skills, gender of SP) • related to facilities (physical barriers, policies, assistive devices) • related to women with disability (awareness of services, SRH knowledge, mental health, fear of services, self medication) • economic barriers (cost of services, transport, SL interpreters) • availability of services and supports (availability of local SRH services, transport, SL interpreters) • related to gender norms(domestic responsibilities)
Women’s SRH compromised by Abuse: Abuse is frequent and isperpetrated by family members and partners, as well as strangers and possibly service providers Sexual, physical, verbal, and emotional abuse reported; also restriction of movement/opportunities and domestic exploitation Negative public attitudes towards women with disability: in public places, from health and transport service providers, from family members Some notable instances of solidarity and support
Clockwise from top L: Participants in Disability Inclusion workshop, QC; Piacollecting data during the household survey, QC; Weng with young people who are deaf in LC.
An enabling society in the Philippines Enabling local environments Supply side interventions Demand side interventions