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The world’s first Global Women’s Health Index reveals how much more needs to be done in this area.
In many countries, fewer than 10% of women have been screened for cancer in the past year.
Targeted changes in women’s healthcare provision can help prolong life expectancy.
Over the past year, more than 1.5 billion women worldwide were not tested for some of the most prevalent and pernicious diseases women face: cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure and sexually transmitted diseases/infections (STDs/STIs).
That’s one of the findings of the inaugural Global Women’s Health Index, developed by medical tech company, Hologic. Based on the experiences of more than 60,000 women and girls from 116 countries, the Index ranks countries with a score out of 100. The global average is just 54, Hologic says, with the highest score (69 out of 100) going to Taiwan and the lowest to Peru (36).
“Women’s health is the cornerstone of families, communities, societies and economies,” Hologic’s Chairman, President and CEO, Stephen MacMillan, said in a press statement. Explaining the rationale for the Index, MacMillan continued: “We saw a clear need for more robust, quality data to track and measure women’s health on a global level – particularly as COVID-19 has worsened longstanding healthcare disparities.”
Childbirth and health outcomes
In almost all regions covered by the Index, women who became pregnant at a young age (under 19) were more likely to experience life-long negative effects on their education, health and livelihoods. This is true everywhere other than Australia and New Zealand, which buck this global trend.
Cancer care
Cancer remains one of the most prevalent – and most worrying – illnesses, blighting the lives of many millions of people. It is the second-leading cause of death globally (heart disease is the biggest killer) and caused an estimated 9.6 million deaths in 2018, according to the index.
The most common causes of death by cancer for both men and women in 2020, according to Hologic, were:
Lung (1.8 million deaths)
Colon and rectum (935,000 deaths)
Liver (830,000 deaths)
Stomach (769,000 deaths)
Breast (685,000 deaths)
Read more- https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/09/first-global-index-womens-health/