2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209586
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Women's (health) work: A population-based, cross-sectional study of gender differences in time spent seeking health care in Malawi

Abstract: BackgroundThere has been a notable expansion in routine health care in sub-Saharan Africa. While heath care is nominally free in many contexts, the time required to access services reflects an opportunity cost that may be substantial and highly gendered, reflecting the gendered nature of health care guidelines and patterns of use. The time costs of health care use, however, have rarely been systematically assessed at the population-level.MethodsData come from the 2015 wave of a population-based cohort study of… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…Thus, several studies point to a gender difference in IBS. In industrialized countries, it has been observed that it is predominately women that seek health care services during acute or chronic symptomatology, as compared with men [62]. Drossman et al [63] reported a 2:1 ratio (men/women) in IBS frequency.…”
Section: Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pathophysiology and Promoting Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, several studies point to a gender difference in IBS. In industrialized countries, it has been observed that it is predominately women that seek health care services during acute or chronic symptomatology, as compared with men [62]. Drossman et al [63] reported a 2:1 ratio (men/women) in IBS frequency.…”
Section: Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pathophysiology and Promoting Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is the first study to investigate renal insufficiency and CKD in a cohort of diabetic patients attending NCD clinics in rural Malawi. Almost two-thirds of the patients were females and this pattern of higher health service utilization by women is common in Malawi [22]. In Malawi, most of the studies evaluating renal impairment and CKD were done in the context of HIV, patients acutely admitted in hospitals, and in urban centers [2328].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Deworming might not have been mentioned in our study because of lack of knowledge of the services that might benefit them and because the Malawian health system emphasizes deworming among children and antenatal women only44]. The Malawian health system has been heavily criticized for only focusing more on women and children and leaving out men which is a disservice to men [45]. Notably men are underserved because the major partners in health services are women and children and are more knowledgeable than men [45,46].…”
Section: Services Men Require In Pmtct Servicesmentioning
confidence: 97%