This paper presents the multisided role of social and health determinants on the well-being of women in Sindh, Pakistan, in the form of a mixed-method study that uses quantitative surveys and qualitative interviews in five rural districts of Sindh. The results indicate that deep-seated socioeconomic disparities including poverty, illiteracy, early marriage, and gender-based violence are strongly related to inhibited access to healthcare, inadequate nutritive status, and elevated prevalence of mental health illnesses. The study population represented a high percentage of women with no formal education (58%), unable to obtain antenatal care (69%), and with malnutrition with 65 percent being underweight and almost 70 percent reporting depressive symptoms. The presence of cultural barriers, patriarchal attitudes, and the lack of infrastructure also aggravate the situation, limiting the freedom of women and access to mental and reproductive health support. The article highlights that much-needed multi-sectoral, gender-responsive policies are needed, including structural inequity, effective care delivery, education promotion, and violence against women to enhance the health and dignity of women in Sindh. These observations are relevant to the larger debate on gender and health disparity in the South Asian Region and remains a valuable lesson to practitioners as well as policy leaders in curtailing disparity in context of health and social development.
Nazma et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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