Filling the Gender Data Gap
In: Studies in family planning: a publication of the Population Council, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 264-269
ISSN: 1728-4465
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In: Studies in family planning: a publication of the Population Council, Band 47, Heft 3, S. 264-269
ISSN: 1728-4465
Across the globe, girls are systematically excluded from participation in social, economic, and political life. The absence of girls in these arenas has implications not only for the young women themselves but also for society as a whole, exacerbating poverty and perpetuating disparities in health, education, and economic achievement. Internationally, this marginalization makes it difficult or impossible for some countries to achieve society-wide goals, such as the Millennium Development Goals identified by the United Nations as benchmarks to reduce poverty. For a number of years, the Population Council has been studying the causes and effects of girls' social exclusion in developing countries, with projects in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. This brief examines which girls are most excluded, girls' social exclusion as a barrier to development, promising strategies for including adolescent girls, and research gaps.
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En todo el mundo, las niñas son sistemáticamente excluidas de la participación en la vida social, económica y política. La ausencia de niñas en estos terrenos tiene consecuencias, no solo para las mismas jóvenes sino también para la sociedad en su totalidad, ya que se exacerba la pobreza y se perpetúan las disparidades de salud, educación y éxito económico. A nivel internacional, esta marginación dificulta o hace imposible que algunos países logren objetivos en toda la sociedad, como los Objetivos de Desarrollo del Milenio, considerados por las Naciones Unidas como parámetros para reducir la pobreza. Desde hace algunos años, el Population Council ha estado estudiando las causas y efectos de la exclusión social de las niñas en los países en desarrollo, con proyectos en África, Asia y América Latina. Promoción de transiciones a la vida adulta: Sanas, seguras y productivas N° 27 examina cuáles son las niñas más excluidas, la exclusión social de las niñas que constituye una barrera para el desarrollo, las causas subyacentes de la exclusión de las niñas, las estrategias promisorias para incluir a las niñas adolescentes, y las brechas en la investigación. --- Across the globe, girls are systematically excluded from participation in social, economic, and political life. The absence of girls in these arenas has implications not only for the young women themselves but also for society as a whole, exacerbating poverty and perpetuating disparities in health, education, and economic achievement. Internationally, this marginalization makes it difficult or impossible for some countries to achieve society-wide goals, such as the Millennium Development Goals identified by the United Nations as benchmarks to reduce poverty. For a number of years, the Population Council has been studying the causes and effects of girls' social exclusion in developing countries, with projects in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Promoting Healthy, Safe, and Productive Transitions to Adulthood Brief No. 27 examines which girls are most excluded, ...
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A recent Horizons study conducted jointly with two Dominican NGOs assessed the impact of two environmental-structural models in reducing HIV-related risk among female sex workers in the Dominican Republic and compared their cost-effectiveness. In the two cities studied, there were improvements from pre- to post-intervention in the key outcome variables, however the type and level of these changes varied by intervention approach. Based on our findings, program planners and policymakers involved in the study in the Dominican Republic agree that the integrated solidarity and policy model in conjunction with ongoing peer education and community mobilization activities is an appropriate, cost-effective, and ethical intervention package. The current dialogue is now focused on how to scale up this successful pilot experience in a way that continues to respect all members of the sex work community and to be effective in curbing the HIV epidemic.
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Effective programs that avert new HIV infections among sex workers and their partners, and hence the general population, are critical components of national HIV-prevention strategies. Prevention efforts have frequently relied on interventions that reach members of these vulnerable groups as individuals, such as condom promotion and STI management. Now, many researchers and program implementers are increasingly turning to "environmental-structural" interventions that address the physical, social, and political contexts in which individual behavior takes place. A recent Horizons study conducted jointly with two Dominican NGOs—Centro de Orientación e Investigación Integral and Centro de Promoción e Solidaridad Humana—and the National Program for the Control of STDs and AIDS assessed the impact of two environmental-structural models in reducing HIV-related risk among female sex workers in the Dominican Republic and compared their cost-effectiveness. As detailed in this brief, the models, built on years of experience gained from sex worker peer education programs, drew from the strengths of both community solidarity and government policy initiatives and engaged community members in both program and policy development.
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Programas efectivos para evitar nuevas infecciones del VIH entre trabajadoras sexuales y sus parejas, y por lo tanto la población en general, son componentes críticos de estrategias nacionales de prevención del VIH. Generalmente los esfuerzos de prevención se han concentrado en intervenciones que alcanzan a los miembros de estos grupos vulnerables al nivel individual, tal como promoción de condones y manejo de ITS. Actualmente, muchos investigadores y gerentes de programas se encuentran dirigiéndose a intervenciones "ambientales-estructurales" que toman en cuenta los contextos físicos, sociales y políticos en que el comportamiento individual ocurre. Un estudio reciente realizado por Horizons, en conjunto con dos ONGs dominicanas—Centro de Orientación e Investigación Integral y Centro de Promoción y Solidaridad Humana—y el Programa Nacional del Control de ITS y SIDA buscaba evaluar el impacto de dos modelos ambientales-estructurales en disminuir el riesgo de VIH entre trabajadoras sexuales en la República Dominicana y de comparar el costo-efectividad de los dos modelos. Como se detalla en este resumen, los modelos, construidos sobre la base de años de experiencia adquirida a través de programas de educación entre pares de trabajadoras sexuales, combinan las fortalezas de iniciativas de solidaridad comunitaria y de políticas gubernamentales, e involucran a miembros de la comunidad en el desarrollo de ambos programa y política. --- Effective programs that avert new HIV infections among sex workers and their partners, and hence the general population, are critical components of national HIV-prevention strategies. Prevention efforts have frequently relied on interventions that reach members of these vulnerable groups as individuals, such as condom promotion and STI management. Now, many researchers and program implementers are increasingly turning to "environmental-structural" interventions that address the physical, social, and political contexts in which individual behavior takes place. A recent Horizons study ...
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The most disadvantaged adolescent girls are the poorest girls from the poorest communities. They suffer from human rights abuses, lack education and economic opportunity, are affected by HIV/AIDS, and have poor reproductive and maternal health outcomes. To effectively reach these girls so that they can receive critical services such as gathering spaces, life skills, financial literacy, savings accounts, and reproductive health knowledge, they must be targeted as a distinct segment. It is important to invest in building the capacities of local partners and governments to deliver and scale-up low-cost, well-targeted programs. This technical report is intended to assist programmatic officers, donors, and policy analysts in making program and policy decisions on investments in adolescent girls. It draws upon current literature on investments in the most disadvantaged girls and highlights case studies from diverse second-generation girl platform programs in Egypt, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Kenya, South Africa, and Uganda. Average annual costs of individual program components, average annual costs per girl beneficiary, and unit costs of interest are presented.
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Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a complex rheumatic disease with both autoimmune and autoinflammatory components. Recently, familial cases of systemic-onset JIA have been attributed to mutations in LACC1/FAMIN. We describe three affected siblings from a Moroccan consanguineous family with an early-onset chronic, symmetric and erosive arthritis previously diagnosed as rheumatoid factor (RF)-negative polyarticular JIA. Autozygosity mapping identified four homozygous regions shared by all patients, located in chromosomes 3, 6 (n:2) and 13, containing over 330 genes. Subsequent whole exome sequencing identified two potential candidate variants within these regions (in FARS2 and LACC1/FAMIN). Genotyping of a cohort of healthy Moroccan individuals (n: 352) and bioinformatics analyses finally supported the frameshift c.128_129delGT mutation in the LACC1/FAMIN gene, leading to a truncated protein (p.Cys43Tyrfs*6), as the most probable causative gene defect. Additional targeted sequencing studies performed in patients with systemic-onset JIA (n:23) and RF-negative polyarticular JIA (n: 44) revealed no pathogenic LACC1/FAMIN mutations. Our findings support the homozygous genotype in the LACC1/FAMIN gene as the defect underlying the family here described with a recessively inherited severe inflammatory joint disease. Our evidences provide further support to the involvement of LACC1/FAMIN deficiency in different types of JIA in addition to the initially described systemic-onset JIA. ; The authors would like to thank the CRG Genomics Unit for assistance with whole exome sequencing. This work has been partially funded by: CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya (JIA, XE, SO), the PERIS program of the Generalitat de Catalunya grant SLT002/16/00310 (RR), the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness co-financed by European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) grant SAF2015-68472-C2-1-R (JIA), the Instituto de Salud Carlos III/Transnational Research Projects on Rare Diseases (JIA) grant AC15/00027, the Spanish Society of Pediatric Rheumatology (JIA), the Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Economia grant 2009-SGR-1502 (XE) and the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) grant agreement no. 262055 (XE). We also acknowledge support of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MEIC) to the EMBL partnership, 'Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa'.
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Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a complex rheumatic disease with both autoimmune and autoinflammatory components. Recently, familial cases of systemic-onset JIA have been attributed to mutations in LACC1/FAMIN. We describe three affected siblings from a Moroccan consanguineous family with an early-onset chronic, symmetric and erosive arthritis previously diagnosed as rheumatoid factor (RF)-negative polyarticular JIA. Autozygosity mapping identified four homozygous regions shared by all patients, located in chromosomes 3, 6 (n:2) and 13, containing over 330 genes. Subsequent whole exome sequencing identified two potential candidate variants within these regions (in FARS2 and LACC1/FAMIN). Genotyping of a cohort of healthy Moroccan individuals (n: 352) and bioinformatics analyses finally supported the frameshift c.128_129delGT mutation in the LACC1/FAMIN gene, leading to a truncated protein (p.Cys43Tyrfs*6), as the most probable causative gene defect. Additional targeted sequencing studies performed in patients with systemic-onset JIA (n:23) and RF-negative polyarticular JIA (n: 44) revealed no pathogenic LACC1/FAMIN mutations. Our findings support the homozygous genotype in the LACC1/FAMIN gene as the defect underlying the family here described with a recessively inherited severe inflammatory joint disease. Our evidences provide further support to the involvement of LACC1/FAMIN deficiency in different types of JIA in addition to the initially described systemic-onset JIA. ; This work has been partially funded by: CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya (JIA, XE, SO), the PERIS program of the Generalitat de Catalunya grant SLT002/16/00310 (RR), the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness co-financed by European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) grant SAF2015-68472-C2-1-R (JIA), the Instituto de Salud Carlos III/Transnational Research Projects on Rare Diseases (JIA) grant AC15/00027, the Spanish Society of Pediatric Rheumatology (JIA), the Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Economia grant 2009-SGR-1502 (XE) and the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) grant agreement no. 262055 (XE).
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