Women are most affected by pandemics - lessons from past outbreaks
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Author(s)
Smith, Julia
Davies, Sara E
Feng, Huiyun
Grepin, Karen A
Harman, Sophie
Herten-Crabb, Asha
Morgan, Rosemary
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Abstract
Women are affected more than men by the social and economic effects of infectious-disease outbreaks. They bear the brunt of care responsibilities as schools close and family members fall ill1,2. They are at greater risk of domestic violence3 and are disproportionately disadvantaged by reduced access to sexual- and reproductive-health services. Because women are more likely than men to have fewer hours of employed work and be on insecure or zero-hour contracts, they are more affected by job losses in times of economic instability2.
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Nature
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583
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7815
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FT130101040
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Commerce, management, tourism and services
Science & Technology
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Science & Technology - Other Topics
Diseases
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Wenham, C; Smith, J; Davies, SE; Feng, H; Grepin, KA; Harman, S; Herten-Crabb, A; Morgan, R, Women are most affected by pandemics - lessons from past outbreaks, Nature, 2020, 583 (7815), pp. 194-198