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Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps

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Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps. / Macura, Biljana; Foggitt, Ella; Liera, Carla et al.
In: BMJ Global Health, Vol. 8, No. 1, e010850, 24.01.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Macura, B, Foggitt, E, Liera, C, Soto, A, Orlando, A, Del Duca, L, Carrard, N, Hannes, K, Sommer, M & Dickin, S 2023, 'Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps', BMJ Global Health, vol. 8, no. 1, e010850. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850

APA

Macura, B., Foggitt, E., Liera, C., Soto, A., Orlando, A., Del Duca, L., Carrard, N., Hannes, K., Sommer, M., & Dickin, S. (2023). Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps. BMJ Global Health, 8(1), Article e010850. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850

Vancouver

Macura B, Foggitt E, Liera C, Soto A, Orlando A, Del Duca L et al. Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps. BMJ Global Health. 2023 Jan 24;8(1):e010850. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850

Author

Macura, Biljana ; Foggitt, Ella ; Liera, Carla et al. / Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps. In: BMJ Global Health. 2023 ; Vol. 8, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{a2a87188a7cb4cd1abd7c67e8bbeffa2,
title = "Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps",
abstract = "Introduction: Poor access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services threatens population health and contributes to gender and social inequalities, especially in low-resource settings. Despite awareness in the WASH sector of the importance of promoting gender equality and social inclusion (GESI) to address these inequalities, evaluations of interventions focus largely on health outcomes, while gender equality and other social outcomes are rarely included. This review aimed to collate and describe available research evidence of GESI outcomes evaluated in WASH intervention studies. Methods: We applied a systematic mapping methodology and searched for both academic and grey literature published between 2010 and 2020 in 16 bibliographic databases and 53 specialist websites. Eligibility screening (with consistency checking) was conducted according to predetermined criteria, followed by metadata coding and narrative synthesis. Results: Our evidence base comprises 463 intervention studies. Only 42% of studies measured transformative GESI outcomes of WASH interventions, referring to those that seek to transform gender relations and power imbalances to promote equality. A majority of studies disaggregated outcome data by sex, but other forms of data disaggregation were limited. Most included studies (78%) lacked a specific GESI mainstreaming component in their intervention design. Of the interventions with GESI mainstreaming, the majority targeted women and girls, with very few focused on other social groups or intersectional considerations. Conclusion: The review points to various areas for future primary and secondary research. Given the potential contribution of WASH to GESI, GESI considerations should be incorporated into the evaluation of WASH interventions. Regular collection of data and monitoring of GESI outcomes is needed as well as developing new and testing existing methods for monitoring and evaluation of such data.",
keywords = "Original research, 1506, Review, Public Health",
author = "Biljana Macura and Ella Foggitt and Carla Liera and Adriana Soto and Arianna Orlando and {Del Duca}, Laura and Naomi Carrard and Karin Hannes and Marni Sommer and Sarah Dickin",
year = "2023",
month = jan,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "BMJ Global Health",
issn = "2059-7908",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Systematic mapping of gender equality and social inclusion in WASH interventions: knowledge clusters and gaps

AU - Macura, Biljana

AU - Foggitt, Ella

AU - Liera, Carla

AU - Soto, Adriana

AU - Orlando, Arianna

AU - Del Duca, Laura

AU - Carrard, Naomi

AU - Hannes, Karin

AU - Sommer, Marni

AU - Dickin, Sarah

PY - 2023/1/24

Y1 - 2023/1/24

N2 - Introduction: Poor access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services threatens population health and contributes to gender and social inequalities, especially in low-resource settings. Despite awareness in the WASH sector of the importance of promoting gender equality and social inclusion (GESI) to address these inequalities, evaluations of interventions focus largely on health outcomes, while gender equality and other social outcomes are rarely included. This review aimed to collate and describe available research evidence of GESI outcomes evaluated in WASH intervention studies. Methods: We applied a systematic mapping methodology and searched for both academic and grey literature published between 2010 and 2020 in 16 bibliographic databases and 53 specialist websites. Eligibility screening (with consistency checking) was conducted according to predetermined criteria, followed by metadata coding and narrative synthesis. Results: Our evidence base comprises 463 intervention studies. Only 42% of studies measured transformative GESI outcomes of WASH interventions, referring to those that seek to transform gender relations and power imbalances to promote equality. A majority of studies disaggregated outcome data by sex, but other forms of data disaggregation were limited. Most included studies (78%) lacked a specific GESI mainstreaming component in their intervention design. Of the interventions with GESI mainstreaming, the majority targeted women and girls, with very few focused on other social groups or intersectional considerations. Conclusion: The review points to various areas for future primary and secondary research. Given the potential contribution of WASH to GESI, GESI considerations should be incorporated into the evaluation of WASH interventions. Regular collection of data and monitoring of GESI outcomes is needed as well as developing new and testing existing methods for monitoring and evaluation of such data.

AB - Introduction: Poor access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services threatens population health and contributes to gender and social inequalities, especially in low-resource settings. Despite awareness in the WASH sector of the importance of promoting gender equality and social inclusion (GESI) to address these inequalities, evaluations of interventions focus largely on health outcomes, while gender equality and other social outcomes are rarely included. This review aimed to collate and describe available research evidence of GESI outcomes evaluated in WASH intervention studies. Methods: We applied a systematic mapping methodology and searched for both academic and grey literature published between 2010 and 2020 in 16 bibliographic databases and 53 specialist websites. Eligibility screening (with consistency checking) was conducted according to predetermined criteria, followed by metadata coding and narrative synthesis. Results: Our evidence base comprises 463 intervention studies. Only 42% of studies measured transformative GESI outcomes of WASH interventions, referring to those that seek to transform gender relations and power imbalances to promote equality. A majority of studies disaggregated outcome data by sex, but other forms of data disaggregation were limited. Most included studies (78%) lacked a specific GESI mainstreaming component in their intervention design. Of the interventions with GESI mainstreaming, the majority targeted women and girls, with very few focused on other social groups or intersectional considerations. Conclusion: The review points to various areas for future primary and secondary research. Given the potential contribution of WASH to GESI, GESI considerations should be incorporated into the evaluation of WASH interventions. Regular collection of data and monitoring of GESI outcomes is needed as well as developing new and testing existing methods for monitoring and evaluation of such data.

KW - Original research

KW - 1506

KW - Review

KW - Public Health

U2 - 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850

DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010850

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

JO - BMJ Global Health

JF - BMJ Global Health

SN - 2059-7908

IS - 1

M1 - e010850

ER -