Reviewing the evidence-to-policy-gap for gender-responsive COVID-19 policies
In-person and online
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed existing faultlines in health inequities, throwing into sharp relief the differences in health outcomes depending on socio-demographic and structural drivers such as poverty, race, geography and gender. Very few of these inequities were unexpected, but, conversely, few of them seem to have played a significant role in driving the policy responses from national/sub-national Governments around the world.

Presenting data collected for the past two and a half years in constructing the world’s largest database of sex-disaggregated COVID-19 data from national sources, this talk will explore the evidence around the roles that sex and gender played in health inequities in the COVID-19 pandemic. It will review the extent to which health policies were gender-responsive, and will question what might be contributing to the gap between evidence and policy.

Join the talk remotely here: spi-ox-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/81496669239
Date: 13 October 2022, 16:00 (Thursday, 1st week, Michaelmas 2022)
Venue: 32-42 Wellington Square (Barnett House), 32-42 Wellington Square OX1 2ER
Venue Details: In-person and online
Speaker: Sarah Hawkes (UCL)
Organising department: Department of Social Policy and Intervention
Organiser: Dr Ben Chrisinger (University of Oxford)
Organiser contact email address: communications@spi.ox.ac.uk
Part of: Michaelmas Term Seminar Series 2022-23
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Public
Editors: Tiya Muluzi, Daisy Mallabar, Richard Evans