DAWN Ontario: DisAbled Women's Network Ontario

Women Enabling Health Services
A National Workshop for Urban Women with Disabilities

by Gail Lush
National Network on Environments and Women’s Health (NNEWH)

National Network on Environments and Women’s Health (NNEWH)

 

While Health Services and programs have tended to focus on biological aspects of Canadian’s health needs, there is increasing recognition of how a range of social and economic factors affect our health. No one understands this better than the men and women whose opportunities for health have been negatively affected by inaccessible barriers to safe and affordable housing, transportation, education and training, and the goods and services that promote wellness.

In the past decade, research related to the health status of women with disabilities has been carried out by the women themselves, and is beginning to bring to light the ways in which health care providers and policy makers can meet the full range of their needs and concerns. Women with disabilities living in urban environments are particularly concerned about how the organization of city spaces (where they live, work and seek services) affect their health and wellbeing.

While well-populated communities can offer greater options for employment, entertainment, education and health services, discriminatory attitudes toward women with disabilities have a disappointing impact on their ability to benefit from these opportunities and fully participate in urban life.

In a recent consumer survey by the Council of Canadians with Disabilities, Canadian women with disabilities indicate that they face a range of physical, environmental, attitudinal, communication and structural barriers to health services.

Fran Odette from Education Wife Assault provides an example of a health service barrier in Toronto: “One of the issues impacting on the health of women living with disabilities,” she says, “is the lack of accessible services that focus on all facets of sexual health, including reproduction.

Oftentimes, many of us do not get our annual pap tests because of inaccessible examination tables or the assumption by practitioners that women with disabilities are asexual and therefore at less risk for gynecological concerns or STIs.”

Many of the disability-related barriers to health services are further compounded by factors such as ageism, heterosexism, cultural discrimination, language barriers, racism and barriers to employment.

Since 1996, the National Network on Environments and Women’s Health (NNEWH), housed at York University in Toronto, has been coordinating projects between community representatives and academic researchers that promote equitable access to health services for women.

NNEWH is currently one of four Centres of Excellence for Women’s Health supported by the Women’s Health Bureau to ensure that the health system is responsive to women’s needs and concerns. Over the next three years, NNEWH will continue to work for change by collaborating with women with disabilities, including researchers, policy makers and disability activists, on a three-phase project entitled Urban Women’s Health and Disabilities.

This project will provide women with disabilities across Canada with a clear and strong voice in the strategies, supports and policy responses needed to remove health care barriers in urban environments.

To carry out Phase I, NNEWH has been awarded a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) workshop grant through the Institute of Gender and Health. This grant will allow the Network to organize a national, virtual workshop, where women with disabilities can discuss health barriers well beyond issues about physical accessibility. This workshop will be conducted over three days, in French and English, through the use of web-based technology on Enablelink, maintained by the Canadian Abilities Foundation.

In the summer of 2005, project participants will be invited to log on to realtime chat rooms and message boards from their home computers and community access sites. Four main focal areas of the discussion will include reproductive health services, primary health services (e.g. general practitioners, hospitals and clinics), mental health services and health services related to violence and abuse.

Women interested in participating will be mailed a package prior to the workshop containing information about the overall project, a consent form and a short survey to help team leaders identify and establish access needs for participation.

Outreach efforts for workshop participation will be inclusive of all women with disabilities including, but not limited to, racialized women, Francophone women, women contending with mental health issues, women who are Deaf, deafened or hard of hearing, and transgendered women.

Discussions among women with disabilities in the workshop will help the team identify the issues and questions needed to plan the research for Phase II.

Recommendations based on the final results will be launched publicly during Phase III. They will be communicated through policy briefs, press releases, quarterly updates in ABILITIES magazine, community and academic publications, and presentations to key stakeholders in the health sector.



Women with Disabilities in the Urban Environment

By Rafia Haniff-Cleofas and Rabia Khedr

This document provides an overview of health issues affecting women with disabilities.

arrow View English PDF PDF File - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader

arrow View French PDF PDF File - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader

 


About NNEWH

Established in 1996, the National Network on Environments and Women's Health is one of four Health Canada Centres of Excellence for Women's Health mandated to "enhance the health system's understanding of and responsiveness to women's health."

NNEWH is committed to improving women's health through support for and coordination of multidisciplinary, collaborative and community-based research, policy development, education, dialogue and action around social, cultural, economic and environmental determinants of health outcomes.

Housed at York University's Centre for Health Studies, the Network encourages academic-community partnerships throughout Canada, bringing together a diversity of perspectives and evidence-based findings to address gaps in public policy and education.

Academic partners from a wide variety of disciplines (sociology, psychology, anthropology, political science, nursing, law, etc.) work with community and advisory partners with experience in women's health and social research, policy and service delivery, media and social marketing.

Results of over fifty research projects have been published on impacts of health systems and reforms; traditional, complementary and informal health care; new genetics; physical environments; paid and unpaid work; unemployment and labour adjustment and restructuring, with reference to such factors as age, family structure, economic status, geographic location, ability, language and culture.

 

 





Up Arrow - go to top of document Go To Top

Return to DAWN Ontario index page

Events Calendar
events, conferences etc

Featured News & Alerts

What's New
additions to the site indexed daily

Contact Us

Sign our Guestbook!

Follow this link to use internal Search feature

 

Add your voice to Make Poverty History

You can help put an end to global poverty. The time to act is now.
Add your voice to Make Poverty History.
Yes I want to Make Poverty History
.
Make Poverty History Platform

Sign On to Make Poverty History

 


Page last updated April 20, 2005

Website designed & maintained courtesy of Barbara Anello