Milton Keynes North MP Ben Everitt has welcomed the news decades of gender health inequality will be addressed as the Conservative Government publishes its vision to reset the dial on women’s health.
The Vision for Women’s Health sets out key government commitments on women’s health, while recognising the system wide changes needed to tackle some of the issues raised, to be addressed by the upcoming Women’s Health Strategy in spring 2022.
To help transform the vision into a decisive strategy and action, the government will appoint a Women’s Health Ambassador who will raise the profile of women’s health, increase awareness about taboo topics and support the government in implementing the strategy.
Underpinned by the analysis from almost 100,000 responses to the call for evidence, the vision reflects the government’s ambition for a healthcare system that prioritises care on the basis of clinical need, not gender.
The responses gave stark and sobering insights into women’s experiences of health and care and highlighted entrenched problems within the healthcare system including:
- Damaging taboos and stigmas in women’s health can prevent women from seeking help and reinforce beliefs that debilitating symptoms are ‘normal’.
- Over 8 in 10 have felt they were not listened to by healthcare professionals.
- There’s a feeling services for specialities or conditions which only affect women are of lower priority compared to other services.
- Women believe compulsory training for GPs on women’s health including the menopause is needed to ensure their needs are met.
- Nearly 2 in 3 respondents with a health condition or disability said they do not feel supported by the services available for individuals with their condition or disability.
- Over half of respondents said they felt uncomfortable talking about health issues with their workplace
The government’s ambitions in the vision are:
- that all women feel comfortable talking about their health and no longer face taboos when they do talk about their health
- that women can access services that meet their needs across the life course
- that all women will have access to high quality information and education from childhood through to adulthood, in * that all women feel supported in the workplace and can reach their full potential at work
- to embed routine collection of demographic data of participants in research trials to make sure that our research reflects the society we serve
Ben Everitt, the MP for Milton Keynes North, said: “I’m pleased the Government is listening to the views of 100,000 women across the country and will take that on board as we aim to deliver a better healthcare system for women.”
Details on the action government will take to fulfil these ambitions will be followed by the Women’s Health Strategy in Spring 2022.
The call to evidence ran from March to June 2021 and generated 110,123 responses, including almost 100,000 responses from individuals across England and over 400 written responses from organisations.