INTRODUCTION There is a correlation between the sex of this study and the frequency with which certain gender members seek medical care. Society based on gender always has different categories. This arises from the fact that gender classifies specific behaviors and attitudes as being more likely for women than men and vice versa. The purpose of this research paper is to understand the influence of gender on the use of medical system.
For reproductive health (and important areas of training such as the safe motherhood of age), gender analysis will show how these relationships affect health outcomes, how health interventions are related to gender related outcomes It is aimed to understand if it affects. Whenever possible, gender issues should be viewed as an integral part of the broad technical analysis to be done during the development of the strategic plan, not as individual problems. How will the proposed results affect the relative positions of men and women? To answer these questions from the US International Development Agency (ADS), you need to do gender analysis on the specific cultural and social context you are working on. Gender experts have developed a number of analytical tools to guide you through the analysis. Some are specific to a specific department, others can be used by various departments.
An important area that needs to tackle gender issues is health policy. Gender inequality in wider societies affects the fair use of health care, which is detrimental to the healthcare experience and opportunities, and the value gained from the health system. In addition, the "blind" health system - the sex difference of health services - is not recognized - the possibility to maintain and / or strengthen sexual inequality and sexual inequality in broader societies, daily operations and health policy is there
From a policy point of view, the health department often lacks a mechanism to cope with gender-based health differences. Health policies often do not identify gender differences in intervention or strategic impacts, and governance systems that oversee such policies often do not explicitly identify gender differences. In addition, health information used to support management can be displayed in a gender-independent way. For example, it can be displayed as aggregated data rather than decomposed data. Lack of transparency in health system governance means that it is difficult to assess the extent to which gender is considered when developing, managing and providing medical services. In addition, cost, efficiency, and impact on health outcomes are not easy to judge that we were unable to cope with gender issues in healthcare systems. Therefore, when considering how to "develop" health policy, it is important to make sure of it.