How social scientists elicit truthful responses on sensitive matters

Understanding women’s healthcare-seeking involves examining attitudes, behaviors, and preferences. In traditional surveys with direct questions, respondents may choose to conceal their true opinions. Researchers employ various techniques to address this issue.
Women’s health: Of religion, culture, and stigma

Women’s healthcare decisions are made within households. Households are part of communities and may be influenced by factors such as religious beliefs, cultural norms, and stigmas.
Gender disparities in healthcare: Rational choice or innate bias?

When resource-constrained households prioritize healthcare for male rather than female members, is it ‘rational’ economic choice or entrenched gender bias?
The disease burden is shifting – and it is gendered

Globally, the disease burden is tilting towards non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Younger populations are increasingly affected and among this demographic, a greater proportion of female deaths are attributable to NCDs relative to males. There is a need to take cognizance of these trends by expanding and adapting the women’s health agenda, which remains largely focused on reproductive health.