Gender and Social Inclusion in Health Supply Chains

The discussion began by aligning on key definitions. Gender equity is the process of being fair to people of all genders. Social inclusion is any set of actions or interventions designed to enable each person or community to fully participate in society and enjoy a safe and healthy life despite race, ethnicity, gender, socio-economic status, age, physical abilities, religious beliefs, political beliefs, or other ideologies or identities.

Members shared on the current states of gender and social inclusion in the health supply chain, including efforts to date to integrate gender and social inclusion in the supply chain:

Women comprise only 41% of the supply chain workforce, 39% of supply chain undergraduates, and 5% of supply chain executives.

The conversation then shifted to what we could be doing to promote gender equity and social inclusion in the health supply chain:

There needs to be transparency from organizations about how they support women from recruitment, to advertising, to compensation for equal work.

Exit mobile version