Through a partnership with the Boston University Overseas Public Health Programme in Geneva, Switzerland, GENDRO offers regular lectures aimed at the importance of understanding and incorporating sex and gender aspects and their intersection with other determinants of health, equipping future public Health professionals with the necessary tools for a more gender responsive and inclusive public health approach.
The event raised critical questions about the prioritization of maternal health and the potential impact on global health priorities from a gender lens and as a question of gender equality, discussing why despite the preventability of PPH-related deaths, progress has stagnated. The forum, following the recent launch of a Global Roadmap by WHO and partners, delved into examining gender, health, and leadership, addressing the persisting challenges in global efforts to combat PPH-related maternal mortality. The perspectives of care from the field, including insights from a midwife from the Philippines, amplified the priorities and highlighted how supporting the women’s health agenda and investing in women’s groups and agencies can have a notable impact.
22-24 November 2023 | Organizers : GENDRO and affiliated partners, hosted by the IdeaSquare at CERN
This workshop convened thoughtleaders, experts and feminist and human rights advocates from diverse disciplinary backgrounds to a dynamic and interactive workshop hosted by CERN Ideasquare as a follow-up to SPARKS! Serendipity Forum organized by CERN. The idea of the workshop was conceived by Shirin Heidari, Meg Davis, Flávia Schlegel, Els Torreele, and Sonia Trigueros, with support from Claudia Marcelloni. The workshop was facilitated by Nadene Canning.
The workshop’s objectives were to allow in-depth conversations about the pressing concerns related to biases and risks related to gender, diversity, equity, and human rights in digital technologies and artificial intelligence for health. The intention was to facilitate a conversation on how intersectional feminist principles and lenses applied end-to-end from research and product design to data collection and use can help avoid exacerbating the existing biases, gender divides and inequities in health, and foster human-rights informed, gender responsive and equitable tools that can ensure health equity and social justice.
A presentation by GENDRO at the Conference on Sex and Musculoskeletal Research focused on the role of SAGER guidelines in fostering greater attention to sex and gender across disciplines, welcoming any measures for adoption of the SAGER guidelines by the journals in the field, encouraging editors to play a more active role in its uptake and using the guidelines as tool to promote greater attention of the sex and gender dimensions across the research ecosystem.
15-16 November 2023 | Organizer : Human Immunome Project, hosted by the Caixa Research Institute
The Human Immunome Project (HIP) presented its comprehensive scientific research plan at the Human Immunome Project Into Action Conference in Barcelona. This ambitious plan, aimed at creating the most extensive immunology dataset in history, facilitated discussion on key areas, such as global data collection, diversity and equity, and emphasized the pivotal role of AI in data analysis.
Dr Shirin Heidari, participated in this meeting in Barcelona, reinforcing the importance of the initiative, and in particular drew attention to consideration of sex and gender, and other diversity dimensions in data collection and analysis from the onset, in particular in light of their critical role in informing AI algorithms and models, to ensure greater accuracy, safety, efficiency and minimizing bias. The meeting emphasized the need to collaborate with existing expertise, form partnerships with organizations experienced in relevant areas, and engage with a diverse range of stakeholders globally.