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The Women's Health Contribution Program
(WHCP) is a partnership of community organizations, leading academic researchers and institutes to support policy research and education on the health needs of women and girls in Canada.
The WHCP program has more than a decade of expertise and experience in producing and communicating policy-relevant research to governments, professional bodies, researchers, community organizations and individuals.
New Questions ~ New Knowledge
The work of WHCP organizations demonstrates how biological factors (sex) and social and cultural roles (gender), interact with environmental, economic and other conditions across the lifespan to influence women's and girls' health.
Health research and education that incorporates sex and gender differences makes for good science and good sense. Understanding the differences between women's and men's health, and within diverse populations of women and girls in Canada, means better health for everyone.
The Women's Health Contribution Program
is supported by the Bureau of Women's Health and Gender Analysis, Health Canada.
www.cewh-cesf.ca
1-888-818-9172
For more than ten years, WHCP partners have produced policy-relevant research papers, syntheses and briefs on the factors that affect the health status of women and girls, including important research that highlights:
Improving our knowledge of women's health and well-being helps governments and policy makers design better policies and programs, deliver more effective services, and involve women in actively addressing the factors that affect their health.
WHCP partners investigate women's and girls' health needs, struggles and concerns through gender-based analysis (GBA), an analytic framework to explore sex and gender differences and other forms of diversity between and within populations of women and men, girls and boys.
Applying GBA provides a more comprehensive portrait of the context and complexities of women's and girls' lives, and helps to inform the appropriate responses required to address health inequities where they exist.
WHCP welcomes new connections with individuals and organizations interested in the effective use of gender and diversity analysis, and in working to improve the health of girls and women in Canada.