1. The role of self-care interventions on men’s health-seeking behaviours to advance their sexual and reproductive health and rights
- Author
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Kevin Moody, Jonathan Hopkins, Carmen H. Logie, Oswaldo Montoya, Anita Hardon, Manjulaa Narasimhan, Anthropology of Health, Care and the Body (AISSR, FMG), and Global Health
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sexual and reproductive health ,Self care ,Sexual and reproductive health and rights ,Review ,Developmental psychology ,Health administration ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health behaviours ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Health policy ,Reproductive health ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Health Policy ,Public health ,Health services research ,Men ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Reproductive Health ,Health practices ,Sexual Health ,Men's Health ,business ,Psychology - Abstract
Background Self-care interventions are influencing people’s access to, expectation and understanding of healthcare beyond formal health delivery systems. In doing so, self-care interventions could potentially improve health-seeking behaviours. While many men proactively engage in maintaining and promoting their health, the focus on men’s health comes from the recognition, at least partially, that male socialization and social norms can induce men and boys to have a lower engagement in institutionalized public health entities and systems around their sexual and reproductive health and rights, that could impact negatively on themselves, their partners and children. Main text A research agenda could consider the ways that public health messaging and information on self care practices for sexual and reproductive health and rights could be tailored to reflect men’s lived realities and experiences. Three examples of evidence-based self-care interventions related to sexual and reproductive health and rights that men can, and many do, engage in are briefly discussed: condom use, HIV self-testing and use of telemedicine and digital platforms for sexual health. We apply four core elements that contribute to health, including men’s health (people-centred approaches, quality health systems, a safe and supportive enabling environment, and behaviour-change communication) to each intervention where further research can inform normative guidance. Conclusion Engaging men and boys and facilitating their participation in self care can be an important policy intervention to advance global sexual and reproductive health and rights goals. The longstanding model of men neglecting or even sabotaging their wellbeing needs to be replaced by healthier lifestyles, which requires understanding how factors related to social support, social norms, power, academic performance or employability conditions, among others, influence men’s engagement with health services and with their own self care practices.
- Published
- 2021
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