Skip to main navigation Skip to main content
  • E-Submission

Health Polit : Health Politics

OPEN ACCESS
ABOUT
BROWSE ARTICLES
EDITORIAL POLICIES
FOR CONTRIBUTORS

Page Path

1
results for

"crisis-driven policymaking"

Article category

Keywords

Publication year

Authors

"crisis-driven policymaking"

Original Research Article
Development of a Sex- and Gender-Based Analysis Plus (SGBA+) Tool to Assess the Equity of Public Policies
Virginia Gunn, Patricia O’Campo, Munira Adan, Paneet Gill, Tasneem Poonawala, Pearl Buhariwala, Flora I. Matheson, Farah N. Mawani, Carles Muntaner
Health Polit 2026;1(1):28-67.   Published online March 31, 2026
DOI: https://doi.org/10.66534/hp.2026.0003
Background
Crisis-driven policymaking often unfolds under conditions of urgency and heightened political pressure, producing policies portrayed as neutral but embedding assumptions that obscure power asymmetries and deepen existing inequities. A literature review revealed a scarcity of policy analysis instruments capable of evaluating the gendered and intersectional equity-promoting potential of public policies.
Purpose
This paper describes the development of a sex- and gender-based analysis plus (SGBA+) tool designed to assess whether COVID-19 public policies meaningfully consider equity and inclusion.
Approach
The tool’s development followed an iterative process involving a mapping literature review, a structured planning and design phase, piloting with Canadian pandemic policies, and consultation with community organizations working with population groups facing marginalization or exclusion.
Findings
The resulting tool comprises 81 questions across six policy dimensions, with a scoring system that rates policies from “unequal” to “transformative” based on their responsiveness to gender and intersecting social identities. While validity and reliability have not yet been tested, the tool fills an identified gap in equity-oriented policy analysis.
Implications
With adjustments, the tool could be applied to public policies adopted in response to health, environmental, and economic crises. By making visible how policy design distributes resources and risks, SGBA+ approaches offer policymakers, advocates, and researchers a concrete means to interrogate decision-making and guide emergency governance toward greater equity.
  • 90 View
  • 20 Download