Health

At IWWAGE, we recognise that women’s health and economic empowerment are deeply interconnected. Access to quality, affordable healthcare is essential for women to enter, remain in, and progress in the workforce. Improved health outcomes strengthen women’s economic participation, while greater economic agency enables better health, creating a reinforcing cycle of empowerment.

IWWAGE’s work on women’s health focuses on:

Linking health and economic participation

Examining how health outcomes influence women’s ability to participate, retain, and advance in paid work across sectors and life stages.

Improving measurement and visibility of women’s work

Bringing attention to under-recognised areas such as menstrual and menopausal health, and their implications for productivity, dignity, and long-term labour market engagement.

Identifying systemic barriers and enablers

Analysing how health systems, workplace practices, and social norms shape women’s access to care and health-related decision-making.

Integrating health into economic and workplace policy

Advocating for the inclusion of women’s health needs within labour, social protection, and workplace policies to support sustained economic empowerment.

Through this work, IWWAGE positions women’s health as a strategic lever for inclusive growth, ensuring that women’s health needs are visible, valued, and embedded within broader economic and social policy agendas.

Brief

A Crisis in Care India’s Ageing

The global population is ageing, presenting complex challenges and new opportunities.The policy brief draws on insights from a roundtable discussion that brought together sectoral experts, practitioners, and academics, along with secondary research.The discussion served as a platform to examine the current state of eldercare in India, identify critical gaps, and explore actionable solutions to increase women’s participation in the formal eldercare workforce.
The global population is ageing, presenting complex challenges and new opportunities.The policy brief draws on insights from a roundtable discussion that brought together sectoral experts, practitioners, and academics, along with secondary research.The discussion served as a platform to examine the current state of eldercare in India, identify critical gaps, and explore actionable solutions to increase women’s participation in the formal eldercare workforce.
Report

Financing Quality Childcare Facilities in India by IWWAGE and Mobile Creches

The increasing nuclearisation of families in urban and peri-urban areas is driving demand for quality childcare, especially for working women.This study explores the current landscape of childcare services in India, focusing on government and non-governmental efforts to improve access and support women’s economic empowerment.
The increasing nuclearisation of families in urban and peri-urban areas is driving demand for quality childcare, especially for working women.This study explores the current landscape of childcare services in India, focusing on government and non-governmental efforts to improve access and support women’s economic empowerment.
Working Paper

Needs Assessment of Childcare Facilities

This report, conducted by IWWAGE in collaboration with SEWA, explores the critical need for childcare in remote tribal areas of India, covering districts in Gujarat, Odisha, Kerala, and Meghalaya. The study focuses on how the lack of quality childcare services impacts mothers’ ability to engage in paid employment, particularly following the disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. It highlights the “double burden” that women face managing domestic responsibilities while striving to earn a livelihood. Findings reveal significant gaps in childcare facilities, with many women relying on informal, unpaid care arrangements. The report stresses the urgent need for improved, accessible Early Childhood Development (ECD) services that not only support mother’s workforce participation but also ensure the well-being and cognitive development of children. This study provides valuable insights into the barriers women in rural and tribal areas face and calls for targeted policy interventions to close the gap in childcare services.
This report, conducted by IWWAGE in collaboration with SEWA, explores the critical need for childcare in remote tribal areas of India, covering districts in Gujarat, Odisha, Kerala, and Meghalaya. The study focuses on how the lack of quality childcare services impacts mothers’ ability to engage in paid employment, particularly following the disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. It highlights the “double burden” that women face managing domestic responsibilities while striving to earn a livelihood. Findings reveal significant gaps in childcare facilities, with many women relying on informal, unpaid care arrangements. The report stresses the urgent need for improved, accessible Early Childhood Development (ECD) services that not only support mother’s workforce participation but also ensure the well-being and cognitive development of children. This study provides valuable insights into the barriers women in rural and tribal areas face and calls for targeted policy interventions to close the gap in childcare services.
Report

Evidence Review of the Global Childcare Crisis

The COVID-19 pandemic reversed gains in women’s equality by intensifying unpaid care work and triggering a global childcare crisis. School and childcare closures sharply increased care demands, disproportionately affecting women—especially those in low-paid, informal, and vulnerable jobs—leading to job losses, income insecurity, and limited social protection. Despite its economic importance, childcare remains underfunded and unpaid care work undervalued. Expanding access to affordable, quality childcare is essential to support women’s employment, reduce poverty, create jobs, and enable an inclusive and sustainable post-COVID recovery.
The COVID-19 pandemic reversed gains in women’s equality by intensifying unpaid care work and triggering a global childcare crisis. School and childcare closures sharply increased care demands, disproportionately affecting women—especially those in low-paid, informal, and vulnerable jobs—leading to job losses, income insecurity, and limited social protection. Despite its economic importance, childcare remains underfunded and unpaid care work undervalued. Expanding access to affordable, quality childcare is essential to support women’s employment, reduce poverty, create jobs, and enable an inclusive and sustainable post-COVID recovery.
Learning note

National Family Health Survey

Discover comprehensive data on women’s socio-economic conditions through our annual factsheets. These factsheets, drawn from the National Family Health Survey (NFHS), provide insights into critical areas such as education, health, work participation, decision-making, and access to resources. By analysing trends across various indicators, these factsheets offer a valuable snapshot of women’s lives in India, highlighting progress and ongoing challenges. Explore the factsheets for the latest data and understand the evolving landscape of gender equality and women’s empowerment.
Discover comprehensive data on women’s socio-economic conditions through our annual factsheets. These factsheets, drawn from the National Family Health Survey (NFHS), provide insights into critical areas such as education, health, work participation, decision-making, and access to resources. By analysing trends across various indicators, these factsheets offer a valuable snapshot of women’s lives in India, highlighting progress and ongoing challenges. Explore the factsheets for the latest data and understand the evolving landscape of gender equality and women’s empowerment.
Learning note

Global Policy Summary: Childcare Crisis

The COVID-19 pandemic magnified the global childcare crisis, exposing deep inequalities in how care work is valued and distributed. With school closures and limited access to childcare services, unpaid care burdens surged-falling disproportionately on women and girls. This not only undermined progress on gender equality but also strained families, reduced women’s economic participation, and weakened childcare systems globally. To ensure a just, resilient recovery, childcare must be placed at the centre of economic and social policy. Governments, donors, and the private sector must work together to support care systems that enable women’s full participation in the workforce and recognise care as essential to economic growth and social well-being. Guided by the ILO’s 5Rs of Care Framework, the policy summary outlines a roadmap for action for pathways to a stronger, more equitable future.
The COVID-19 pandemic magnified the global childcare crisis, exposing deep inequalities in how care work is valued and distributed. With school closures and limited access to childcare services, unpaid care burdens surged-falling disproportionately on women and girls. This not only undermined progress on gender equality but also strained families, reduced women’s economic participation, and weakened childcare systems globally. To ensure a just, resilient recovery, childcare must be placed at the centre of economic and social policy. Governments, donors, and the private sector must work together to support care systems that enable women’s full participation in the workforce and recognise care as essential to economic growth and social well-being. Guided by the ILO’s 5Rs of Care Framework, the policy summary outlines a roadmap for action for pathways to a stronger, more equitable future.
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