HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at Barcelona, Spain from your home or work.

10th Edition of World Congress on Infectious Diseases

June 25-27, 2026 | Barcelona, Spain

June 25 -27, 2026 | Barcelona, Spain
Infection 2026

Gendered socioeconomic impacts of emerging infectious diseases: Insights from a mixed-methods study in Guinea

Speaker at Infection Conference - Stephanie Maltais
University of Montreal, Canada
Title : Gendered socioeconomic impacts of emerging infectious diseases: Insights from a mixed-methods study in Guinea

Abstract:

This study examines the gendered socioeconomic impacts of pandemics and outbreaks on populations in Guinea, using data from the Decentralize and Operationalize One Health Platforms (DOPERAUS) project. A mixed-methods approach combined quantitative survey data (N=906) from participants aged 18 and over and qualitative data from an open-ended question answered by 508 respondents to capture both measurable outcomes and nuanced experiences. Sampling accounted for gender, age, and vulnerable populations, and analyses incorporated descriptive statistics, Chi-square tests, Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney tests, and thematic coding of qualitative data.

Findings reveal gendered disparities in how socioeconomic impacts are experienced during pandemics and outbreaks. Women disproportionately bore caregiving and household management responsibilities and were more affected by income loss and reduced marker access, as many reported being unable to sell their goods in the qualitative data. Men were more affected by income loss, and disruptions to traditional gender roles based on the quantitative data. Vulnerability was also shaped by age and occupational status, with adults aged 30–49 and those in informal or precarious employment experiencing heightened economic and social stress. Women frequently relied on informal borrowing and community support to cope with financial strain, highlighting structural gaps in social protection systems.

These results underscore the intersectional nature of pandemic impacts, showing that gender alone does not fully explain vulnerability. The study emphasizes the importance of integrating social science perspectives into the One Health approach, as understanding household dynamics, community roles, and economic inequalities is essential for designing effective and equitable outbreak preparedness and response strategies.

Biography:

Stéphanie Maltais is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Management, Evaluation and Health Policy (DGEPS) at the School of Public Health of the Université de Montréal (ESPUM). She holds a PhD in International Development, with a thesis focused on the management of health crises in fragile states, using the Ebola outbreak in Guinea as a case study. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship on the “One Health” approach at the University of Ottawa. Her expertise lies at the intersection of crisis management, project management, public and global health, and organizational resilience.

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