Mothupi, MamothenaDasgupta, JashodharaHosseini Jebeli, Seyede Sedighe2023-06-202023-06-202023Mothupi, M. et al. (2023). Using an intersectionality approach to transform health services for overlooked healthcare users and workers after Covid-19. BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 381, e072243.10.1136/bmj-2022-0722431756183310.1136/bmj-2022-072243http://hdl.handle.net/10566/9118Globally, government responses to the covid-19 pandemic reinforced prevailing patterns of privilege and prejudice and further entrenched the inequitable distribution of health and disease in different populations.1-3 These patterns reflect how the legacies of historical discrimination combine with existing power structures to shape, condone, and continue social disadvantage and the unequal distribution of resources. Analysis of these inequalities within health systems from the perspective of intersectionality can help us understand their drivers and find solutions to reduce them. Tackling these inequalities can also help transform health services for improved pandemic preparedness.4enPublic healthCovid-19World Health Organization (WHO)RaceEthnicityUsing an intersectionality approach to transform health services for overlooked healthcare users and workers after Covid-19Article