George, Asha SLopes, Claudia AVijayasingham, Lavanya2023-06-202023-06-202023George, A. S. et al. (2023). A shared agenda for gender and Covid-19 research: Priorities based on broadening engagement in science. BMJ Global Health, 8(5), e011315. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-0113152059-7908http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-011315http://hdl.handle.net/10566/9124While the acute and collective crisis from the pandemic is over, an estimated 2.5million people died from COVID-19 in 2022, tens of millions suffer from long COVID and national economies still reel from multiple deprivations exacerbated by the pandemic. Sex and gender biases deeply mark these evolving experiences of COVID-19, impacting the quality of science and effectiveness of the responses deployed. To galvanise change by strengthening evidence-informed inclusion of sex and gender in COVID-19 practice, we led a virtual collaboration to articulate and prioritise gender and COVID-19 research needs. In addition to standard prioritisation surveys, feminist principles mindful of intersectional power dynamics underpinned how we reviewed research gaps, framed research questions and discussed emergent findings.enPublic healthCovid-19World Health Organization (WHO)Gender studiesGlobal healthA shared agenda for gender and Covid-19 research: Priorities based on broadening engagement in scienceArticle