Main points
- In Viet Nam’s health sector, corruption opportunities are shaped less by gender itself than by position, authority and access to public resources. Because men dominate senior decision-making roles, they are more likely to be involved in higher-value corruption in procurement, appointments and specialist services. Women are concentrated in frontline caregiving roles, where they have less access to major resources but greater exposure to informal payments and patient-facing pressure.
- Informal payments place a particular burden on women, especially ethnic minority women, women with disabilities, and women from low-income households. As primary caregivers, women are often the ones who navigate health services, manage interactions with health workers and decide whether to offer ‘envelopes’ to secure timely or attentive care.
- Women make up much of the frontline health workforce but remain underrepresented in senior management, hospital leadership, and procurement-related decision-making. Low pay, overcrowding, and chronic underfunding create integrity risks across the system, while women health workers may face the added burden of low status, patient frustration, and limited protection when challenging misconduct.
- Viet Nam’s anti-corruption frameworks have not yet fully integrated gender analysis, gender-disaggregated data or gender-responsive monitoring. Sexual corruption also remains insufficiently recognised in law and policy, leaving survivors with limited protection and policymakers with little evidence on the scale and nature of the problem.
- Legal, institutional, and policy reforms should recognise sexual corruption and non-material bribes, strengthen whistleblower protection, make reporting channels safer for women and marginalised groups, and improve health worker pay, working conditions, and commune health stations to reduce the pressures that sustain informal payments.
- Women’s participation in health-sector governance should be strengthened through minimum representation targets for senior hospital boards, bidding committees, and medical ethics councils. This should be supported by mandatory gender-disaggregated data collection, a clearer monitoring role for the Viet Nam Women’s Union, patient rights awareness, and gender-responsive integrity training across the health sector.



