CorrespondenceZika virus outbreak: reproductive health and rights in Latin America
References (3)
Zika virus triggers pregnancy delay calls
Cited by (59)
Analysing the intersection between health emergencies and abortion during Zika in Brazil, El Salvador and Colombia
2021, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :We argue that the failure for a meaningful national discussion on reproductive rights as part of the response to the Zika outbreak was the dominance of global health security's biomedical, clinical, public health and epidemiological narratives (Kelly et al., 2020; Harris et al., 2016) in Brazil, Colombia and El Salvador. Whether this was strategic decision or a downstream effect of the dominance of global health security narratives within mainstream response to national disease control, the result was that SRH was ignored (González Vélez and Diniz, 2016; Roa, 2016). As one respondent summed up; “the focus was in the hospitals and there – nobody understood women's rights or even reproductive rights, we didn't understand the significance of such rights” (Quasi-Government Official, El Salvador).
Researching Zika in pregnancy: lessons for global preparedness
2020, The Lancet Infectious DiseasesDynamics analysis of a Zika–dengue co-infection model with dengue vaccine and antibody-dependent enhancement
2019, Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its ApplicationsGlobal Systems Resilience and Pandemic Disease-A Challenge for SandT Governance
2023, Technology Assessment in a Globalized World: Facing the Challenges of Transnational Technology GovernanceEmerging challenges to prisoners vaccination of covid-19: Historical, legal and humanitarian view
2022, Journal of Public Health ResearchWays out of the crisis: how gender equality can help overcome COVID-19
2022, Journal of Public Health Policy