Zika virus infection in Brazil and human rights obligations
Visualizar/ Abrir
Data
2016Autor
Diniz, Debora
Gumieri, Sara
Gallu, Bevilacqua
Cook, Rebecca J.
Dickens, Bernard M.
Metadata
Mostrar registro completoResumo
The February 2016 WHO declaration that congenital Zika virus síndrome constitutes a Public Health Emergency of International Concern reacted to the outbreak of the syndrome in Brazil. Public health emergencies can justify a spectrum of human rights responses, but in Brazil, the emergency exposed prevailing inequities in the national healthcare system. The government’s urging to contain the syndrome, which is associated with microcephaly among newborns, is confounded by lack of reproductive health services. Women with low incomes in particular have little access to such health services. The emergency also illuminates the harm of restrictive abortion legislation, and the potential violation of human rights regarding women’s health and under the UN Conventions on the Rights of the Child and on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Suggestions have been proposed by wich the government can remedy the widespread healthcare inequities among the national population that are instructive for other countries where congenital Zika virus syndrome is prevalent
Collections
Itens relacionados
Apresentado os itens relacionados pelo título, autor e assunto.
-
Threats of retrocession in sexual and reproductive health policies in Brazil during the Zika epidemic
Galli, Beatriz; Deslandes, Suely (2016)The Zika virus epidemic, officially declared a global emergency, and the threats of retrocession in the Legislative Branch, like Bill of Law n. 5.059, Brazil runs the risk of counteracting the measures needed to guarantee ... -
The Interpretation of Article 4(1) of the American Convention on Human Rights Consistently with the Human Rights of Women by Joanna Erdman, J.D. Fellow, International Programme on Reproductive and Sexual Health Law and Rebecca J. Cook, J.D. J.S.D., F.R.S.C. Professor of Law, & Faculty Chair in International Human Rights International Programme on Reproductive and Sexual Health Law Faculty of Law University of Toronto
Autor desconhecido (2005)The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that each year almost 4 million unsafe abortions are performed in Latin America.1 Each year, thousands of Latin American women die from complications related to unsafe abortions, ... -