Zika virus public health crisis and the perpetuation of gender inequality in Brazil.
Raquel Zanatta CoutinhoAida Villanueva MontalvoAbigail WeitzmanLetícia Junqueira MarteletoPublished in: Reproductive health (2021)
Government and individual responses to the epidemics reinforced gender roles, situating pregnant women as responsible for averting mosquito bites and microcephaly. Further, prevention campaigns largely excluded men. Since low-socioeconomic status women possessed fewer resources to preclude infection, we also found that beyond the gender divide, this subgroup faced more pronounced Zika prevention challenges as they found it harder to negotiate condom use with their sexual partners and often could not access other types of contraceptives resulting in unplanned pregnancies.