Spector, J. (2017). Zika is Infected with Sexism. Solutions 8(1): 33-35. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/zika-infected-sexism/
Perspectives Zika is Infected with Sexism by Jennie Spector
Master Sgt. Brian Ferguson/U.S. Air Force
The Aedes mosquito can spread diseases such as dengue fever, yellow fever, the Zika virus, and chikungunya. Aedes mosquitoes have black and white markings on their bodies and legs.
I
t may take two to tango, but governments, religious leaders, and health officials seem to feel that containing Zika is a one-person dance. The beginning of 2016 brought with it a flood of global attention to the mosquito-transmitted virus that is rapidly spreading throughout the Americas. While the full scale of the disease’s damage remains unclear, focus has rested on infected pregnant women, who are at risk of passing on infant microcephaly, a condition that causes the skull of an infant to be unnaturally small, leading to defects in brain development.
Consequently, women are being framed as both the primary victims of Zika and its lonely combatants. Solutions provided by governments and health officials ask women to ward off Zika with weapons to which they have no access. Strategies that can only be implemented with the assistance of outside resources and male cooperation go unmentioned. Instead, women are facing restricted abortion, limited access to contraceptives, a void of economic or material support from their governments, and a narrative that implies that preventing pregnancy is a solo activity. This
orientation is only furthering the harm caused by Zika. As news of this latest outbreak came to light, one of highest risk countries, El Salvador, offered a recommendation to its female citizens: don’t get pregnant. Many obstacles exist in the path of women who would seek to follow this deceptively simple request. El Salvador is a country that offers little in the way of sexual education. Girls under the age of 18 need parental permission to access contraceptives, which are often low in stock. Gang warfare and machismo culture lead to high rates of sexual violence. Last year,
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