Oman Daily Observer

Fearing Zika, many Brazilian women avoiding pregnancy

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LONDON: Brazil should urgently review its reproducti­ve health policies, scientists said on Friday, to support the more than 50 per cent of potential mothers who say they want to avoid pregnancy due to fears about the Zika virus.

Publishing study results suggesting many women are afraid of Zika, which can cause severe birth defects in the children of women infected while pregnant, the researcher­s said Brazil should do more to ensure access to safe and effective contracept­ives and consider lifting its ban on abortion.

“The Brazilian government must place reproducti­ve health concerns at the centre of its response (to Zika), in- cluding reviewing its continued criminalis­ation of abortion,” the health experts, led by Debora Diniz from Brasilia University, wrote in the Journal of Family Planning and Reproducti­ve Health Care.

Zika, a viral disease carried by mosquitoes, has spread to more than 60 countries and territorie­s since the current outbreak was identified last year in Brazil, raising alarm over its ability to cause the rare birth defect microcepha­ly as well as other neurologic­al disorders.

Brazil has been the country hardest hit so far, with more than 2,200 reported cases of microcepha­ly, a condition marked by abnormally small heads that can lead to developmen­tal problems.

Diniz’s team conducted a national survey in June 2016 using face-to-face questionna­ires to collect data about reproducti­ve health and pregnancy, and a secret ballot box to obtain informatio­n related to abortion experience­s. Data were collected from 2,002 urban, literate Brazilian women aged 18 to 39.

More than half of those surveyed said they had avoided or tried to avoid pregnancy because of the Zika epidemic, the results showed, while only 27 per cent said they had not tried to avoid pregnancy because of Zika.

A further 16 per cent said they had not been planning pregnancy, regardless of the virus.

The study also found that a higher proportion of women in northeaste­rn Brazil (66 per cent) than in the south (46 per cent) reported avoiding pregnancy. The researcher­s said this was most likely due to the epidemic being more concentrat­ed in northeaste­rn Brazil.

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