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Gender mainstreaming as a pathway for sustainable arbovirus control in Latin America

Clare Wenham, João Nunes, Gustavo Corrêa Matta, Carolina de Oliveira Nogueira, Polyana Aparecida Valente, Denise Nacif Pimenta

2020PLoS neglected tropical diseases50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The 2015 to 2017 outbreak of Zika generated global attention on the risk of a spectrum of neurological disorders posed to women and their unborn children-including, but not limited to, microcephaly-that came to be known as congenital Zika syndrome (CZS). Images of women cradling babies born with CZS underscored the gendered nature of the epidemic. Nonetheless, the media attention towards the highly gendered dimensions of the outbreak was not matched by a recognition of the importance of female participation in the decision-making for the control of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, the vector responsible for the spread of Zika. Moreover, while women were the target population of the public health response to the epidemic, the impact of arbovirus policies on women was largely neglected.

Topics & Concepts

ArbovirusZika virusAedes aegyptiDengue feverPublic healthGender mainstreamingLatin AmericansOutbreakAedesPopulationMicrocephalyArbovirus InfectionsMainstreamingEnvironmental healthPolitical scienceMedicineVirologyPediatricsSociologyGender studiesBiologyPathologyEcologyLawVirusLarvaSpecial educationGender equalityMosquito-borne diseases and controlZoonotic diseases and public healthCommunity Health and Development