Risk and intersectional power relations: an exploration of the implications of early COVID-19 pandemic responses for pregnant women

被引:11
|
作者
Manca, Terra A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Dalhousie Univ, Dept Pediat, Halifax, NS, Canada
[2] IWK Hlth Ctr, Canadian Ctr Vaccinol, Halifax, NS, Canada
关键词
pregnancy; intersectionality; pandemic responses; risk; risk management; HEALTH; UNCERTAINTY; CHILDBIRTH; MATERNITY; GENDER;
D O I
10.1080/13698575.2021.1994933
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The World Health Organization and many national health authorities identifie pregnant women as requiring extra protections during the COVID-19 global pandemic. Nevertheless, many initial responses to the COVID-19 pandemic were implemented in ways that have disrupted the care and support women receive and provide during pregnancy. In this article, I apply an intersectional approach to explore the unintended implications of discourses and practices targeting universal risks of COVID-19 for pregnant women. I discuss three overlapping topics. First, pandemic responses that aimed to negate the universal risk of COVID-19 transmission created obstacles to maternal health care that disproportionately impacted low-income women and regions. For example, rapidly changing public health mandates that were intended to protect the population from the universal threat of COVID-19 have produced unintended results of restricting public transportation, and consequently, access to maternal care. Second, overly precautious healthcare practices aimed at protecting foetuses and new-borns from possible risks can harm women and their new-borns. Recommendations, such as separating women from their new-borns at birth to prevent the spread of COVID-19, are shown to be often entangled with racism and colonialism. Third, in neoliberal contexts, dominant discourses have constructed privileged women as 'normal' in a way that responsibilised all women to minimise health risks for their foetuses. Such recommendations ignore inequalities in women's living conditions and ability to follow public health advice about COVID-19. I argue that responses to COVID-19 were (dis)organised within pre-existing economic, racial, colonial, and patriarchal power relations that disadvantaged some pregnant women more than others.
引用
收藏
页码:321 / 338
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Assessment of the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on pregnant women
    Moreira Ramiro, Ana Carolina
    Cortes Ribeiro, Camila
    Leles Vieira de Souza, Bruna
    Santana dos Passos, Fabio
    JOURNAL OF MATERNAL-FETAL & NEONATAL MEDICINE, 2022, 35 (25) : 6461 - 6465
  • [22] The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Pregnant Women: A Qualitative Approach
    Uludag, Elif
    Turkcu, Sinem Goral
    Sercekus, Pinar
    ozkan, Sevgi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHILDBIRTH, 2023, 13 (01) : 37 - 48
  • [23] Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on the Psychological Status of Pregnant Women
    Jelly, Prasuna
    Chadha, Lisa
    Kaur, Navjeet
    Sharma, Suresh
    Sharma, Rakesh
    Stephen, Shine
    Rohilla, Jitendra
    CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2021, 13 (01)
  • [24] Perinatal experiences of pregnant women with psychiatric disorders during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Feeney, Anna
    Hock, Rebecca S.
    Harmon, Heather A.
    Caplin, Phoebe S.
    Kobylski, Lauren A.
    Viguera, Adele C.
    Freeman, Marlene P.
    Cohen, Lee S.
    GENERAL HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 73 : 114 - 119
  • [25] Relations of COVID-19 and the Risk Management Framework
    Klucka, Jozef
    Gruenbichler, Rudolf
    Ristvej, Jozef
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (21)
  • [26] The experiences of pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey: A qualitative study
    Sahin, Berrak Mizrak
    Kabakci, Esra Nur
    WOMEN AND BIRTH, 2021, 34 (02) : 162 - 169
  • [27] Assessment of the emotional state of women in the early postpartum period during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Sadowska-Warta, Marta
    Pawik, Malwina
    Kowalska, Joanna
    HUMAN MOVEMENT, 2024, 25 (01) : 97 - 104
  • [28] Management of pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic and experience in a Coruia's hospital
    Suarez Lavandeira, Tania
    Vazquez Diaz, Cristina
    Legazpi Fernandez, Rocio
    Peteiro Mahia, Laura
    REVISTA ROL DE ENFERMERIA, 2023, 46 (01): : 34 - 39
  • [29] Paradox of COVID-19 in pregnancy: are pregnant women more protected against or at elevated risk of severe COVID-19?
    Santa, Sheila
    Doku, Derek A.
    Olwal, Charles O.
    Brown, Charles A.
    Tagoe, Emmanuel A.
    Quaye, Osbourne
    FUTURE MICROBIOLOGY, 2022, 17 (10) : 803 - 812
  • [30] Anxiety among pregnant women during the COVID-19 pandemic in India - A multicentric study
    Tikka, Sai Krishna
    Parial, Sonia
    Pattojoshi, Amrit
    Bagadia, Ashlesha
    Prakash, Chandni
    Lahiri, Deyashini
    Jaiswal, Jyoti
    Puri, Manju
    Kukreti, Prerna
    Behera, Rabindra Nath
    Agrawal, Sarita
    Garg, Shobit
    Dubey, Surbhi
    Gupta, Vineeta
    Bajaj, Aakash
    Agrawal, Akanksha
    Singour, Chhaya
    Patel, Geetanjali
    Maghade, Megha
    Purushotham, A.
    Pany, Sanjaya Kumar
    Saurabh
    Doria, Simran
    Tejan, Veena
    Chandra, Prabha S.
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 66