By Agomoni Ganguli Mitra
Originally posted at Journal of Medical Ethics blog
Three pieces of news over the last weeks particularly troubled me.
In the first, and perhaps most radical of them all, Latin American
governments began to urge women not to become pregnant over the next couple of years,
as a public health measure to restrict the number of children born with
microcephaly, potentially caused by the Zika virus currently plaguing
the region. The second came from the Indian Minister of Women and Child
Development, Maneka Gandhi, one of the highest ranking officials in the
current Indian government. For years, India has struggled with
non-medical sex-selective abortion (and female infanticide) in such
significant numbers, that the sex-ratio for infants in certain regions
has become heavily skewed. Despite sex-determination being illegal since 1994,
the practice has continued with the complicity of physicians and
clinics, and in some cases without the consent of the pregnant women
themselves. At a conference in early February, Gandhi suggested that an
alternative to the current, ineffective policy of criminalising those
who provide ultrasounds and sex-selective abortions, would be to register and monitor every pregnant woman in the country
to ensure that female foetuses are brought to term and female infants
are not killed shortly after birth. The last and most recent piece is
perhaps the least shocking of them all, if only because we almost take
it for granted that women’s health and lifestyles choices are seen to be
closely related to their ability and inclination to produce babies.
The US government’s Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in
a bulletin patronisingly subtitled Why Take the Chance?, has suggested
that women should think carefully before mixing sex and alcohol intake,
if they are trying to get pregnant, or (and this is what makes it
particularly problematic) could unknowingly be pregnant.
On the face of it, these are three very different sets of
circumstances, geographical, political and social contexts, and in
applied ethics, context is crucial to rigorous analysis. And yet I am
struck by how, ironically, these policies and policy proposal fail to be
contextualised within broader considerations of reproductive rights and
justice by policy makers. Underlying all
three events is a blatant naivety, if not wilful ignorance about the
circumstances in which women make reproductive choices (when they make
them at all), and a nonchalant paternalism about controlling women’s
rights and freedoms, as if it is evident that such "public health"
measures can be suggested with full impunity, as long as they come under
the cloak of protecting the health and well-being of (potential)
children. Plus ça change…
Never mind that the link between Zika and microcephaly hasn’t been conclusively established.
Never mind the mind-boggling logistical implications of registering
and monitoring each and every pregnancy in a country of 1.3 billion
people, where the State is currently unable to bring to justice those
who are currently flouting the ban on sex-determination. Never mind
that the implications of what the CDC recommends seems to be that women
of reproductive age should consider either giving up alcohol altogether
(since according to the same bulletin, half of the pregnancies in the US
are unplanned) or that all women of reproductive age should consider
serious measures not be become pregnant if they wish to drink –
especially in a country where access to affordable contraception and
healthcare remains politically fraught.
There seems to be, on the part of state officials, a staggering lack
of recognition and humility with respect to the role public policies
currently play in impeding women’s reproductive freedoms and well-being.
The Latin American governments could have possibly responded to the
Zika emergency by taking a hard look at current regulations around
access to contraception and abortion in this (predominantly Catholic)
region, and by opening a dialogue with the Church in order to revisit
political and social norms around access to contraception and abortion.
The CDC could have separated their concern about alcohol abuse in
pregnancy as part of a wider debate on alcohol abuse by men and women
and its potential dangers, including intimate partner violence, or as one commentator has suggested,
contextualised it along with recommendations about men’s reproductive
health. The Indian government Ministry of Women and Child Development
could have taken this opportunity to revisit corruption in the judiciary
and law enforcement, or its recent failure to bring those responsible to justice on the matter of sex-selection.
None of these proposals came with suggestions to ensure that
women are not further criminalised for their reproductive choices,
measures to increase women’s reproductive freedoms and well-being in
general, or steps towards conferring additional responsibility to actors
who happen to be involved, and sometimes in more privileged positions
with regards to these choices (religious leaders, partners, families,
health care providers, law enforcement officials). The UN has now asked
the Latin American governments to revisit their laws on contraception and abortion, Gandhi and her ministry were forced to do some political backtracking in response to the outrage from activists, and the internet backlash to the CDC proposal has been swift (see this, this, and this, for example). However,
it seems unlikely that in the wake of these events, there will be a
wider debate regarding reproductive health and freedom in any of these
contexts.
What should the response be from the bioethics community? Firstly, a
trend that I particularly welcome as an early career researcher in
medical ethics and bioethics is the increased popularity and
understanding of social justice issues in health and healthcare debates,
and a recognition that women and girls’ health, flourishing and
well-being are heavily influenced by policies in other areas. But often,
these approaches remain confined to those who are particularly
concerned with social and health justice topics. I would welcome
further academic attention to cultures – professional, institutional,
societal, economic – to ensure that policy changes are eventually
translated into practice and social norms. Finally, for those of us who
tend to be kept awake at night worrying about global justice concerns,
the cases above further show that the global bioethics discourse does
not necessarily need a final answer to the statist-cosmopolitan divide
before we can consider whether bioethics concerns are truly global, nor
does it require a breakdown of borders through trade, mass exodus,
pandemics, and climate change in order to be relevant. In bioethics,
more than ever, the local, is also the global.