AI Article Synopsis

  • The concept of "obstetric violence" has gained traction globally, highlighting power imbalances in reproductive health and challenging the perception of pregnancy and childbirth as merely medical events.
  • The discussion extends to include post-partum obstetric violence, which has been largely overlooked, emphasizing the impact of pharmaceutical treatments for issues like postpartum depression (PPD) on women's health.
  • The approval of zuranolone, the first pill for PPD, exemplifies the risks of framing emotional distress as purely biochemical, which could underplay the socio-political factors at play and result in harmful consequences for women.

Article Abstract

The growing identification of "obstetric violence," first in Latin America and subsequently far more widely around the world and in supra-national human rights forums' jurisprudence, has been a pivotal site for contesting the power asymmetries encoded into the biomedical paradigm and examining reproductive governance. A key aspect of deploying "obstetric violence," as opposed to the discourses of "disrespect and abuse" or, in the United States, the more common "obstetric mistreatment" has been to challenge the treatment of pregnancy and childbirth as a medical condition or event, as opposed to a natural process. Until now, little attention has been paid to post-partum obstetric violence beyond egregious acts such as detentions in health facilities for non-payment of fees. We argue here for expanding consideration of the post-partum period gure to include pharmaceuticalization, with a focus on the US context. Rapidly increasing diagnoses of PPD, especially among women of color, and newly available pharmaceutical solutions, may appear as a solution to lack of access. However, the biomedical framing shifts attention from the socio-political causes of emotional distress-with significant consequences for individual women and public health. Taking the recent approval of the 'first-ever' pill for post-partum depression, zuranolone (brand name Zurzuvae) as a case example, we argue here that the reduction of reproductive subjects' experiences to biochemical disorders, and the lowering of regulatory standards for the pharmaceutical industry, threaten to perpetuate a subtle but damaging form of obstetric violence, which warrants concern.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2024.2441031DOI Listing

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