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Journal of Human Growth and Development

versão impressa ISSN 0104-1282versão On-line ISSN 2175-3598

J. Hum. Growth Dev. vol.28 no.1 São Paulo jan./mar. 2018

http://dx.doi.org/10.7322/jhgd.143875 

STATE-OF-THE-ART ARTICLE

 

Juridical perspectives of interruption of pregnancy with zika virus infection regarding medical, emotional and social consequences

 

 

Ana Rita Souza PrataI, II; Daniela PedrosoI, III; Greice MenezesI, IV; Jefferson DrezettI, III, V; José Henrique Rodrigues TorresI, VI; José Ruben de Alcântara BonfimI, VII; Leila AdesseI, VIII; Maria Elisa dos Santos BragaI, IX; Monica KulcsarI; Roberto Luiz Corcioli FilhoI, VI; Thomaz Rafael GollopI, X; Yasmin Oliveira Mercadante PestanaI, II

IGrupo de Estudos sobre o Aborto (GEA)
IINúcleo Especializado de Promoção e Defesa dos Direitos da Mulher - Defensoria Pública do Estado de São Paulo
IIINúcleo de Violência Sexual e Aborto Legal do Hospital Pérola Byington
IVGrupo de Trabalho Gênero e Saúde - Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva (ABRASCO)
VDepartamento de Saúde, Ciclos de Vida e Sociedade - Faculdade de Saúde Pública da Universidade de São Paulo (USP)
VIAssociação Juízes para a Democracia (AJD)
VIISociedade Brasileira de Vigilância de Medicamentos (SOBRAVIME)
VIIIAções Afirmativas em Direito e Saúde (AADS)
IXConselho Federal de Serviço Social (CFSS)
XDepartamento de Ginecologia - Faculdade de Medicina de Jundiaí

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Zika virus was identified in 1947 in Rhesus monkeys in the Republic of Uganda and isolated in humans in 1952 in the same country. Up to 2007 there were few cases of human infection in African and Asian countries. The first outbreak of the Zika virus occurred in Brazil in 2015, becoming a serious public health problem due to the increase in the number of cases of microcephaly in infected pregnant women.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the legal abortion at Zika virus infection during pregnancy regarding medical, emotional and social consequences. perspectives of abortion for the pregnant woman with Zika virus regarding the medical, emotional and social consequences.
METHODS: This is a documentary study based on documents about abortion and its outcomes in Brazil. Technical norms, textbooks, indexed articles of Scopus and PubMed, documents extracted from international human rights treaties and conventions, and legal documents on the subject were used. It was decided to direct the text based on the experiences of each theme on abortion and its outcomes in Brazil, with a synthesis of the current scenario.
RESULTS: Recognizing the exceptional nature of this situation, it is sought to confer an interpretation according to the Constitution and Article 128 of the Criminal Code, based on an analogical application, which seeks to protect the physical and mental health of women infected by the Zika virus. It is possible to qualify the practice of abortion in these circumstances as atypical conduct by the state of necessity, excluding the unlawfulness by comparing with articles 23, I and 24 of the Penal Code.
CONCLUSION: Authorizing the termination of pregnancy after diagnosis of the virus Zika guarantees women the free exercise of their reproductive rights, which is not confused with state imposition of abortion or eugenic practice.

Keywords: zika virus infection, foetal diseases, microcephaly, induced abortion, women's health, public health.


 

 

INTRODUCTION

The Zika virus was first identified in 1947 in Rhesus monkeys in the Republic of Uganda and isolated in humans in 1952 in the same country. Up to the year 2007 there were few cases of infection registered in humans in African and Asian countries1. Only in 2014 was the virus reported in French Polynesia, where there was an unusual increase in the number of cases of malformations of the central nervous system in foetuses and newborns2.

The first epidemic outbreak of the Zika virus occurred in Brazil in 2015, rapidly becoming a serious public health problem due to its association with the surprising increase in the number of cases of microcephaly in infected pregnant women2,3. Between March 2015 and April 2016, more than 5,000 cases of microcephaly were reported in the country, the majority in the north-east region, 20 times higher than in previous years4. In response, in February 2016 the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the situation of the Zika virus as a health emergency of international importance5.

The Zika virus is spread by the mosquito Aedes aegypti, which also transmits diseases such as chikungunya fever and dengue fever. In addition to pregnant women being directly contaminated by the mosquito, it has also been established that the disease can be acquired through sexual intercourse with partners contaminated by the Zika virus, even if these partners do not show signs of the disease. Transmission of the virus from pregnant women to the foetus at any time during pregnancy is also documented6.

The Zika virus causes an acute, usually self-limiting, febrile illness that rarely requires hospitalization for treatment. It is estimated that only 20% of people with Zika virus infection have clinical signs and symptoms, which may include low fever, red patches, pruritus, joint pain, muscle aches, headache, redness of eyes, dry cough or vomiting. There is no specific treatment and the symptoms last for a few days. The Zika virus is also a cause of Guillain-Barré syndrome and other relevant neurological diseases, such as myelitis and meningoencephalitis, although these disorders are uncommon. Deaths from Zika virus infection are rare in the literature4.

Zika Virus Infection During Pregnancy

According to WHO, microcephaly is considered when the cephalic perimeter measurment is two or more standard deviations below the mean. In the United States, the public birth defect mapping system estimates that the number of newborns with microcephaly, resulting from different causes, ranges from 2 to 12 cases per 10,000 births7. In the absence of maternal infection with the Zika virus, microcephaly occurs in 8.7 per 10,000 live births8.

Microcephaly may have different causes, which are classified as primary or secondary. Primary microcephaly is often caused by genetic abnormalities that interfere with brain growth during the first months of foetal development. It is associated with chromosomal, metabolic syndromes or gene mutations. The most common form is true microcephaly, in which no neurological or other abnormalities occur. Secondary microcephaly has perinatal causes, such as hypoxaemia at birth, intracranial haemorrhage or obstetric trauma7.

Microcephaly may also be of infectious origin, following meningitis or encephalitis, contamination by chemical agents, or resulting from maternal infection with rubella, syphilis, varicella, toxoplasmosis or cytomegalovirus7. This diversity of conditions and aetiologies of microcephaly results in different foetal and newborn consequences, which in some cases does not imply brain damage, intellectual disability or relevant cognitive impairment9.

However, newborns with Zika virus infection do not only present microcephaly. Severe neurological damage is present, such as decreased auditory acuity, congenital deafness, excess scalp, arthrogryposis, congenital crooked foot, and dysplasia of the hip joints10,11. Ophthalmologic damage is also severe, including diseases such as microphthalmia, anophthalmia, coloboma, cataracts, intraocular calcifications, chorioretinal macular anomalies such as atrophy, pallor, gross abnormalities and retinal haemorrhage, and optic nerve atrophy11.

The evidence is overwhelming regarding the brain damage produced by the Zika virus, which is predominantly destructive, irreversible and irreparable, even if qualified care can be provided to the newborn. The findings include cerebral atrophy, white cell, caudate nucleus and cerebellum calcifications, corpus callosum and vermix dysgenesis, and dilation of the cisterna magna. Also included are asymmetry of the cerebral hemispheres, increase of the ventricles and thinning of the cerebral parenchyma12.

Studies also found an increased risk of foetal intrauterine growth restriction, impaired placental function, spontaneous abortion up to the 20th week of pregnancy and foetal death stillbirth in infected pregnant women11. These conditions have a negative impact on the normal development of the children affected, greatly impairing their quality of life. Therefore, the serious situation presented is that of a congenital Zika syndrome, which is different from the reductionist perception of microcephaly9,13.

Facing congenital Zika syndrome involves obstacles and challenges, considering the high incidence of foetal anomalies among infected pregnant women. In the US, a collaborative study between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and US health departments involving 442 pregnant women with Zika virus infection showed that 271 of them (61.3%) were asymptomatic. Twenty-six foetuses or newborns (5.9%) with congenital anomalies were found, of which 85% had cerebral anomalies, microcephaly or both. All foetal or newborn compromises occurred in mothers with symptomatic infection or positive serology for the Zika virus either in the first trimester of pregnancy or in the periconceptional period11.

However, the data above contrasts sharply with those found in Brazil. For reasons not yet established, pregnant women in the north-east states of Brazil and Rio de Janeiro infected with the Zika virus have foetuses or newborns affected more severely and more frequently. In these regions, foetal death occurred in 7% of the cases, with 46% of foetuses or newborns presenting with congenital anomalies. Severe cranial and encephalic anomalies were found in 42% of cases. In addition, Brazilian researchers observed that foetal or newborn involvement occurred at any time during gestation. In fact, central nervous system abnormalities have been found in foetuses infected with the Zika virus even at the 39th week of pregnancy14.

Given that there is no limited period of pregnancy during which Zika virus foetal contamination may occur, the anguish experienced by the pregnant women in this situation generates enormous psychicological and emotional suffering. In such cases, the defense of the decision to interrupt pregnancy or not, which may or may not be taken prior to the diagnosis of foetal anomalies, favours the sexual and reproductive rights of women15,16.

The intense psychological distress of pregnant women with the infection can put their mental health at risk, with the possibility of generating conditions of social and psychic vulnerability for the rest of their lives, since there is no prognosis for repair and no public policies regarding the future of the child and the dignified life of the woman. This context carries similarities to the impacts of subjective torture situations as it places the pregnant woman at permanent risk of physical and psychic disruption, forcibly unable to make autonomous decisions about her body and her life15,16.

Given the fragile health conditions and social determinants, such as poverty added to the massive presence of the vector, Brazil has become a propitious country for the consolidation of the Zika virus. The demands of care are increasing and it is becoming necessary that actions are carried out with the purpose of prevention and control of the problem in the face of a new public health reality3.

Zika Virus And Pregnancy Interruption

The Brazilian State's omission regarding the guarantee of women's sexual and reproductive rights is well known. The need to ensure the free exercise of women's sexual and reproductive rights has already been addressed in General Recommendation No. 24, during the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) in 1999, which states: ''Prioritize the prevention of unwanted pregnancies through family planning and sex education and reduce maternal mortality rates through risk-free services and prenatal care. As far as possible, it should amend legislation criminalizing abortion in order to abolish the punitive provisions imposed on women who undergo abortions"17.

In a common context, disrespect for the above-mentioned fundamental rights violates other rights, such as the right to information, intimacy, freedom, among others, according to the opinion of the Attorney General of the State in Direct Action of Unconstitutionality (ADI) n° 5,097, not yet judged in the Federal Supreme Court (STF). This situation is aggravated when an epidemic of a virus, such as Zika, occurs, which, according to all the evidence, interferes directly with a woman's gestation.

It is known that the Penal Code criminalizes abortion, however, it also allows, since its promulgation, the termination of pregnancy in cases of risk to the life of the pregnant woman and where a pregnancy results from sexual violence (article 128, I and II) 18. The STF acknowledged another hypothesis, allowing the interruption of pregnancy in anencephalic foetuses, guaranteeing interpretation according to the Federal Constitution, in the Arrangement of Non-compliance with Fundamental Precept (ADPF) n. 5419. Just as one could not have imagined the detection of anencephaly at the time of the amendenment to the Penal Code, cases in which the Zika virus epidemic could bring such devastating and uncertain consequences to the foetus could not have been predicted.

The decisions to allow the termination of a pregnancy in the three cases mentioned above are all based on women's rights, recognizing that a woman do not lose their status as a person due to being pregnant, as in the case of Artavia Murillo and Others (Fertilización in vitro) v. Inter-American Court of Human Rights. The guarantee of the life and health of women should prevail, meaning health as the state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not only the absence of disease, as established by the World Health Organization, since 1946. This was the legislator's decision in the promulgation of Decree-Law no. 3914/194120 and of the STF in ADPF nº 5419.

Recently, in the judgment of the specific case referring to Habeas Corpus (HC) nº 124.306/RJ, the STF conferred interpretation according to the Constitution to articles 124 to 126 of the Penal Code. It was decided not to criminalize abortion during the first trimester of pregnancy, stating that in this case, criminalization would violate women's fundamental rights, their autonomy, the principle of proportionality, the physical and psychological integrity of the pregnant woman, the principle of equality and the right to access to medical care21.

Women infected with the Zika virus who are pregnant suffer from the lack of information and the uncertainty of what they will face in the future. This state of ignorance about their own future and the lack of autonomy in making decisions can generate severe psychic suffering, comparable to torture. Furthermore, in view of the criminalization of the termination of pregnancy, women are subjected to degrading treatment and ill-treatment by the health services when they resort to illegal termination of pregnancy22.

Recognizing the exceptional nature of this situation, it is necessary to confer an interpretation according to the Constitution and Article 128, items I and II of the Criminal Code, based on an analogical application that seeks to protect the physical and mental health of women infected by the Zika virus. In the same sense, it is possible to describe the practice of interrupting pregnancy in these circumstances as an atypical conduct by the state of necessity, excluding unlawfulness by comparing with articles 23, I and 24 of the Penal Code18.

In this scenario of uncertainties it is not possible to predict the number of pregnant women who will be infected by the Zika virus or how many will present severe foetal or neonatal damage at the end of gestation. Likewise, it is not possible to predict the evolution of the epidemic, and it is prudent to acknowledge both its aggravation and its resurgence, depending on the effectiveness of the measures that will be adopted in an attempt to control the epidemic9.

To authorize the termination of pregnancy, after diagnosis of Zika virus infection, is to guarantee to women, especially those in situations of greater vulnerability, the free exercise of their reproductive rights, which is not to be confused with the State's imposition of abortion or its eugenic practice. On the contrary, it is ensuring that women will exercise a conscientious and responsible motherhood with the support of the State, if they so wish.

 

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Correspondence:
jdrezett@gmail.com

Manuscript received: September 2017
Manuscript accepted: October 2017
Version of record online: March 2018

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