Scars from a Previous Epidemic: Social Proximity to Zika and Fertility Intentions during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

IF 3 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Socius Pub Date : 2023-07-26 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23780231231184767
Leticia J Marteleto, Molly Dondero, Andrew Koepp
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Abstract

We examine whether women's social proximity to Zika during the Zika epidemic predicts intentions to avoid a pregnancy because of the COVID-19 pandemic either directly or indirectly via subjective assessments of the pandemic. We apply path models on unique microdata from Brazil, the country most affected by Zika and an epicenter of COVID-19, to understand whether a novel infectious disease outbreak left lasting imprints shaping fertility intentions during a subsequent novel infectious disease outbreak. Findings show that Zika social proximity is associated with fertility intentions through an indirect path related to subjective assessment of the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings emerged regardless of whether a woman herself had or suspected she had Zika and speak to the transformative consequences of novel infectious disease outbreaks that go beyond mortality and health.

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上一次流行病留下的伤疤:COVID-19 大流行期间与寨卡病毒的社会亲近程度和生育意愿。
我们研究了妇女在寨卡疫情期间与寨卡的社会接近程度是否会直接或通过对 COVID-19 大流行的主观评估间接预测避免怀孕的意愿。巴西是受寨卡影响最严重的国家,也是 COVID-19 的中心,我们将巴西的独特微观数据应用于路径模型,以了解新型传染病爆发是否会在随后的新型传染病爆发期间留下影响生育意愿的持久印记。研究结果表明,寨卡疫情的社会邻近性通过与 COVID-19 大流行的主观评估相关的间接路径与生育意愿相关。无论妇女本身是否感染或怀疑自己感染了寨卡病毒,这些研究结果都会出现,并说明新型传染病爆发所带来的变革性后果超出了死亡率和健康范围。
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来源期刊
Socius
Socius Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
84
审稿时长
8 weeks
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