In pain thou shalt bring forth children? For a human right to pain relief in childbirth
In pain thou shalt bring forth children? For a human right to pain relief in childbirth
Date
2019
Authors
Basso, Francesca
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
In recent years, increasing attention has been dedicated to the quality of
childbirth conditions for women around the world, following the wave of
civil society movements that promoted the protection of human rights in
childbirth.
In this context, a crucial factor to be addressed is pain and its management:
this thesis stems from the observation that there is an absence of any human
right to pain relief in childbirth, even though studies show that many women
who complained about their pain were ignored, disbelieved or not taken
seriously, and that pain relief was denied to them, even when they explicitly
requested it. I decided to explore the reasons underlying the little attention
dedicated to this issue, both on the part of institutions and on the part of
medical staff. This thesis analyses the meanings and values attached to pain
in childbirth, which are deeply influenced by religious and cultural beliefs;
it then examines the present international human rights framework on pain
relief.
This analysis reveals that gender plays a fundamental role in making
women’s pain in childbirth undervalued and often unseen, and that, ultimately,
the denial of pain relief in childbirth can be regarded as a violation of human
rights and as a type of gender-based violence. Therefore, I support a human
right to pain relief in childbirth and hypothesise that obstetric violence is a
potentially effective device to confront the neglect of pain relief in childbirth
in medical facilities.
Keywords: pain, pregnancy, childbirth, gender, stereotypes, pain relief, human
rights, women’s rights, gender-based violence, obstetric violence
Description
Second semester University: New University of Lisbon.
Keywords
pregnancy,
women rights,
childbirth,
violence,
human rights,
analgesia