NPR calls him an expert, but the reality is David Vanderpool is a Christian missionary doctor on the front lines of the Zika virus in Haiti.
The Live Beyond
director told NPR the Catholic Church's view on contraception can
actually enable the spread of the Zika virus among the poorer
populations in Central and South America.
"People assume that
women in Haiti, you know, would have the same access to birth control
that American women would, and it's just not true. The Haitian woman may
not have a choice in sex. The sex may not be consensual at all.
And so
just enjoining people not to have babies is probably not going to be
very effective," Vanderpool tells NPR.
Vanderpool is referring to government pleas for women to delay pregnancies for months, even years.
According the Center for Disease Control and Prevention,
the Zika virus is a mosquito-transmitted illness that typically results
in rash, fever, joint pain and red eyes. If a mother is infected,
scientists suspect she can pass the virus on to her child in-utero or
delivery.
The disease is easily treated for those in developing worlds, but the effect on pre-born children is microcephaly, or abnormally small heads.
To avoid this, government leaders told women to merely avoid pregnancies, but it's much easier said than done.
"It's
easy to wax philosophical when we're in an air-conditioned building in
the United States surrounded by all the food and water that we need, but
when you go into the reality of these people's lives, the philosophy
sort of goes out the window. We have so many examples of women who had
to prostitute themselves because their children were starving to death.
Well, you know, that's not a philosophically discussed question, but
that is a real question; that's a reality," Vanderpool said.
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