Rama, Martín, Vargas, Verónica, Iunes, Roberto, and Guerra Junior, Augusto Afonso
Subjects
*HEALTH services accessibility laws, *DRUG laws, *OCCUPATIONAL roles, *MEDICAL laws, *HUMAN rights, *UNIVERSAL healthcare, *MEDICAL care costs, *QUALITY of life, *PROFESSIONAL autonomy, *LEGAL procedure, *PHYSICIANS, *DECISION making in clinical medicine
Abstract
In a context of rapid technological innovation and expensive new products, the paper calls for the generation of real-world data to inform decision-making and an international discussion on the affordability of new medicines, particularly for low- and middle-income countries. Without these, the challenges of health judicialization will continue to grow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
RACE, BLACK Latin Americans, MESTIZOS, GENOMICS, RACIAL identity of Black people, INDIGENOUS peoples, CULTURAL pluralism
Abstract
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Abortion, Therapeutic, Argentina, Brazil, Catholicism, Civil Rights, Colombia, Criminal Law, Developing Countries, Family Planning Services, Humans, Latin America, Legislation as Topic, Maternal Welfare, Mexico, Mortality, Politics, Pregnancy, Pregnant Women, Rape, Socioeconomic Factors, Uruguay, Abortion, Criminal, Abortion, Induced, Government Regulation, Jurisprudence, Social Control, Formal
Abstract
In order to explore ways of dealing with this phenomenon of illegal abortions and restrictive abortion laws in Latin America, several special sessions were held at last summer's international conference in Toronto, sponsored by the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics. The sessions brought together lawyers, health professionals, and reproductive rights advocates from a number of Latin American countries; their counterparts in the developed world; and representatives of non-governmental agencies concerned with this issue, including Catholics for a Free Choice. The goal of the sessions was to share information on the status of abortion in various countries and to try to devise strategies to make abortion law reform more palatable to Latin American governments and public opinion. One major component of the sessions was a series of papers prepared by some of the Latin American representatives describing and analyzing the situations in their countries. The papers illustrate some of the issues facing women in this part of the world.