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How has COVID-19 affected women's rights during childbirth? Help us track this globally

Since the pandemic started, we've been documenting cases of abuse and mistreatment of women in labour around the world. Explore our findings – and help add to them.

How has COVID-19 affected women's rights during childbirth? Help us track this globally
Around the world women say they've had to give birth 'alone', without support from partners, friends and relatives, because of COVID-19 restrictions. | Inge Snip

openDemocracy has been tracking how COVID-19 has impacted women’s rights during childbirth since the pandemic was declared in March.

The data visualised below displays cases we have identified in 45 countries, of women being denied essential services or being treated in ways that breach World Health Organization (WHO) guidance. Explore the map (click on each dot for details of that case) or download the dataset.

These cases involve dozens of women from Europe, Latin America and Africa who told openDemocracy directly about their experiences of being separated from their newborns and denied birth companions, appropriate pain relief, clear communication and respectful treatment.

Other cases were identified from local media and civil society reporting, by our international Tracking the Backlash team of investigative journalists who monitor threats to women’s and LGBTIQ rights around the world.

This week, top doctors, human rights lawyers and policymakers called for urgent government action in response to this “shocking and disturbing” evidence. It shows how international guidance, as well as national policies and laws to protect women giving birth, are not working on the ground.

But the abuse of women’s rights while giving birth is also a problem that predates the pandemic. And COVID-19 is not over. There is no international observatory tracking these issues – so our team will continue to monitor them. And we need your help to do this around the world.

openDemocracy Author

Arya Karijo

Arya Jeipea Karijo is a trans woman in Kenya working at the intersection of human rights, LGBTIQ rights, feminism and gender equality. She is a user experience researcher and designer, building for simplicity in human lives – applications, experiences and interventions for people’s resilience and the planet’s sustainability. She was a Data Journalism Fellow for open Democracy’s Tracking the Backlash team in 2020.

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openDemocracy Author

Ani Hovhannisyan

Ani was a Data Journalism Fellow at openDemocracy in 2020. Ani works as a journalist and manages data-driven and education projects at the NGO Investigative Journalists of Armenia, which publishes the Hetq.am online news portal in Armenian and English. She is a Fulbright alumna and has a master’s in journalism from West Virginia University.

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