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This content is from pages to of Workers' Guide to Health and Safety. In this chapter:. Reproductive and sexual health can be affected by working conditions and exposure to chemicals that affect reproductive organs. Policies and practices in the factory that control or limit our reproductive choices also harm our reproductive and sexual health. Women face many challenges from factory work. Some bosses refuse to hire married women, pregnant women, or women with children.
Some factories even have policies to prevent women from getting pregnant. Chemicals and bad working conditions hurt women by causing problems with monthly bleeding, complications of pregnancy, miscarriage, or the health of the baby. Chemicals are also linked with cancers in the breasts, womb, and ovaries. Men are also hurt by factory conditions. Other chemicals can cause cancer of the testicles. Women also face reproductive and sexual harm in communities where their reproductive and sexual health is controlled by men.
They are harmed by lack of information and access to services for sexual health, family planning, domestic violence, STIs, and cancer. For most people, having children is an important part of their sexual health. Reproductive health is especially important for women because they get pregnant, give birth, feed the baby, and are often the primary caregivers of the family. In many factories, however, women are forced to choose between having children or having a job.
They try to prevent women from becoming mothers while employed. Some bosses only hire women who are unmarried with no children. If women do become pregnant, the employers often deny pregnant women safer jobs, paid health care for prenatal visits and delivery, or paid leave before and after giving birth, forcing them to either accept the health risks to themselves and their babies or to quit to take care of their families.