As the Zika Virus continues to alarm several countries, including Latin America like Ecuador, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Honduras, Panama and El Salvador, health organizations have recently urged for women to try not to get pregnant and have more access to contraceptives, Fox News Latino reports.

The publication revealed that the Pan American Health Organization has announced that they are against the recent immediate solution that health organizations have suggested, like asking women not to get pregnant for at least two years in light of the virus outbreak.

Furthermore, Pan American Health Organization asked that it may be more proper that women and families are given more access to contraceptives, since it is every woman's right to decide whether she would like to be pregnant or not, even with the risks involved.

"We don't know how much longer it will last. What happens if in two years it's worse? That's not the solution. We've got to work to reduce the vector (the Aedes aegypti mosquito) and to ensure women have greater access to contraception," Suzanne Serruya, director of PAHO's Latin American Center for Perinatology, Women and Reproductive Health told EFE.

Meanwhile, Monica Roa, vice president of strategy at Women's Link Worldwide, also told the publication how insufficient it is for women to be given the burden of avoiding pregnancy when they aren't given any alternatives.

This comes after the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that they will hold an emergency meeting regarding the Zika Virus, which is now reportedly identified in 25 countries, USA Today reports.

The meeting is reportedly for the purpose of giving light to the situation and to provide possible solutions that the global community need, the news agency reports. "You have populations who have never been exposed and have no immunity," Lawrence Gostin, director of Georgetown's O'Neill Institute told WHO as quoted by the news outlet. "You have a huge moral and public health concern about the well-being of pregnant women and their babies."

The meeting also hopes to direct more finance to the growing health problem caused by the Aedis Aegypti mosquito, resulting in new born babies with abnormal heads and incomplete brain development, the publication adds.

And while initial efforts are being made, Amesh Adalja, a senior associate at the Center for Health Security at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, urged that the emergency declaration should be able to contain the outbreak so that no further risks to pregnancies will happen, the news agency reports.