Chair of Social Knowledge Transfer/Parc de Recerca UAB - Santander, Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Sep 16;13:851. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-851.
Female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) is a harmful traditional practice with severe consequences for the health and well-being of girls and women. Health care professionals (HCPs) are therefore expected to be aware of how to identify and manage these consequences in order to ensure that those affected by the practice receive quality health care. Moreover, their integration and legitimacy within the communities allow them to play a key role in the prevention of the practice. Nevertheless, the perception of HCPs on FGM/C has been barely explored in African contexts. This study seeks to contribute to this field of knowledge by examining the knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding FGM/C among HCPs working in rural settings in The Gambia.
A cross-sectional descriptive study was designed through a quantitative methodology, following a multiethnic approach. A pre-tested questionnaire with open and closed-ended questions was created. Forty medical students from the Community-based Medical Programme were trained to administer the questionnaire, face to face, at village health facilities in rural areas of The Gambia. A final sample of 468 HCPs included all nurse cadres and midwives.
A significant proportion of Gambian HCPs working in rural areas embraced the continuation of FGM/C (42.5%), intended to subject their own daughters to it (47.2%), and reported having already performed it during their medical practice (7.6%). However, their knowledge, attitudes, and practices were shaped by sex and ethnic identity. Women showed less approval for continuation of FGM/C and higher endorsement of the proposed strategies to prevent it than men. However, it was among ethnic groups that differences were more substantial. HCPs belonging to traditionally practicing groups were more favourable to the perpetuation and medicalisation of FGM/C, suggesting that ethnicity prevails over professional identity.
These findings demonstrate an urgent need to build HCP's capacities for FGM/C-related complications, through strategies adapted to their specific characteristics in terms of sex and ethnicity. A culturally and gender sensitive training programme might contribute to social change, promoting the abandonment of FGM/C, avoiding medicalisation, and ensuring accurate management of its health consequences.
女性外阴残割/切割(FGM/C)是一种有害的传统习俗,对女孩和妇女的健康和福祉造成严重后果。因此,医疗保健专业人员(HCPs)应该意识到如何识别和处理这些后果,以确保受该习俗影响的人得到高质量的医疗保健。此外,他们在社区中的融入和合法性使他们能够在预防该习俗方面发挥关键作用。然而,在非洲背景下,HCPs 对 FGM/C 的看法几乎没有得到探索。本研究旨在通过检查在冈比亚农村地区工作的 HCPs 对 FGM/C 的知识、态度和实践,为这一知识领域做出贡献。
采用定量方法设计了一项横断面描述性研究,采用多民族方法。创建了一个带有开放式和封闭式问题的经过预测试的问卷。40 名来自社区医疗计划的医学生接受培训,在冈比亚农村地区的乡村卫生所面对面地管理问卷。最终样本包括所有护士干部和助产士,共 468 名 HCPs。
冈比亚农村地区工作的 HCPs 中有相当一部分人赞成继续进行 FGM/C(42.5%),打算让自己的女儿接受 FGM/C(47.2%),并报告在医疗实践中已经进行了 FGM/C(7.6%)。然而,他们的知识、态度和实践受到性别和族裔身份的影响。与男性相比,女性对继续进行 FGM/C 的支持度较低,对预防 FGM/C 的建议策略的支持度较高。然而,在族裔群体中,差异更为显著。属于传统实践群体的 HCPs 更倾向于延续和将 FGM/C 医学化,这表明族裔身份优先于专业身份。
这些发现表明,迫切需要通过针对 HCPs 特定性别和族裔特征的策略,增强他们对与 FGM/C 相关并发症的能力。一种文化和性别敏感的培训计划可能有助于社会变革,促进放弃 FGM/C,避免医学化,并确保准确处理其健康后果。