Sagna Marguerite L
a Centre for Health Promotion Studies, School of Public Health, University of Alberta , Edmonton , Canada.
Cult Health Sex. 2014 Jun;16(6):603-19. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2014.896474. Epub 2014 Apr 16.
Despite decades of policies, interventions and legislation, many girls and women are being subjected to female genital cutting (FGC) across the African continent. Because FGC has profound implications for women's wellbeing and reproductive health rights, an examination of behavioural changes toward the practice is imperative to reinforce strategies directed at eradicating it. Using a nationally representative survey, this study examines support for discontinuation of FGC and its associated predictors among both women and men in Sierra Leone. Findings reveal gender differences in attitudes toward the elimination of the practice across most of the socioeconomic predictors. Interestingly, beliefs about and perceived benefits of FGC emerge as important determinants of the support for the elimination of FGC, both genders considered. The findings highlight the importance of achieving gender equality and women's empowerment, and the necessity for a more contextualised approach to FGC eradication.
尽管实施了数十年的政策、干预措施和立法,但非洲大陆仍有许多女孩和妇女遭受女性生殖器切割(FGC)。由于女性生殖器切割对妇女的福祉和生殖健康权利有着深远影响,因此有必要审视针对这种行为的态度变化,以强化根除该行为的策略。本研究利用一项具有全国代表性的调查,考察了塞拉利昂男女对停止女性生殖器切割的支持情况及其相关预测因素。研究结果显示,在大多数社会经济预测因素方面,男女对消除这种做法的态度存在性别差异。有趣的是,无论男女,对女性生殖器切割的看法及其感知到的益处都是支持消除女性生殖器切割的重要决定因素。研究结果凸显了实现性别平等和妇女赋权的重要性,以及采取更因地制宜的方法根除女性生殖器切割的必要性。