Zurynski Yvonne, Sureshkumar Premala, Phu Amy, Elliott Elizabeth
Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, Australia.
Discipline of Paediatrics and Child Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2015 Dec 10;15:32. doi: 10.1186/s12914-015-0070-y.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 100-140 million girls and women have undergone female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C). FGM/C is an ancient cultural practice prevalent in 26 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia. With increased immigration, health professionals in high income countries including UK, Europe, North America and Australia care for women and girls with FGM/C. FGM/C is relevant to paediatric practice as it is usually performed in children, however, health professionals' knowledge, clinical practice, and attitudes to FGM/C have not been systematically described. We aimed to conduct a systematic review of the literature to address this gap.
The review was conducted according to guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement and registered with the PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (CRD42015015540, http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/). Articles published in English 2000-2014 which used quantitative methods were reviewed.
Of 159 unique articles, 18 met inclusion criteria. The methodological quality was poor - six studies met seven of the eight quality criteria. Study participants included mainly obstetricians, gynaecologists and midwives (15 studies). We found no papers that studied paediatricians specifically, but two papers reported on subgroups of paediatricians within a mixed sample of health professionals. The 18 articles covered 13 different countries: eight from Africa and 10 from high income countries. Most health professionals were aware of the practice of FGM/C, but few correctly identified the four FGM/C categories defined by WHO. Knowledge about FGM/C legislation varied: 25% of professionals in a Sudanese study, 46 % of Belgian labour ward staff and 94 % of health professionals from the UK knew that FGM/C was illegal in their country. Health professionals from high income countries had cared for women or girls with FGM/C. The need to report children with FGM/C, or at risk of FGM/C, to child protection authorities was mentioned by only two studies.
Further research is needed to determine health professionals' attitudes, knowledge and practice to support the development of educational materials and policy to raise awareness and to prevent this harmful practice.
世界卫生组织(WHO)估计,有1亿至1.4亿女童和妇女经历了女性生殖器切割(FGM/C)。女性生殖器切割是一种古老的文化习俗,在非洲、中东和亚洲的26个国家盛行。随着移民增加,包括英国、欧洲、北美和澳大利亚在内的高收入国家的卫生专业人员开始照料接受过女性生殖器切割的妇女和女童。女性生殖器切割与儿科实践相关,因为这种手术通常在儿童身上进行,然而,卫生专业人员对女性生殖器切割的知识、临床实践及态度尚未得到系统描述。我们旨在对文献进行系统综述以填补这一空白。
该综述按照系统评价与Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)声明的指南进行,并在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库PROSPERO(CRD42015015540,http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/)进行了注册。对2000年至2014年发表的使用定量方法的英文文章进行了综述。
在159篇独立文章中,18篇符合纳入标准。方法学质量较差——六项研究符合八项质量标准中的七项。研究参与者主要包括产科医生、妇科医生和助产士(15项研究)。我们未发现专门研究儿科医生的论文,但有两篇论文报告了在卫生专业人员混合样本中的儿科医生亚组情况。这18篇文章涵盖13个不同国家:8篇来自非洲,10篇来自高收入国家。大多数卫生专业人员知晓女性生殖器切割这种做法,但很少有人能正确识别世界卫生组织定义的四种女性生殖器切割类型。关于女性生殖器切割立法的知识各不相同:在一项苏丹研究中,25%的专业人员、比利时产房工作人员中的46%以及来自英国的94%的卫生专业人员知道女性生殖器切割在本国是非法的。高收入国家的卫生专业人员照料过接受过女性生殖器切割的妇女或女童。只有两项研究提到有必要向儿童保护当局报告遭受或有遭受女性生殖器切割风险的儿童。
需要进一步开展研究以确定卫生专业人员的态度、知识和实践情况,以支持开发教育材料和政策,提高认识并预防这种有害做法。