School of Public Health, Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
School of International Development and Global Studies, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
Reprod Health. 2020 Nov 7;17(1):174. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-01027-1.
Female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) comprises all procedures that involve the total or partial elimination of the external genitalia or any injury to the female genital organ for non-medical purposes. More than 200 million females have undergone the procedure globally, with a prevalence of 89.6% in Sierra Leone. Education is acknowledged as a fundamental strategy to end FGM/C. This study aims to assess women's educational attainment and how this impacts their views on whether FGM/C should be discontinued in Sierra Leone.
We used data from the 2013 Sierra Leone Demographic and Health Survey. A total of 15,228 women were included in the study. We carried out a descriptive analysis, followed by Binary Logistic Regression analyses. We presented the results of the Binary Logistic Regression as Crude Odds Ratios (COR) and Adjusted Odds Ratios (AOR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Most of the women with formal education (65.5%) and 15.6% of those without formal education indicated that FGM/C should be discontinued. Similarly, 35% of those aged 15-19 indicated that FGM/C should be discontinued. Women with a higher education level had a higher likelihood of reporting that FGM/C should be discontinued [AOR 4.02; CI 3.00-5.41]. Christian women [AOR 1.72; CI 1.44-2.04], those who reported that FGM/C is not required by religion [AOR 8.68; CI 7.29-10.34], wealthier women [AOR 1.37; CI 1.03-1.83] and those residing in the western part of Sierra Leone [AOR 1.61; CI 1.16-2.23] were more likely to state that FGM/C should be discontinued. In contrast, women in union [AOR 0.75; CI 0.62-0.91], circumcised women [AOR 0.41; CI 0.33-0.52], residents of the northern region [AOR 0.63; CI 0.46-0.85] and women aged 45-49 [AOR 0.66; CI 0.48-0.89] were less likely to report that FGM/C should be discontinued in Sierra Leone.
This study supports the argument that education is crucial to end FGM/C. Age, religion and religious support for FGM/C, marital status, wealth status, region, place of residence, mothers' experience of FGM/C and having a daughter at home are key influences on the discontinuation of FGM/C in Sierra Leone. The study demonstrates the need to pay critical attention to uneducated women, older women and women who have been circumcised to help Sierra Leone end FGM/C and increase its prospects of achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) three and five.
女性外阴残割/切割(FGM/C)包括所有为非医学目的而对女性外生殖器进行全部或部分切除或对女性生殖器官造成任何伤害的程序。在全球范围内,有超过 2 亿女性经历过这种程序,塞拉利昂的流行率为 89.6%。教育被认为是结束 FGM/C 的一项基本策略。本研究旨在评估女性的教育程度以及这如何影响她们对塞拉利昂是否应停止 FGM/C 的看法。
我们使用了 2013 年塞拉利昂人口与健康调查的数据。共有 15228 名女性被纳入研究。我们进行了描述性分析,随后进行了二元逻辑回归分析。我们以未调整优势比(COR)和调整优势比(AOR)以及 95%置信区间(CI)的形式呈现二元逻辑回归的结果。
大多数受过正规教育的女性(65.5%)和 15.6%没有正规教育的女性表示应该停止 FGM/C。同样,15-19 岁的女性中有 35%表示应该停止 FGM/C。教育程度较高的女性更有可能报告说应该停止 FGM/C [AOR 4.02;CI 3.00-5.41]。基督教女性 [AOR 1.72;CI 1.44-2.04]、报告说宗教不要求进行 FGM/C 的女性 [AOR 8.68;CI 7.29-10.34]、较富裕的女性 [AOR 1.37;CI 1.03-1.83] 和居住在塞拉利昂西部的女性 [AOR 1.61;CI 1.16-2.23] 更有可能表示应该停止 FGM/C。相比之下,已婚女性 [AOR 0.75;CI 0.62-0.91]、已割礼女性 [AOR 0.41;CI 0.33-0.52]、北部地区居民 [AOR 0.63;CI 0.46-0.85] 和 45-49 岁的女性 [AOR 0.66;CI 0.48-0.89] 不太可能报告说应该在塞拉利昂停止 FGM/C。
本研究支持这样一种观点,即教育对于结束 FGM/C 至关重要。年龄、宗教和宗教对 FGM/C 的支持、婚姻状况、财富状况、地区、居住地、母亲的 FGM/C 经历以及家中有女儿是影响塞拉利昂停止 FGM/C 的关键因素。该研究表明,需要认真关注未受过教育的女性、老年女性和已割礼的女性,以帮助塞拉利昂结束 FGM/C 并增加其实现可持续发展目标(SDG)三和五的前景。