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对与非洲下一代妇女中女性生殖器切割做法和延续相关因素进行分层建模。

Hierarchical modelling of factors associated with the practice and perpetuation of female genital mutilation in the next generation of women in Africa.

机构信息

Faculty of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology and Medical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.

Division of Population and Behavioural Sciences, School of Medicine, St Andrews University, St Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Apr 23;16(4):e0250411. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250411. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Despite a total prohibition on the practice of female genital mutilation (FGM), young girls continue to be victims in some African countries. There is a paucity of data on the effect of FGM practice in two generations in Africa. This study assessed the current practice of daughters' FGM among women living in 14 FGM-prone countries in Africa as a proxy to assess the future burden of FGM in the continent. We used Demographic and Health Surveys data collected between 2010 and 2018 from 14 African countries. We analyzed information on 93,063 women-daughter pair (Level 1) from 8,396 communities (Level 2) from the 14 countries (Level 3). We fitted hierarchical multivariable binomial logistic regression models using the MLWin 3.03 module in Stata version 16 at p<0.05. The overall prevalence of FGM among mothers and their daughters was 60.0% and 21.7%, respectively, corresponding to 63.8% reduction in the mother-daughter ratio of FGM. The prevalence of FGM among daughters in Togo and Tanzania were less than one per cent, 48.6% in Guinea, with the highest prevalence of 78.3% found in Mali. The percentage reduction in mother-daughter FGM ratio was highest in Tanzania (96.7%) and Togo (94.2%), compared with 10.0% in Niger, 15.0% in Nigeria and 15.9% in Mali. Prevalence of daughters' FGM among women with and without FGM was 34.0% and 3.1% respectively. The risk of mothers having FGM for their daughters was significantly associated with maternal age, educational status, religion, household wealth quintiles, place of residence, community unemployment and community poverty. The country and community where the women lived explained about 57% and 42% of the total variation in FGM procurement for daughters. Procurement of FGM for the daughters of the present generation of mothers in Africa is common, mainly, among those from low social, poorer, rural and less educated women. We advocate for more context-specific studies to fully assess the role of each of the identified risk factors and design sustainable intervention towards the elimination of FGM in Africa.

摘要

尽管全面禁止女性生殖器切割(FGM),但在一些非洲国家,年轻女孩仍然是受害者。关于两代人在非洲进行女性生殖器切割实践的效果的数据很少。本研究评估了居住在非洲 14 个女性生殖器切割流行国家的妇女中女儿的生殖器切割的现状,以评估该大陆未来女性生殖器切割的负担。我们使用 2010 年至 2018 年期间在 14 个非洲国家收集的人口与健康调查数据。我们分析了来自 14 个国家的 8396 个社区(第 2 级)中 93063 对妇女-女儿对(第 1 级)的信息。我们使用 Stata 版本 16 中的 MLWin 3.03 模块在 p<0.05 下拟合分层多变量二项逻辑回归模型。母亲及其女儿的生殖器切割总流行率分别为 60.0%和 21.7%,母亲-女儿生殖器切割比例相应降低 63.8%。多哥和坦桑尼亚的女儿生殖器切割流行率不到 1%,几内亚为 48.6%,马里最高,为 78.3%。坦桑尼亚(96.7%)和多哥(94.2%)的母亲-女儿生殖器切割比例降幅最高,尼日尔为 10.0%,尼日利亚为 15.0%,马里为 15.9%。有和没有生殖器切割的妇女中女儿生殖器切割的流行率分别为 34.0%和 3.1%。母亲对女儿进行生殖器切割的风险与母亲年龄、教育程度、宗教、家庭财富五分位数、居住地、社区失业率和社区贫困状况显著相关。妇女居住的国家和社区解释了女儿生殖器切割采购的总变异的约 57%和 42%。非洲目前一代母亲的女儿的生殖器切割采购行为很常见,主要是来自社会地位较低、较贫穷、农村和受教育程度较低的妇女。我们提倡进行更多针对具体情况的研究,以充分评估确定的风险因素中的每一个因素的作用,并设计可持续的干预措施,以消除非洲的女性生殖器切割。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d611/8064566/7ffdb67c9b76/pone.0250411.g001.jpg

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