Albert Juliet, Wells Mary, Spiby Helen, Evans Catrin
University of Nottingham and Division of Womens, Children and Clinical Support, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust (ICHNT), London, United Kingdom.
Nursing Directorate, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust (ICHNT), Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Glob Womens Health. 2024 May 22;5:1329819. doi: 10.3389/fgwh.2024.1329819. eCollection 2024.
Health care for women with Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) in the Global North is often described as sub-optimal and focused on maternity care. Specialist FGM/C services have emerged with little empirical evidence informing service provision. The objective of this scoping review is to identify the key features of FGM/C specialist care.
The review was conducted in accordance with JBI methodology. Participants: organisations that provide specialist FGM/C care. Concept: components of specialist services. Context: high-income OECD countries. Eligibility criteria included primary research studies of any design from 2012 to 2022, providing a comprehensive description of specialist services. Seven bibliographic databases were searched (MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, SCOPUS, Cochrane Library and MIC). The components of "specialist" (as opposed to "generalist") services were defined and then applied to an analysis of FGM/C specialist care. FGM/C specialist provision was categorised into primary (essential) and secondary features. Data were extracted and analysed descriptively through charting in tables and narrative summary.
Twenty-five papers described 20 unique specialist services across eleven high income countries. Primary features used to identify FGM/C specialist care were:-(i) Named as a Specialist service/clinic: 11/20 (55%); (ii) Identified expert lead: 13/20, (65%), either Midwives, Gynaecologists, Urologist, or Plastic Surgeons; (iii) Offering Specialist Interventions: surgical (i.e., reconstruction and/or deinfibulation) and/or psychological (i.e., trauma and/or sexual counselling); and (iv) Providing multidisciplinary care: 14/20 (70%). Eleven services (in Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, France, Belgium, and USA) provided reconstruction surgery, often integrated with psychosexual support. No services in UK, Norway, and Australia offered this. Six services (30%) provided trauma therapy only; 25% sexual and trauma therapy; 15% sexual therapy only; 30% did not provide counselling. Secondary features of specialist care were subdivided into (a) context of care and (b) the content of care. The context related to concepts such as provision of interpreters, cost of care, community engagement and whether theoretical underpinnings were described. Content referred to the model of care, whether safeguarding assessments were undertaken, and health education/information is provided.
Overall, the features and composition of FGM/C specialist services varied considerably between, and sometimes within, countries. Global guidelines advocate that specialist care should include access to deinfibulation, mental health support, sexual counselling, and education and information. The review found that these were rarely all available. In some high-income countries women cannot access reconstruction surgery and notably, few services for non-pregnant women mentioned safeguarding. Furthermore, services for pregnant women rarely integrated trauma therapy or psychosexual support. The review highlights a need for counselling (both trauma and psychosexual) and culturally-appropriate sensitive safeguarding assessments to be embedded into care provision for non-pregnant as well as pregnant women. Further research is needed to extract the features of specialist services into a comprehensive framework which can be used to examine, compare, and evaluate FGM/C clinical specialist care to determine which clinical features deliver the best outcomes. Currently a geographical lottery appears to exist, not only within the UK, but also across the Global North.
在全球北方地区,为接受女性生殖器切割(FGM/C)的女性提供的医疗保健通常被认为不够理想,且主要集中在孕产护理方面。专门的FGM/C服务已经出现,但在服务提供方面几乎没有实证依据。本范围综述的目的是确定FGM/C专科护理的关键特征。
本综述按照JBI方法进行。参与者:提供专门FGM/C护理的组织。概念:专科服务的组成部分。背景:经合组织高收入国家。纳入标准包括2012年至2022年任何设计的原发性研究,全面描述专科服务。检索了七个文献数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、Web of Science、SCOPUS、Cochrane图书馆和MIC)。定义了“专科”(相对于“全科”)服务的组成部分,然后将其应用于对FGM/C专科护理的分析。FGM/C专科护理分为主要(基本)特征和次要特征。通过表格绘制和叙述性总结对数据进行描述性提取和分析。
25篇论文描述了11个高收入国家的20项独特的专科服务。用于确定FGM/C专科护理的主要特征包括:(i)被命名为专科服务/诊所:11/20(55%);(ii)确定有专家牵头:13/20(65%),包括助产士、妇科医生、泌尿科医生或整形外科医生;(iii)提供专科干预措施:手术(即重建和/或解除阴部扣锁)和/或心理治疗(即创伤和/或性咨询);(iv)提供多学科护理:14/20(70%)。11项服务(在西班牙、瑞典、瑞士、德国、意大利、荷兰、法国、比利时和美国)提供重建手术,通常还提供性心理支持。英国、挪威和澳大利亚没有这样的服务。6项服务(30%)仅提供创伤治疗;25%提供性和创伤治疗;15%仅提供性治疗;30%不提供咨询。专科护理的次要特征分为(a)护理背景和(b)护理内容。背景涉及诸如提供口译员、护理费用、社区参与以及是否描述了理论基础等概念。内容涉及护理模式、是否进行保障评估以及是否提供健康教育/信息。
总体而言,FGM/C专科服务的特征和构成在不同国家之间,有时在一个国家内部,差异很大。全球指南提倡专科护理应包括解除阴部扣锁、心理健康支持、性咨询以及教育和信息。综述发现这些很少能全部具备。在一些高收入国家,女性无法获得重建手术,值得注意的是,很少有针对非孕妇的服务提及保障措施。此外,针对孕妇的服务很少将创伤治疗或性心理支持纳入其中。综述强调需要将咨询(包括创伤和性心理咨询)以及符合文化背景的敏感保障评估纳入非孕妇和孕妇的护理服务中。需要进一步研究,以将专科服务的特征提炼成一个综合框架,用于检查、比较和评估FGM/C临床专科护理,以确定哪些临床特征能带来最佳结果。目前,不仅在英国,而且在整个全球北方地区,似乎都存在地域差异。