Osborne Augustus, Bangura Camilla, Abu Baindu, Sesay Umaru
Institute for Development, Freetown, Western area, Sierra Leone.
Department of Biological Sciences, School of Basic Sciences, Njala University, PMB, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
PLoS One. 2025 May 15;20(5):e0323947. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0323947. eCollection 2025.
Female genital mutilation remains a public health concern and human rights violation affecting young girls in Sierra Leone, despite global efforts to eliminate the practice. With its diverse socio-cultural background and varying regional practices, Sierra Leone presents a unique context for examining how female genital mutilation practices have evolved across different population subgroups. This study examined the early childhood female genital mutilation among women of reproductive age (15-49 years) who reported having FGM before the age of five in Sierra Leone.
The study utilised data from the Sierra Leone Demographic Health Survey rounds conducted in 2008, 2013, and 2019. The World Health Organisation Health Equity Assessment Toolkit software calculated various measures, including difference, ratio, population-attributable risk, and population-attributable fraction. An assessment was calculated for five stratifiers: age, education level, economic status, place of residence, and sub-national province.
The prevalence of female genital mutilation among women of reproductive age (15-49 years) who reported undergoing the practice before the age of five in Sierra Leone declined from 23.2% in 2008 to 12.3% in 2019. By 2019, female genital mutilation showed minimal variation between women aged 40-49 and 15-19, as well as in urban-rural differences. Economic variations in female genital mutilation decreased but continued to disadvantage women in the poorest quintile. Educational variations in female genital mutilation decreased but still impacted women without formal education. Provincial variations in female genital mutilation widened, with the ratio between the Western and Northwestern provinces increasing from 1.8 in 2008 to 2.6 in 2019.
The results showed a decrease in early childhood female genital mutilationin Sierra Leone. While differences related to age groups and urban-rural residence have largely been eliminated, substantial differences persist across educational levels, economic status, and provinces. Most notably, the provincial differences between the Western and Northwestern provinces had widened, with the difference in ratio indicating that female genital mutilation practices remain disproportionately concentrated in some provincial areas. These results suggest that while national-level interventions have been partially successful, there is a critical need for targeted, context-specific approaches that address persistent socioeconomic and provincial variations to achieve a more equitable reduction in early childhood female genital mutilation across all population groups in Sierra Leone.
尽管全球都在努力消除女性生殖器切割这一行为,但在塞拉利昂,它仍是一个影响年轻女孩的公共卫生问题和侵犯人权行为。塞拉利昂拥有多样的社会文化背景和不同的地区习俗,为研究女性生殖器切割行为在不同人群亚组中的演变提供了独特的背景。本研究调查了塞拉利昂15至49岁育龄妇女中在5岁前接受过女性生殖器切割的情况。
该研究利用了2008年、2013年和2019年塞拉利昂人口与健康调查的数据。世界卫生组织健康公平评估工具包软件计算了各种指标,包括差异、比率、人群归因风险和人群归因分数。对五个分层因素进行了评估:年龄、教育水平、经济状况、居住地点和国家以下省份。
在塞拉利昂,报告在5岁前接受过女性生殖器切割的15至49岁育龄妇女的患病率从2008年的23.2%降至2019年的12.3%。到2019年,40至49岁和15至19岁女性之间以及城乡差异方面,女性生殖器切割的差异最小。女性生殖器切割的经济差异有所下降,但最贫困五分之一人口中的女性仍处于不利地位。女性生殖器切割的教育差异有所下降,但仍影响到未接受正规教育的女性。女性生殖器切割的省份差异扩大,西部和西北部省份之间的比率从2008年的1.8增至2019年的2.6。
结果显示塞拉利昂儿童期女性生殖器切割行为有所减少。虽然与年龄组和城乡居住相关的差异已基本消除,但在教育水平、经济状况和省份之间仍存在显著差异。最显著的是,西部和西北部省份之间的省份差异扩大,比率差异表明女性生殖器切割行为仍不成比例地集中在一些省级地区。这些结果表明,虽然国家级干预措施取得了部分成功,但迫切需要有针对性的、因地制宜的方法来解决持续存在的社会经济和省份差异,以在塞拉利昂所有人群中更公平地减少儿童期女性生殖器切割行为。