Female genital mutilation/cutting in The Gambia: long-term health consequences and complications during delivery and for the newborn
- PMID: 23843705
- PMCID: PMC3702244
- DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S42064
Female genital mutilation/cutting in The Gambia: long-term health consequences and complications during delivery and for the newborn
Abstract
Background: Female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) is a harmful traditional practice deeply rooted in 28 Sub-Saharan African countries. Its prevalence in The Gambia is 76.3%. The objective of this study was to gain precise information on the long-term health consequences of FGM/C in The Gambia as well as on its impact on delivery and on the health of the newborns.
Methods: Data were collected from 588 female patients examined for antenatal care or delivery in hospitals and health centers of the Western Health Region, The Gambia. The information collected, both through a questionnaire and medical examination, included sociodemographic factors, the presence or not of FGM/C, the types of FGM/C practiced, the long-term health consequences of FGM/C, complications during delivery and for the newborn. Odds ratios, their 95% confidence intervals, and P values were calculated.
Results: The prevalence of patients who had undergone FGM/C was 75.6% (type I: 75.6%; type II: 24.4%). Women with type I and II FGM/C had a significantly higher prevalence of long-term health problems (eg, dysmenorrhea, vulvar or vaginal pain), problems related to anomalous healing (eg, fibrosis, keloid, synechia), and sexual dysfunction. Women with FGM/C were also much more likely to suffer complications during delivery (perineal tear, obstructed labor, episiotomy, cesarean, stillbirth) and complications associated with anomalous healing after FGM/C. Similarly, newborns were found to be more likely to suffer complications such as fetal distress and caput of the fetal head.
Conclusion: This study shows that FGM/C is associated with a variety of long-term health consequences, that women with FGM/C are four times more likely to suffer complications during delivery, and the newborn is four times more likely to have health complications if the parturient has undergone FGM/C. These results highlight for the first time the magnitude of consequences during delivery and for the newborn, associated with FGM/C in The Gambia.
Keywords: cutting, The Gambia, sexual and reproductive health, Africa; female genital mutilation.
References
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- World Health Organization Eliminating female genital mutilation: an interagency statement OHCHR, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNECA, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF, UNIFEM, WHO; Geneva, Switzerland: 2008Available from: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241596442_eng.pdfAccessed March 18, 2013
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- Gage AJ, Van Rossem R. Attitudes toward the discontinuation of female genital cutting among men and women in Guinea. Int J Gynecol Obstet. 2006;92:92–96. - PubMed
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- United Nations Children’s Fund The dynamics of social change towards the abandonment of female genital mutilation/cutting in five African countries Florence, Italy: Innocenti Digest, UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre; 2010Available from: http://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/fgm_insight_eng.pdfAccessed March 19, 2013
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