肯尼亚切割女性生殖器的医学化:三重论述。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
Jolien Inghels, Sarah Van de Velde, Naomi Biegel, Samuel Kimani, Nina Van Eekert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在肯尼亚,切割女性生殖器(FGC)的流行率正在缓慢下降。与此同时,这种做法越来越多地由医疗服务提供者而不是传统的割礼师来实施,这可能会造成这种做法合法化的风险。迄今为止,人们对其背后的机制仍然知之甚少。本研究利用 1998 年、2008-09 年和 2014 年肯尼亚人口健康调查的数据,通过绘制不同出生组群和种族群体的女性割礼流行率和医疗化率图,旨在加深对这一现象的了解。此外,本研究还深入研究了女性外阴残割医疗化程度特别高的基西社区的数据,以考察医疗化与母亲的社会地位之间的关联,因为母亲通常是这种做法的主要决策者。研究结果表明,女性外阴残割发生率下降和医疗化程度提高的并存趋势表现出明显的种族差异。在基西人中,与传统割礼相比,更富裕的人接受医疗割礼的几率更高,而与接受医疗割礼相比,更高的教育程度和媒体使用率与完全不接受割礼的几率更高相关。国际社会认为女性外阴残割的医疗化会阻碍根除这一习俗,我们的研究结果对这一观点进行了细微的解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The medicalisation of female genital cutting in Kenya: a threefold exposition.

In Kenya, the prevalence of Female Genital Cutting (FGC) is slowly decreasing. Simultaneously, the practice is increasingly being performed by healthcare providers rather than traditional circumcisers, which may pose the risk of legitimising the practice. To date, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Using the 1998, 2008-09, and 2014 Kenyan Demographic Health Surveys, this study aims to enhance understanding by mapping both FGC prevalence and medicalisation rates across birth cohorts and ethnic groups. Additionally, the study delves into data from the Kisii community, where FGC medicalisation is particularly high, to examine the association between medicalisation and a mother's social position, as she is typically the primary decision-maker regarding the practice. Findings reveal that the coexisting trends of decreasing prevalence and increasing medicalisation exhibit significant ethnic variation. Among the Kisii, greater wealth is associated with higher odds of a medicalised cut compared to a traditional cut, while higher education and media use are linked to higher odds of not undergoing cutting at all compared to a medicalised cut. Our findings nuance the international community's premise that the medicalisation of FGC hinders the eradication of the practice.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
80
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