西非几内亚女性生殖器切割或切割女性女儿的预测因素

B. Ahinkorah, E. Ameyaw, A. Seidu, S. Yaya
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引用次数: 5

摘要

背景和目标:在几内亚等一些非洲国家,切割女性生殖器被认为是通过减少性欲来确保女孩和妇女童贞的一项重要社会规范。这项研究旨在调查几内亚15-49岁女性女儿中与女性生殖器切割相关的因素。方法:利用2018年几内亚人口与健康调查,我们分析了10721名至少有一个女儿的育龄妇女(15-49岁)的数据。拟合了两级多层次逻辑回归分析,给出了随机效应和固定效应及其相应的95%可信区间(95%可信区间)。结果:与15-19岁的女性相比,所有年龄组的女性都有更高的几率生下女儿,35-39岁的女性生下女儿的几率最高(aOR=26.10,CrI=111.22-53.94)。“与未接受过割礼的母亲相比,接受过割礼母亲的女儿的女性生殖器切割率更高(aOR=5.50,CrI=3.11-9.72)。与穆斯林相比,信奉万物有灵论或没有宗教信仰的女性更有可能给女儿进行割礼(aOR=2.13,CrI=1.12-4.05)相反,受过中等/高等教育、伴侣受过中等/高级教育的妇女、基督徒、财富指数最高的妇女以及居住在法拉纳和恩泽雷科雷地区的妇女不太可能给女儿做割礼。结论及其对翻译的启示:目前的研究表明,几内亚15-49岁女性的女儿中,个人和环境因素与女性生殖器切割有关。研究结果表明,在几内亚消除女性生殖器切割需要多方面的干预措施,如宣传和教育战略,如焦点小组讨论、同伴教学、在有女性生殖器切割做法的地区开展导师项目。这将有助于实现可持续发展目标5.3,该目标的重点是到2030年消除所有有害习俗,如童婚、早婚和强迫婚姻以及切割女性生殖器。版权所有©2021 Ahinkorah。等。由Global Health and Education Projects,股份有限公司出版。这是一篇根据知识共享归因许可CC by 4.0条款分发的开放获取文章。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Predictors of Female Genital Mutilation or Cutting Among Daughters of Women in Guinea, West Africa
Background and Objective: In some African countries like Guinea, female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) has been considered as an essential social norm in ensuring girls’ and women’s virginity by reducing their sexual desires. This study aimed at examining the factors associated with FGM/C among daughters of women aged 15-49 in Guinea. Methods: Using the 2018 Guinea Demographic and Health Survey, we analyzed data on 10,721 women of reproductive age (15-49 years) who had at least one daughter. A two-level multi-level logistic regression analysis was fitted and the random and fixed effects together with their corresponding 95% credible intervals (95% CrIs) were presented. Results: Women of all age categories had higher odds of having circumcised daughters with the substantially highest odds among those aged 35-39 (aOR=26.10, CrI=11.22-53.94) compared to those aged 15-19. “FGM/C was higher among daughters of circumcised mothers (aOR=5.50, CrI=3.11-9.72), compared to those who were not circumcise. Compared to Muslims, women who were either animists or had no religion were more likely to circumcise their daughters (aOR=2.13, CrI=1.12-4.05). Conversely, women with secondary/higher education, whose partners had secondary/higher education, Christians, women of richest wealth index and those who lived in the Faranah and N’zerekore regions were less likely to circumcise their daughters. Conclusion and Implications for Translation: The current study revealed that individual and contextual factors are associated with FGM/C among daughters of women aged 15-49 in Guinea. The findings imply that eliminating FGM/C in Guinea requires multifaceted interventions such as advocacy and educational strategies like focus group discussions, peer teaching, mentor-mentee programs in regions noted with the FGM/C practice. This will help achieve the Sustainable Development Goal 5.3 which focuses on eliminating all harmful practices, such as child, early and forced marriage and female genital mutilation by 2030.   Copyright © 2021 Ahinkorah. et al. Published by Global Health and Education Projects, Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0.
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