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FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION
Definition
Female genital mutilation (FGM) is the cutting, or partial or total
removal, of the external female genitalia for cultural, religious, or other
non-medical reasons. It is usually performed on girls between the ages of four
and 10. It is also called female
circumcision.
Purpose
FGM results in the cutting or removal of the tissues around the
vagina that give women pleasurable sexual feelings. This procedure is used for
social and cultural control of women's sexuality. In its most extreme form, in
fibulation, where the girl's vagina is sewn shut, the procedure ensures
virginity. In some cultures where female circumcision has been a tradition for
hundreds of years, this procedure is considered a rite of passage for young
girls. Families fear that if their daughters are left uncircumcised, they may
not be marriageable. As in most cultures, there is also the fear that the girl
might bring shame to the family by being sexually active and becoming pregnant
before marriage.
Precautions
It
is illegal to perform FGM in many countries, including the
Description
Female circumcision includes a wide range of procedures. The simplest
form involves a small cut to the clitoris or labial tissue. A Sunna circumcision
removes the prepuce (a fold of skin that covers the clitoris) and/or the tip of
the clitoris. A clitoridectomy removes the entire clitoris and some or all of
the surrounding tissue; this procedure occurs in approximately 80% of cases. The
most extreme form of genital mutilation is excision and in fibulation, in which
the clitoris and all of the surround tissue are cut away and the remaining skin
is sewn together. Only a small opening is left for the passage of urine and
menstrual blood. In fibulation accounts for approximately 15% of FGM
procedures.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that between 100
million and 140 million girls and women have undergone some form of FGM. As a
very deeply rooted cultural and religious tradition still practiced in over 28
African and Asian countries, up to two million girls per year are at risk. The
following countries have the highest number of occurrences of FGM:
In
an effort to integrate old customs with modern medical care, some immigrant
families have requested that physicians perform the procedure. While trying to
be sensitive to cultural traditions, health care providers are sometimes put in
the difficult position of choosing to perform this procedure in a medical
facility under sanitary conditions, or refusing the request, knowing that it may
be done anyway with no medical supervision. Some families who are intent on
having this procedure done will take their daughters back to the country they
immigrated from in order to have the girls
circumcised.
Many national and international medical organizations including the
American Medical Association (AMA), Canadian medical organizations, and WHO
oppose the practice of female genital mutilation. The United Nations (UN)
considers female genital mutilation a violation of human rights. WHO has
undertaken a number of projects aimed at decreasing the incidence of FGM. These
include the following activities:
- publishing a statement addressing the regional
status of FGM and encouraging the development of national policy against its
practice,
- organizing training for regional community workers,
- developing educational materials for local health
care workers,
- providing alternative occupations for individuals
who perform FGM procedures.
Aftercare
A
girl or young woman who has recently had the procedure performed may require
supportive care to control bleeding and antibiotics to prevent infection.
Women who were circumcised as children may require medical care to treat
complications. Pregnant women who have been infibulated may have to have the
labial tissue cut open to allow the baby to be delivered. Aftercare should be
provided with a supportive and nonjudgmental approach towards the girls and
women who have undergone this procedure.
Risks
The immediate risks after the procedure are hemorrhage (excessive
bleeding), severe pain, and infection (including abscesses,
tetanus, and gangrene). The most severe consequence is
death due to excessive blood loss. Long term complications include
scarring, interference with the drainage of urine and menstrual blood, chronic
urinary tract infections, pelvic and back pain, and infertility. Sexual
intercourse can be painful. Complications of childbirth are also a risk.
It is unclear whether it is related to the procedure itself, or related to the
general condition of medical practice, but infant and maternal death rates are
generally higher in those communities where female circumcision is
practiced.
Key Terms
Circumcision
A procedure, usually with religious or
cultural significance, where the prepuce or skin covering the tip of the penis
on a boy, or the clitoris on a girl, is cut away.
Clitoridectomy
A procedure where the clitoris and
possibly some of the surrounding labial tissue at the opening of the vagina is
cut away.
Infibulation
A procedure where the tissue around the
vagina is sewn shut, leaving only a small opening for the passage of urine and
menstrual blood.
For more Information: Please ask your attending
physician on your next visit.
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