Female Genital Mutilation Consequences and Healthcare Received among Migrant Women: A Phenomenological Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Ethical Considerations
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Rigour
3. Results
3.1. Consequences of FGM
3.1.1. Obstetric Consequences
3.1.2. Genitourinary Complications
“In my country (Mali) they usually do FGM to babies of a week or days of life. There are not so many means to do it. Likewise, they cut 20 girls using the same knife, so there are many infections. There are also girls who die from hemorrhages…”(I14VW)
“There are many complications (…) first, there are plenty hygienic infections”(I8VW)
“Bleeding... Her family was healing her, at home! Not in a hospital”(I9VW)
3.1.3. Pain
3.1.4. Sexual Complications
3.1.5. Psychological and Social Consequences
“I had to please my parents, I had to please everyone. I was given plenty of gifts, gold, jewellery, which is hardly praised in our culture”(I1LW)
“Because a girl who is not mutilated, people call them ‘bilákoro’, it’s like… if you are dirty, you are not welcomed…”(I15VM)
“It is a party, the day of FGM comes and then the whole family gets prepared. It is said that the girl’s crying defines the courage of the family”(I15VM)
3.1.6. Lack of Insight
“If they have severe FGM types, they have lots of problems such as infection, difficulty with bleeding like periods problems. However, they do not seek much help because they think that is normal for every woman, the more they are educated the more help is seek. Yes, but I do not think they will be coming in numbers. Only the ones who knows better”(I1LW)
3.1.7. Men’s Consequences
“A lot of pressure comes also from men, but I think in my culture lots has changed, and men are stepping back, and they don’t want to go through that trouble (…), when a woman who is FGM type III comes to them, and they have to open their vagina with their own genitalia”(I1LW)
“There are men who do not want to sleep with the woman that day, but there are others who force her wives because they have to do so (…)”(I14VW)
“Women do not have pleasure when they have sex and this generates many frustrations, for men too, so they do not feel satisfied in bed and then the problem begins. They go with other women…”(I14VW)
3.2. Healthcare Received
3.2.1. Unacquainted Professionals
“I knew that the way they looked at me meant that they had no knowledge of what had happened to me (…) When we talk between us, the ignorance of professionals comes up”(I14VW)
3.2.2. Lack of Detection and Information
3.2.3. Stigmatizing and Over-Inquisitive Attitudes
“But when I was doing my booking, they asked me if I had FGM done. I said yes, and they said that if I had a girl, they would have to refer me to social services… for child protecting issues. This was quite offensive because I don’t want anyone else what I have been through” (…). “It wasn’t my choice; it wasn’t me going to the doctor and saying: ‘I want FGM to be done on me’ (…). Instead of judging women, professionals should raise awareness, provide education and emotional support if women’s been traumatised”(I1LW)
3.2.4. Offering Reversal or Deinfibulation
“I was in labour and the doctor came and told me that he will open before the baby came. I refused because I didn’t want it. But at the end I had caesarean not because pf the FGM but because the baby was stuck somewhere. With my second baby I also had caesarean”(I2LW)
“They said to me: ‘You can’t deliver your baby unless we open you’. And I chose to be opened the day of delivery. I didn’t want to have a reversal in pregnancy, I wanted everything at the time of delivery, all together”(I4LW)
3.3. Tackling FGM
3.3.1. Education and Awareness
“Oh God! Education, education, education. I can’t say it enough! And also educating men here but also back home”(I1LW)
“To avoid this practice, women must go to school (…) When a woman is not educated, she cannot think, she cannot defend herself (…)”(I9VW)
3.3.2. Speaking Up
“I explained to my mother the inconveniences and I have succeeded to prevent my daughter and nieces from FGM. It is possible! If there is a will, there is a way. I didn’t know that I could convince my mother either”(I14VW)
“When I went back to my country, I gave a talk about FGM (…) at first, I looked as if I was no longer African, my mind had changed a lot”(I14VW)
“I have also held a meeting with all the women in my town (…) Now I can say that 80% of the women in my town have abandoned the practice”(I15VM)
3.3.3. Improving Prevention
3.3.4. Penalization
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type | Description |
---|---|
I | Clitoridectomy |
This is the partial or total removal of the clitoris and in very rare cases, only the prepuce. | |
II | Excision |
This is the partial or total removal of the clitoris and the labia minora with or without excision of the labia majora. | |
III | Infibulation |
This is the narrowing of the vaginal opening through the creation of a covering seal. The seal is formed by cutting and repositioning the labia minora or labia majora, sometimes through stitching with or without removal of the clitoris. | |
IV | Others |
This includes all other harmful procedures to the female genitalia for non-medical purposes, e.g., pricking, piercing, incising, scraping and cauterizing the genital area. |
Number | Sex | Age | Place of Origin | Profession | Ethnicity | Residence | Years Out of Country of Origin | FGM | Type of FGM | Age of FGM (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I1LW | Woman | 28 | Kismaayo, Somalia | Midwife | - | London | 22 | Yes (in Italy) | I | 6 |
I2LW | Woman | 43 | Kismaayo, Somalia | Health Care Assitant | - | London, | 17 | Yes | II-III (Pharaon) | 6–7 |
I3LW | Woman | 44 | Mogadishu, Somalia | Health clinic assistant | - | London | 5 | Yes | II-III (Pharaon) | - |
I4LW | Woman | 28 | Mogadishu, Somalia | Housewife | - | London, | 12 | Yes | III (oni) | 9 |
I5LW | Woman | 36 | Mogadishu, Somalia | Housewife | - | London, | 13 | Yes | II | 5–6 |
I6VW | Woman | 43 | Senegal | Catering | - | Valencia | 9 | No | - | - |
I7VM | Man | 47 | Cameroon | Catering | Bamileke | Valencia | 16 | - | - | - |
I8VW | Woman | 35 | Dakar, Senegal | Hospitality | Wolof | Valencia | 11 | No | - | - |
* sister in law | Dakar, Senegal (originally from Guinea) | - | - | France | - | Yes | Uncertain | 12 | ||
I9VW | Woman | 39 | Nigeria | Hospitality | Ibu | Valencia | 11 | No | - | - |
I10VW | Woman | 40 | Bata, Ecuatorial Guinea | Hospitality | Fang | Valencia | 18 | No | - | - |
* female relative | Nigeria | - | - | - | Yes | Uncertain | - | |||
I11VW | Woman | 43 | Uagadugú, Burkina Faso | Cleaning staff | Mossi | Valencia | 10 | Yes | I | 1 |
I12VW | Woman | 34 | Mali | Housewife | Bambara | Valencia | 8 | Yes | Uncertain | 3–4 |
I13VW | Woman | 31 | Edo, Nigeria | Housewife | - | Valencia | 5 | Yes | Uncertain | <1 |
I14VW | Woman | 29 | Kayes, Mali | Technical staff in Foundation | Mandike | Valencia | 8 | Yes | III | 1 week |
I15VM | Man | 53 | Malí | Seasonal worker | Bambara | Valencia | 7 | - | - | |
* his wife | 44 | Malí | - | Bambara | Valencia | 3 | Yes | Type II | - | |
I16VW | Woman | 28 | Bamaku, Mali | Student | Fulani (Peul) | Valencia | 8 | Yes | Uncertain | <7 |
I17VW | Woman | 25 | Kayes, Mali | Housewife | Valencia | 2 | Yes | Uncertain | 1 month | |
I18VW | Woman | 26 | Rural area, Mali | Housewife | Valencia | 1 | Yes | Uncertain | 1 month |
Interview | Age | Country of Origin | Years out of Country of Origin | Marital Status | FGM, Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
IG1VW | 19 | Nigeria | 2 | Single | Yes, uncertain |
IG2VW | 19 | Nigeria | 5 | Single | Yes, uncertain |
IG3VW | 31 | Nigeria | 4 | Single | Yes, uncertain |
IG4VW | 22 | Nigeria | 1 | Single | Yes, uncertain |
IG5VW | 24 | Nigeria | 3 | Single | Yes, uncertain |
Theme | Subtheme |
---|---|
Consequences of FGM | Obstetric consequences Genitoruinary complications Pain Sexual complications Psychological and social consequences Lack of insight Men’s consequences |
Healthcare received | Unacquainted professionals Lack of detection and information Stigmatizing and over-inquisitive attitudes Offering reversal or deinfibulation |
Tackling FGM | Education and awareness Speaking up Improving prevention Penalization |
Obstetric-Gynaecological Complications | |
---|---|
Postpartum haemorrhage | “I started working in a maternity ward (…) when a pregnant woman arrived for birth it was a disaster (…) two women in front of me lost a lot of blood…” (I15VM) “Two girls from my town, 18 and 22 years old died in childbirth (…) in my town there isn’t a blood bank, there is nothing at all, if your wife has a problem with childbirth you have to take the woman by bicycle to the nearest maternity hospital, which is 8, 10, 20 km away from town… “ (I15VM) |
Perineal tears | “It was very painful, that’s what I always say. I asked the midwife then how many stitches I had, but they could nou be counted. They gave me a lot of stitches inside and outside” (I14VW) |
Infection | “There are many complications for women (…) first, there are many hygienic infections” (I8VW) “Strong pain ... but also if you are unlucky you get an infection...” (I6VW) |
Arm palsy | “The problem was with my third baby (…), to get him out they forced his arm… the midwife squeezed a lot and his arm ended up broken. He has arm paralysis” (I11VW) |
Preterm birth | “They were very preterm; they were born at 23 weeks” (I16VW) |
Infertility | “Yes, yes, we were trying for a while, with the second insemination I got pregnant” (I16VW) |
Death | “When you are pregnant… labour is usually very difficult, there are even girls who die giving birth” (I8WM) “At times there are girls who bleed a lot and sometimes they die” (I11VW) |
Pain | |
---|---|
Dysmenorrhea | “I was lucky because I never had problems with my periods, the man who was doing it was a doctor, so he didn’t cut us like other people from outside the city” (I2LW) |
Dysuria | “The first time I went for a wee it was very painful. I didn’t want to go to toilet, I was holding my wee… I was crying I will never forget that moment” (I2LW) “Bad things, pain for wee at the beginning. After 2 weeks, it was normal” (I5LW) |
Dyspareunia | “Period problems, having sex is very painful…” (I2LW) “She has 3 children but with her husband during intercourse she is always screaming” (I8VW) |
Pain during birth | “I didn’t feel it, but they say that when you are giving birth there are women who find it much more difficult (…) it hurts more when giving birth (…) They say that there are births that last longer and are harder” (I11VW) “I have explained to him the inconveniences that women have when giving birth because they see it the opposite of the ones here; they think that women who are not mutilated at the time of giving birth they will suffer a lot, but it is totally the opposite” (I14VW) |
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González-Timoneda, A.; González-Timoneda, M.; Cano Sánchez, A.; Ruiz Ros, V. Female Genital Mutilation Consequences and Healthcare Received among Migrant Women: A Phenomenological Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137195
González-Timoneda A, González-Timoneda M, Cano Sánchez A, Ruiz Ros V. Female Genital Mutilation Consequences and Healthcare Received among Migrant Women: A Phenomenological Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(13):7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137195
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Timoneda, Alba, Marta González-Timoneda, Antonio Cano Sánchez, and Vicente Ruiz Ros. 2021. "Female Genital Mutilation Consequences and Healthcare Received among Migrant Women: A Phenomenological Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 13: 7195. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137195