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Home » Types of Female Genital Cutting in Burkina Faso and Mali and Their Relationship With Negative Health Outcomes

Types of Female Genital Cutting in Burkina Faso and Mali and Their Relationship With Negative Health Outcomes

    Types of Female Genital

    Cutting

    in Burkina Faso and Mali and Their Relationship With Negative Health

    Outcomes

    Heidi Jones, Nafissatou Diop, Ian Askew and

    Inoussa Kaboré

    Heidi Jones, Data Analyst with Population Council’s Impact Studies

    Program, Nafissatou Diop, Program Associate with the Population

    Council’s Frontiers in Reproductive Health Project, Ian Askew, Project

    Director, Population Council’s Africa OR/TA II, and Inoussa Kaboré,

    Host Country Social Scientist, Population Council’s Burkina Faso

    office.

    Abstract

    Studies of the types of female genital cutting (FGC) and their associated

    gynecological complications were undertaken in clinics in rural

    Burkina Faso and in rural and urban clinics in Mali. Women who came

    to the clinics for services that included a pelvic exam were interviewed,

    and the type of cut and any associated complications were observed

    by providers. Ninety-three percent of the women in the Burkina Faso

    study clinics and 94 percent of the women in Mali had undergone

    FGC. In Burkina Faso, type one (clitoridectomy) was the most prevalent

    (52%), while in Mali type two (removal of clitoris and parts of

    the labia minora) was the most prevalent (74%). Logistic regression

    analyses show dose-response relationships between FGC status and

    type or severity of cut, and the probability of a woman having visible

    complications and/or difficulties during childbirth.

     

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