Female Genital Cutting
Female Genital Cutting
By:Safa Magid
Female Genital Cutting(FGC) 
    * Also known as: female circumcision & female genital mutilation
    * Female circumcision is the term preferred by cultures who practice this custom
FGC -Definition 
    * Procedure involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs whether for cultural, religious, or other non-therapeutic reasons.
WHO Classification of FGC 
    * Type 1: Excision of prepuce w/ or w/o    excision of all of the clitoris
    * Type 2: Clitoridectomy and partial or total excision of labia minora
    * Type 3: Infibulation, includes removing all or part of ext. genitalia and re-approximation of remnant labia majora, leaving a small interoitus for passage of urine and menstrual blood  
    * Type 1 and Type 2 are the most common forms
    * Type 1 and Type 2 account for 80% of the cases
    * Infibulation accounts for 15% of the cases
FGC  
    * Currently ~ 130 million women and girls have had the procedure
    * An estimated 2 million girls worldwide are at risk per year
FGC in the US 
    * Data from 2000 census suggests:
    228,000 women and girls are with or at risk for FGC in the United States 
    * CA, NY, and MD have the most female immigrants and refugees from countries where FGC is prevalent. 
    * Occurs mostly in 28 sub-Saharan African countries
    * FGC is practiced by Christians, Muslims, and adherents to traditional African religions
    * Also practiced in Middle East and Asia
Origins and History 
    * Origins remain unclear
    * FGC practiced in Pre-Islamic Arabia, ancient Rome, and Tsarist Russia
    * Female circumcision was discovered in ancient Egyptian mummies in 200 B.C.
    * Practiced in the United States until the 1970’s to tx hysteria, lesbianism, and erotomania
FGC and Religion 
    * Christianity:
    FGC is not an obligatory religious requirement  
    * Islam:
    FGC is not an obligatory religious requirement
FGC-Procedure 
    * Performed between the ages of 5-10, or prior to marriage
    * Performed by a member of community who is not a healthcare worker
    * Often performed w/o anesthesia
    * However in metropolitan areas the use of anesthesia is more common
FGC Procedure 
    * Performed w/o surgical instruments. Razor blades or other instruments which may or may not be sterile are used
    * Depending on socio-economic factors FGC may also be performed in a health care facility by qualified health personnel
    * WHO is opposed to medicalization of all types of female genital mutilation.
    * Reasons currently practiced:
          o Rite of passage to womanhood
          o Maintains chastity
          o Ensure marriageablity
          o Belief that it improves hygiene
          o Social pressure to adhere to custom
          o Belief that it is a religious requirement
Complications 
    * Prevalence of complications is unknown
    * Rate of complications increase with severity of procedure( i.e. women with type III have > complications that women w/type I)
    * A study of 120 Somalian women suggests rate of complications are inversely proportional to the age of the child when FGC was performed
    * Women who had FGC btwn the ages of 5-8, had more complications than their 9-12 y.o counterparts
    * Long and short term complications
    * Some women with FGC do not experience complications
Short term complications 
    * Hemorrhage
    * Severe pain
    * Shock
    * Infection
    * Urine retention
    * Ulceration of genital region injury to adjacent tissue
    * HIV?-Possibly transmitted due to use of unsterilized equipment
Long Term Complications 
    * Cysts and abscesses
    * Post-partum fistulaes: vesico-vaginal
    * Keloid scar formation
    * Damage to the urethra resulting in urinary incontinence
    * Dyspareunia and sexual dysfunction
    * Infertility
    * Difficulties with labor.
Case Report 
    * 16 y.o female presents w/severe dysmenorrhea
    * PE revealed the absence of a clitoris and fused labia majora with a 1cm opening
    * Physicians initially thought pt had corrective surgery for ambiguous genitalia
    * Later determined that while visiting Africa with her mother she had FGC performed
    * Perinealography revealed:
          o Filling of the vagina,urethra, and bladder simulating a urogenital sinus.
          o Dilated vagina suggested obstruction
Perinealography
Case Report 
    * Defibulation procedure was performed
    * The patients symptoms of dysmenorrhea eventually resolved
FGC and Obstetric outcomes 
    * WHO Study
FGC & Length of maternal hospital stay 
    * FGC and length of maternal hospital stay
          o FGC Type I- RR: 1.15
          o FGC Type II-RR:1.51
          o FGC Type III-RR:1.98
FGC and Mental Health 
    * Anxiety
    * Depression
    * PTSD
    * Feeling of incompleteness
Defibulation 
    * Corrective procedure
    * Involves division of the fused labia majora with suturing of each labia for hemostasis
    * Thus the infibulated scar, which is a flap obstructing the introitus and urethra, is removed
    * WHO Indications for defibulation:
    * Urinary retention
    * Recurrent UTI’s or kidney infections
    * Dysmenorrhea
    * Dyspareunia or apareunia
    * Prior to coitus
    * Prior to labor
    * It is also reasonable that defibulation can be performed to alleviate any mental health consequences for women who do not meet the WHO indications
Approach to patients with FGC 
    * Some physicians remain unfamiliar w/FGC & have expressed their shock during PE
    * Some women report being reprimanded by physicians for having the procedure done
    * Despite the fact the majority had FGC while they were children and were not given a choice
Patients perspective of FGC 
    * Many pts w/FGC who have immigrated to the West do not feel as if they abused
    * Some feel that FGC was done “for them” and not an attack against them
Patients perspective of FGC 
    * 1st generation pts born in the West who had FGC while traveling abroad often have very different views than their foreign born counterparts
    * HC workers may need to modify their approach depending on the pts perspective
Legality of FGC 
    * U. S. passed a law in March 1997:
    * Made performing any medically unnecessary surgery on the genitalia of a girl younger than 18 years of age a federal crime.
    * Reinfibulation was not included as a federal crime, so it may be performed with absorbable sutures in a running fashion if a woman chooses the procedure
 
Resources for pts and HC providers 
    * African’s Women’s Health Center
          o Established in 1999 by Dr. Nawal Nour a Sudanese-American OB/GYN
          o Goal of clinic is to provide culturally appropriate holistic care to African women who are refugees who may or may not have undergone FGC
          o Defibulation is performed at this clinic
Resources for pts and HC providers 
    * WHO
    * Website with information about FGC
    * Includes fact sheet about FGC and guidelines for healthcare workers
    * http://www.who.int/topics/female_genital_mutilation/en/
    * http://www.who.int/reproductive-health/publications/rhr_01_18_fgm_policy_guidelines/index.html
Dedicated to all of my sisters who have had FGC. 
To those who have suffered physical or mental consequences, I am inspired by your courage and strength. 
References
Female Genital Cutting.ppt

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