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Towards the abandonment of female genital mutilation – healthcare provision in Australia within the framework of global collaboration on health system response, prevention, and prosecution

Varol, Nesrin

University of Sydney 2016

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  • Título:
    Towards the abandonment of female genital mutilation – healthcare provision in Australia within the framework of global collaboration on health system response, prevention, and prosecution
  • Autor: Varol, Nesrin
  • Assuntos: female genital mutilation ; health professional training ; includes published articles ; men ; midwifery training ; obstetric complications
  • Descrição: Female genital mutilation (FGM) refers to all procedures involving removing parts or all of the external female genitalia for non-medical reasons. As a result of migration and asylum seeking from conflict and wars, FGM has become a transnational issue, affecting more than 200 million girls and women worldwide. It is a form of gender-based violence, a health and policy issue, and violates many human rights laws. FGM has serious physical, psychological, sexual, and reproductive consequences to girls and women. As FGM has a complex socio-cultural imperative, an understanding of the driving forces of this harmful practice is key to helping communities abandon it and to providing education to all stakeholders involved from the level of the community, to healthcare professionals, teachers, civil rights, law and policy makers, migration and law enforcement organisations. FGM is on the decline, and many communities do want it to end. Addressing the human rights priorities of communities and providing them power over their own development processes are key to helping them abandon this practice. In this thesis, I address two questions. The first one is, “How do we strengthen the response of the healthcare system in Australia to best care for women and girls with FGM?” The second one is, “Focusing on the socio-cultural imperatives of FGM, how could we change our path in the global abandonment program to help communities stop this harmful practice?” My review of the literature on this topic has shown that two of the main reasons that FGM continues to be practised are pressure of social obligation in communities and lack of discourse in the public arena between men and women. In the first systematic review conducted on the topic I have highlighted the ambiguity of men’s wishes in regards to the continuation of FGM. In general, men wished to abandon it because of the physical and psychosexual complications to both women and men. Education of men was found to be the most important indicator for men’s support for abandonment. Australia is home to many women and girls from countries where FGM is practised. My thesis shows that two to three percent of women, who gave birth in a metropolitan Australian hospital, had FGM. This is the first available data on prevalence of women with FGM in Australia. My analysis also showed that women who received specialised FGM care had similar obstetric and neonatal outcomes to women without FGM. An extension of such services would further alleviate the burden among affected women and reduce healthcare costs for the Government. Accurate data collection on prevalence and complications of FGM is needed in Australia to appropriately allocate funding and develop such services. The literature and my thesis provide evidence that healthcare professionals (HCP) in countries of prevalence and those of migration, including Australia, lack knowledge on and training in the management of women with FGM. Midwives expressed a lack of confidence in clinical knowledge, skills, and data collection, as well as cultural competence in caring for women with FGM. Doctors acknowledged barriers to effective care stemming from uncoordinated care, unclear professional responsibilities, and communication difficulties. There is a need for improved education and training, supportive supervision, and evidence-based best-practice clinical guidelines and policies to address knowledge gaps and provide better management of and prevention of FGM in children. Informed by the research presented in this thesis, I developed an e-learning module for HCP in Australia to improve their knowledge on the medical, cultural, legal, and advocacy aspects. The Australian Government has addressed violence against women as an important area of focus and has been implementing a 12-year National Plan to reduce violence against women and their children 2010 – 2022. In the final paper in this thesis I propose that HCP, teachers, welfare officers, child protection officers, and government and non-government organisations involved in prevention programs on FGM, need to form a network of experts within this national framework to develop, implement and evaluate national policy and guidelines on healthcare provision, protection of girls, and prevention of FGM. The abandonment process may be accelerated through a global collaboration between governments and organisations involved in FGM programs. I have been involved in the establishment of the Africa Centre for the abandonment of FGM (ACCAF) in Kenya in 2012. A similar centre is planned in the Asia Pacific region in a country of FGM prevalence, which would collaborate with ACCAF and its partners to share research and expertise. It is my hope that the research presented in this thesis will support the work of these centres and hasten the abandonment of FGM. Access is restricted to staff and students of the University of Sydney . UniKey credentials are required. Non university access may be obtained by visiting the University of Sydney Library.
  • Editor: University of Sydney
  • Data de criação/publicação: 2016
  • Idioma: Inglês

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