Main Article Content
Female genital cutting among the Hausa community in Sagamu
Abstract
Methodology: A cross-sectional study was carried out in Sabo, Sagamu, in the months of May/June 2002. Multi-staged sampling technique was used to choose 245 respondents from the study area.
Results: One hundred and seventy seven females and 68 males were interviewed. The males had a higher level of education compared with the females (p<0.05). Female genital cutting was a prevalent practice in the community as 80% of all the respondents were aware of the practice and 69.9% of the females reported that they were circumcised. The most commonly performed type was Type 1 (sunna), which is usually performed in the first week of life by traditional birth attendants and barber surgeons. The commonly cited reasons for the practice were: to ease delivery (20.6%), religious injunctions (19.1%) and tradition (15.5%). At the household level, fathers were the major decision-makers about female circumcision. The females in the study had a more conservative attitude to female genital cutting, as they tended to support the practice more than the males (64.8% females and 20.5% males). The males were more likely to be aware of the campaign against FGC and were more likely to support the campaign (p<0.05).
Conclusion: Female genital cutting is a prevalent practice among the study population. There is a need to improve female education among this population, intensify anti-FGC campaigns and more specifically target information at the women.
Keywords: female genital cutting, Hausa, Sagamu
Journal of Community Medicine and Primary Health Care 2005, 17(1): 28-32