| Literature DB >> 32739135 |
Abdulrahim A Rouzi1, Rigmor C Berg2, Rana Alamoudi3, Faten Alzaban4, Mohammad Sehlo5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The consequences of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) on female genital self-image are not known. AIM: To assess whether women with and without FGM/C differed with regard to female genital self-image.Entities:
Keywords: Circumcision; Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting; Female Genital Self-Image Scale; Saudi Arabia
Year: 2020 PMID: 32739135 PMCID: PMC7691868 DOI: 10.1016/j.esxm.2020.06.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Med ISSN: 2050-1161 Impact factor: 2.491
Sociodemographic characteristics of the study participants, by FGM/C status and total
| Women with FGM/C n = 175 | Women with no FGM/C n = 756 | Total sample | Test for difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, y (average, SD) | 33·4 ± 9·95 | 28·1 ± 8·62 | 28·9 ± 9·1 | |
| Nationality | ||||
| Saudi | 87 (49·7) | 572 (75·7) | 683 (70·9) | |
| Naturalized Saudi | 23 (13·1) | 54 (7·1) | 79 (8·2) | |
| Non-Saudi | 65 (37·2) | 130 (17·5) | 201 (20·9) | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 42 (24·0) | 403 (53·3) | 463 (48·1) | |
| Married | 122 (69·7) | 330 (43·7) | 465 (48·3) | |
| Divorced | 8 (4·6) | 18 (2·4) | 27 (2·8) | |
| Widowed | 3 (1·7) | 5 (0·6) | 8 (0·8) | |
| Education | ||||
| No university education | 80 (45·7) | 307 (40·6) | 399 (41·4) | ns |
| Some or completed university | 95 (54·3) | 449 (59·4) | 564 (58·6) | |
| Occupation | ||||
| Student | 30 (17·1) | 356 (47·1) | 404 (42·0) | ns |
| Part-time employed | 11 (6·3) | 23 (3·0) | 36 (3·7) | |
| Full-time employed | 49 (28·0) | 185 (24·5) | 239 (24·8) | |
| Retired | 10 (5·7) | 6 (0·8) | 16 (1·7) | |
| Stay-at-home housewife | 75 (42·9) | 186 (24·6) | 268 (27·8) | |
| Monthly income | ||||
| <5,000 Saudi Riyal (<≈1,330 US$) | 74 (42·3) | 158 (20·9) | 240 (24·9) | |
| 5,000–10,000 (≈1,331–2,665 US$) | 57 (32·6) | 263 (34·8) | 330 (34·3) | |
| >10,000 (≈2,665 US$) | 44 (25·1) | 335 (44·3) | 393 (40·8) |
FGM/C = female genital mutilation/cutting; ns = not statistically significant.
Statistically significant differences between women with FGM/C and women with no FGM/C were found for age, Saudi nationality vs not, married vs not, income <5,000 Saudi Riyal versus >5,000.
Multiple regression on FGSIS
| Variables | β | B | Std.Error | 95% CI | t | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FGM/C status | .028 | .346 | .416 | −.472 to 1.163 | .830 | .4107 |
| Age | .019 | .010 | .020 | −.029 to .049 | .499 | .618 |
| Nationality | .025 | .290 | .436 | −.566 to 1.146 | .665 | .506 |
| Marital status | −.019 | −.184 | .355 | −.882 to .512 | −.519 | .604 |
| Education | .134 | 1.292 | .352 | .600 to 1.983 | 3.667 | .000 |
| Employment | .012 | .121 | .366 | −.598 to .840 | .330 | .741 |
| Income | .041 | .449 | .425 | −.385 to 1.282 | 1.059 | .291 |
CI = confidence interval; FGM/C = female genital mutilation/cutting; FGSIS = female genital self-image scale.