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Do educated women in Sierra Leone support discontinuation of female genital mutilation/cutting? Evidence from the 2013 Demographic and Health Survey.

Edward Kwabena AmeyawOlumuyiwa OmonaiyeAbdul-Aziz SeiduBright Opoku AhinkorahLinus BaatiemaCarolyne Njue
Published in: Reproductive health (2020)
This study supports the argument that education is crucial to end FGM/C. Age, religion and religious support for FGM/C, marital status, wealth status, region, place of residence, mothers' experience of FGM/C and having a daughter at home are key influences on the discontinuation of FGM/C in Sierra Leone. The study demonstrates the need to pay critical attention to uneducated women, older women and women who have been circumcised to help Sierra Leone end FGM/C and increase its prospects of achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) three and five.
Keyphrases
  • polycystic ovary syndrome
  • type diabetes
  • pregnant women
  • metabolic syndrome
  • working memory
  • insulin resistance
  • breast cancer risk