NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Pregnant women who underwent female genital
cutting as girls are at increased risk of needing an emergency Cesarean section
or suffering serious tears during childbirth, a new study finds.
It is estimated that more than 130 million women worldwide have undergone female
genital mutilation, also known as female "circumcision." The centuries-old
practice, which involves removing part or all of a girl's clitoris and labia,
and sometimes narrowing the vaginal opening, remains a common practice in some
countries, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa.
With increased immigration, more and more healthcare workers in developed
countries are seeing women who have undergone female genital mutilation.
In the new study, doctors at the University of Berne, in Switzerland, followed
122 pregnant women with a history of genital mutilation who received prenatal
care at their medical center. They compared their childbirth outcomes with 110
other women the same age who delivered at the hospital.
Overall, women with genital mutilation had a higher risk of emergency C-section;
18 needed the procedure, compared with three women in the comparison group. They
were also more likely to suffer severe vaginal tears during delivery -- with
nine having the complication, versus one woman in the comparison group.
The findings, which appear in the medical journal BJOG, show that healthcare
workers in developed countries need to be prepared to care for women who've
undergone genital cutting.
That includes prenatal discussions about how delivery should proceed, Dr.
Annette Kuhn, the senior researcher on the study, told Reuters Health in an
email.
All of the women with genital cutting in this study had been asked about how
they wanted to manage delivery. Six percent wanted to have defibulation --
surgical widening of the vaginal opening -- before giving birth. Another 43
percent wanted it during labor, while one-third requested that it be done only
if medically necessary.
A small number of women wanted to have the vaginal opening re-stitched after
giving birth -- a request they were denied because it is medically inadvisable,
as well as illegal in Switzerland, the researchers note.
It is important, Kuhn said, for health professionals in developed countries to
be able to sensitively discuss the issue of female genital cutting, and inform
women of their potential treatment options.
SOURCE: BJOG, August 4, 2009.