Such conditions and inadequate fluid intake could be contributing factors to the high rates of urinary tract infections reported: Shandall has reported a prevalence rate of 28 percent of northern Sudanese women affected by urinary tract infections (1967, see also Boddy 1998a:53).
The limited epidemiological information available on maternal mortality, stillbirths, and neonatal mortality in the countries affected by female circumcision practices gives cause for concern, though clear demonstrations of the relationship of these results to incidence of female circumcision await better data. Nevertheless, there is every reason to believe that reduction of the incidence and severity of female circumcision could contribute to improvement of the health and survival of women and children. (For more on medical consequences, see Abdalla 1982; Boddy 1982, 1989, 1998; Cook 1976; Dorkenoo and Elworthy 1992; Dorkenoo 1994; El Dareer 1982; Verzin 1975; Rushwan et al. 1983; Shandall 1967; Toubia 1993, 1994; Van der Kwaak 1992).
Psychological risks have also been discussed by some writers and depicted in fiction (e.g., Walker 1992, El Saadawi 1980a, Abdalla 1982). Abdalla states that psychological reactions range from “temporary trauma and permanent frigidity to psychoses,” and she hypothesizes an effect on the personality development of the young girls, a “totally neglected” topic (1982:27). There have been a few studies of mental health sequelae and the issue is being addressed in the literature (e.g., Baashar et al. 1979; Grotberg 1990, Toubia 1993). Baashir notes that the physical complications often produce psychological effects, for example, the “toxic confusional states” resulting from shock or tetanus, and there are also longer-term psychiatric sequelae to the physical complications, which can lead to “chronic irritability, anxiety reactions, depressive episodes and even frank psychosis” (quoted in Abdalla 1982:27). More research would be useful on female circumcision trauma in relation to later depression, fear of intimacy, and sexual dysfunction. Psychological consequences clearly can be expected to vary considerably, depending on cultural meanings that are taught and whether girls are prepared for the operations.
Reviewing the horrendous health risks, one can understand the intense outpouring of condemnation that ensued when the practices became more widely known by people outside the societies involved. That they have been nevertheless strongly defended and variously interpreted is the source of the intense controversy.
The Extent of Female Circumcision Practices
Various writers estimate that there are more than 100 million women and girls whose bodies have been altered by some form of female circumcision. Toubia estimates 114.3 million (1993:25). About 2 million are considered at risk for undergoing the procedure each year. Some form of female genital cutting is practiced in about twenty-eight countries in Africa.
But the procedure is not limited to Africa. Many more countries need to be concerned, as medical practitioners and social services providers find themselves dealing with circumcised women of immigrant populations now living in North America, Europe, South America, and Australia. Although new cases among immigrants are believed to be few, public health education of immigrants is needed and caregivers need preparation. Circumcision may also spread as people come to believe, however erroneously, that it is required by their religion, as in the case of Muslim populations in South Asia and Indonesia that have adopted circumcision. Several countries of Europe, south and southeast Asia, and North America, together with Brazil and Australia are said to have practicing populations that are “less than 1 percent” (Toubia 1993:34).
In Africa, statistics on prevalence of circumcision, its types, and the rates of new cases have been difficult to determine, as data are uneven (see Toubia 1993, 1995; Amnesty International 1997; Hosken 1978, 1982, 1998). According to data drawn from national surveys, small studies, country reports in WIN News, and anecdotal information, the affected countries have prevalence rates (i.e., the percentage of cases in the appropriate female age groups) that range from as high as 98 percent to as low as 5 percent. Some countries have none. The moderate rates of some countries may reflect an average of high prevalence in one area (perhaps certain ethnic groups) with low prevalence in another.
The countries with the highest total estimated prevalence are Somalia (98 percent), Djibouti (95–98 percent), Egypt (97 percent), Mali (90–94 percent), Sierra Leone (90 percent), Ethiopia (90 percent), Eritrea (90 percent), Sudan (89 percent for the northern two-thirds of the country), Guinea (70–90 percent), Burkina Faso (70 percent), Chad (60 percent), Cote d’Ivoire (60 percent), Gambia (60 percent), and Liberia (60 percent). Also very high, with estimates of 50 percent each, are Benin, Central African Republic, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, and Nigeria. Countries where fewer than one-third of women and girls are affected include Mauritania (25 percent), Ghana (15–30 percent), Niger (20 percent), Senegal (20 percent), Togo (12 percent), Tanzania (10 percent), Uganda (5 percent), and Zaire (5 percent). The remaining countries of northern Africa and southern Africa are considered “nonpracticing countries.” (See Map 1.)
Nearly a third of the cases in Africa are in Nigeria, not because of high prevalence but because of its large population; the country accounts for 30.6 million of the 114.3 million cases for Africa as a whole, according to Toubia (1993:25). Just seven countries of northeast Africa (Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Somalia, and Kenya) contain half of the circumcised women and girls in Africa.
Infibulation, the most severe form of female circumcision, is most common in that same region of northeast Africa, including Somalia, Djibouti, eastern Chad, central and northern Sudan, southern Egypt, and parts of Ethiopia and Eritrea (see also Hicks 1993). The people of Djibouti have practiced infibulation almost exclusively. For Somalia, circumcision is virtually universal, and at least 80 percent are infibulated. For the northern two-thirds of Sudan, where El Dareer’s research team conducted interviews, 98 percent had circumcisions, but only 2.5 percent were sunna, while 12 percent were intermediate and 83 percent were infibulated. At the time of the interviews in 1979 and 1980, only 1.2 percent reported no circumcisions (El Dareer 1982:1). In Egypt the prevalence of infibulation is high mostly in the south near Sudan. Similarly, the areas of Eritrea and Ethiopia where infibulation is found are those near Sudan, Somalia, and Djibouti, where infibulation is predominant.
Although the amount of information is growing, mapping the areas where the various forms are practiced today and indicating prevalence is challenging, given the unevenness of data. Unfortunately, some of the maps that are being used in publications draw upon earlier efforts that incorporated anecdotal accounts that, at least for the areas of Sudan with which I am familiar, are not fully supported by ethnographic information. Because comprehensive epidemiological research has not been carried out everywhere and health data in general is often inaccurate in areas underserved by health care systems, all existing maps (including Map 1) must be understood as crude approximations of the pattern of prevalence; they do not reflect the increases or decreases in incidence (rate of new circumcisions in age groups at risk) that may or may not be occurring because of public health efforts and cultural change.
Clitoridectomy in the West
Damaging female genital surgeries are not limited to just a few countries of the world, nor have they always been linked to cultural traditions. A few years ago one of my European-American students told me that her grandmother had been circumcised as a child, growing up in the American South. She was not alone.
In a surgery performed in Berlin in 1822 (reported in The Lancet in 1825), a fourteen-year-old “idiotic” patient was said to have been cured of her “excessive masturbation and nymphomania” after being “declitorized” (Huelsman 1976:127). Not only did she discontinue “selfpollution,” but the “intellectual faculties of the patient began to develop themselves, and her education could now be commenced,” allowing her to begin to “talk, read, reckon, execute several kinds of needle-work, and a few easy pieces on the piano forte” (quoted in Huelsman 1976:127–28). According to Huelsman, the first four decades that The Lancet was in publication (i.e.,