BMJ Global Health (Jun 2023)

Lessons learnt in scaling up evidence-based comprehensive health sector responses addressing female genital mutilation in highly prevalent settings

  • Leopold Ouedraogo,
  • Christina Pallitto,
  • Karima Gholbzouri,
  • Wisal Ahmed,
  • Eyob Gebretsadik,
  • Dina Gbenou,
  • Yelmali Hien,
  • Bernadette Dramou,
  • Haimanot Ambelu,
  • Hiba Hussein,
  • Joyce Lavussa,
  • Anabay Mamo,
  • Matilda Cherono,
  • Mary Kessi,
  • Hala El Hennawy,
  • Asmani Chilanga,
  • Hayfa Elamin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2023-012270
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6

Abstract

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Female genital mutilation (FGM) affects over 200 million girls and women. Its health complications include acute and potentially lifelong urogenital, reproductive, physical, mental health complications with estimated health treatment costs of US$1.4 billion per year. Moreover, there is a concerning rise in the trend of FGM medicalisation with almost one in five FGM cases being performed by a health worker.The WHO developed several evidence-based resources to apply a comprehensive health approach to strengthen FGM prevention and care services. However, there has been limited uptake of this comprehensive approach in FGM prevalent settings. To address this, a three-step multicountry participatory process was used to engage health sector players from FGM prevalent settings to develop comprehensive action plans, implement foundational activities and harness the learnings to inform subsequent planning and implementation. Support to adapt evidence-based resources and seed funding were also provided to initiate foundational activities that had potential for scale up.A total of 15 countries participated in this three-step this approach between 2018 and 2022. Ten countries developed comprehensive national action plans and eight WHO resources were adapted for foundational activities.This scale up approach can be strengthened by increasing the frequency of multicountry experience sharing meetings, identifying in-country champions to continuously advocate for FGM integration within (public and private) health services and securing stable funding to implement foundational activities. Documentation of each country’s experience as case studies including monitoring and evaluation are essential to expand the learning and quality of the health interventions addressing FGM.