4.6 Article

Are you in pain if you say you are not? Accounts of pain in Somali-Canadian women with female genital cutting

Journal

PAIN
Volume 162, Issue 4, Pages 1144-1152

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002121

Keywords

Neuropathic pain; Chronic pain; Vulvodynia; Female genital cutting; circumcision; mutilation

Funding

  1. University of Toronto Fellowship
  2. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  3. Carol Mitchell and Richard Venn Fellowship in Women's Mental Health
  4. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
  5. Institute of Gender and Health, Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  6. Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging through the Women's Brain Health Initiative

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The study found a connection between peripheral nerve damage and chronic neuropathic pain in women who have undergone severe female genital circumcision. Women with this experience a multifaceted pain, despite reporting good overall health on short pain questionnaires, they still face significant pain in daily life.
As a rite of passage to womanhood, 2 million girls undergo female genital circumcision (FGC)-the tradition of cutting, and often removing parts of the vulva-every year. The current study is the first to focus on the connection between peripheral nerve damage and chronic neuropathic pain in women with FGC. We used mixed methods-quantitative, qualitative, and physiological-to study chronic pain in Somali-Canadian women (N = 14). These women have the most extensive form of FGC, which includes removal of the glans clitoris, labia minora, medial portion of the labia majora, and stitching together the remaining parts of the labia majora. Our results indicate a multifaceted pain experience in women with FGC. Although they report good overall health and very low pain levels on the short form of the McGill Pain Questionnaire, pressure-pain quantitative sensory testing of the vulvar region applied through vulvalgesiometers shows pain thresholds consistent with those reported by women with chronic vulvar pain. Furthermore, qualitative interviews reveal a considerable amount of often debilitating pain in daily life. These results challenge the use of assessment tools offering elicited verbal pain language and highlight the importance of culturally sensitive ways of conceptualizing, measuring, and managing pain.

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