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Africa:
Mass male circumcision - what will it mean for women?
IRIN News
July 24, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73285
Women's voices have gone
largely unheard in the debate on male circumcision as an HIV prevention
method, but informal discussions with women reveal a range of concerns,
preferences and views that researchers and governments would do
well to consider before drawing up plans for rolling out a national
circumcision programme.
In an unscientific poll,
IRIN/PlusNews found a high degree of ambivalence among wives, girlfriends
and mothers about the implications of a mass male circumcision campaign.
"It's going to be
an advantage for women who are married to men who are cheating,"
said Carol Masombuka, 19, a Sesotho woman from Mpumalanga Province,
in South Africa, zeroing in on the fact that even the partial protection
circumcision provides could make a difference to women who are powerless
to insist on condom use.
Other women were wary
of an initiative that could give men one more excuse not to use
condoms. "Most women are shy when it comes to things concerning
sex - it's always the man who knows better, so he will decide when
we have sex, and if he wants to use a condom he will, and whatever
he says goes, so it's going to suppress women even more," said
Kgaugelo Khuto, 20, a student from South Africa's Limpopo Province.
"Women should be
informed so they do not get fooled by the men, because some girls
might get told by the men that because he's circumcised she can't
be infected," said Masombuka.
Gloria Mphekgwana, 44,
a receptionist and single mother of two, who lives in a Johannesburg
township and has watched a number of her relatives succumb to AIDS-related
illnesses, was strongly in favour of male circumcision. "Women
should fight for this," she said. "They can refuse to
have sex unless their man goes for circumcision."
The
evidence, or lack of it
Studies have found even
higher levels of acceptability for male circumcision among women
than among men. This is despite the fact that very little is known
about how a large-scale male circumcision campaign would affect
women.
Three clinical trials
have demonstrated that circumcision reduces a man's chances of contracting
HIV by about 60 percent. The expected numbers of male HIV infections
averted by a large-scale male circumcision programme would eventually
translate into fewer infections in women. There is also evidence
that circumcised men are less likely to harbour the human papilloma
virus (HPV), which causes cervical cancer - a major killer of women
in sub-Saharan Africa.
However, a set of guidelines
issued by the World Health Organisation and UNAIDS in March 2007
makes it clear that we do not know whether male circumcision, specifically,
reduces sexual transmission of HIV from men to women.
Preliminary results from
a study underway in Uganda suggest that HIV-positive men who resume
sex before their circumcision wounds have healed are more likely
to infect their female partners. The findings are too small to be
conclusive, but they have raised the alarm about the need to inform
both sexes about the potential risks and benefits.
One of greatest of those
risks is that circumcised men will misunderstand or exaggerate the
degree to which they are protected from HIV and stop using condoms;
no one knows how real this risk is or to what extent it could be
offset by education campaigns and individual counselling.
A route
to "better manhood"?
The only experience many
African women have of male circumcision is as part of a traditional
rite of passage that their sons, brothers and male friends go through
if they belong to certain ethnic groups.
Women are not only barred
from attending such rituals, men are also "not supposed to
talk about it with women - they tell them they can go crazy if they
do", said Masombuka.
Several of the women
IRIN/PlusNews spoke to said they could observe a positive change
in men who had attended traditional circumcision 'schools'. "Most
of the guys who've been through it know how to respect a woman and
elders; a person not coming from circumcision school, they're very
rude and they use power," said Mphekgwana, who is from Limpopo
Province, where traditional circumcision is practiced.
According to Masombuka,
"They tell them to be faithful to a girl, and to marry that
girl, and not to go 'jolling' [sleeping] around."
Rachel Jewkes, who heads
the gender and health unit of South Africa's Medical Research Council,
believes that efforts to introduce male circumcision as an HIV intervention
should borrow from traditional approaches that view the procedure
as part of a "transformative process".
"If we see it purely
as a medical intervention, it'll be a mistake; it's a social intervention,"
said Jewkes. "I think culture is very flexible and to the extent
that circumcision has been associated with manhood, I think that
gives it enormous potential for equating it with better manhood."
By "better manhood"
Jewkes means men who are more sexually responsible, and more willing
to view women as equals. She sees male circumcision programmes as
a valuable opportunity to engage men in discussions about safer
sex as well as gender equity.
"The critical thing
is that male engagement in HIV prevention must not stop at the surgical
knife, but that circumcision programmes must be accompanied by gender-transformative
approaches to HIV prevention," she stressed.
What
role for women?
Although public health
experts have paid lip service to the idea of involving women in
efforts to roll out national male circumcision programmes, details
of what form such involvement would take are sketchy.
Dr Yassa Piere, a virologist
who treats HIV-positive patients at the University Teaching Hospital
in Lusaka, Zambia's capital, believes women could play a role in
motivating their male partners to be circumcised.
He pointed to evidence
that circumcised men experience slightly less sensation during sexual
intercourse, a side effect some women might consider an advantage.
The latest research contradicts this, but according to Piere, "some
women prefer circumcised men because they last longer."
The women IRIN/PlusNews
spoke to were more likely to cite hygiene as a reason for preferring
their sexual partners to be circumcised. "I prefer a guy who's
circumcised, I think it's safer and cleaner," said Kgaugelo
Khuto, the student from Limpopo. "But I wouldn't ask him to
do it."
Mothers were much more
vocal in support of medical circumcision. Gloria Mphekgwana is under
pressure from her ex-husband to send their son to a traditional
circumcision school, but she has read media reports about botched
procedures and even fatalities, and refuses to send her son to one.
"No one wants her
kids to go there now, because they don't clean their utensils, they're
using only one blade. I want to take him to the hospital [to be
circumcised]," she said.
At the male circumcision
clinic at Lusaka's University Teaching Hospital, where around 80
procedures are performed every month, about half of the patients
are young boys brought to the clinic by their mothers.
"Studies show high
acceptability of women for this," said Dr Kasonde Bowa, the
clinic's director. "I think they're very keen on anything that
is healthy for their children and their husbands."
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