The Psychological Perspective of Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) Among Women in Kenya

Authors

  • Caroline Nkatha Ngondu University of South Africa
  • Nokuthula Caritus Mazibuko University of South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2958-3918/18400

Keywords:

FGM/C, trauma, depression, anxiety, stigma, Kenya

Abstract

Despite two decades of legal prohibition, female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) remains entrenched in several Kenyan highland counties and is increasingly recognised as a public mental health issue, not merely a surgical event. Lived experience interviews with 39 adult women in Tharaka-Nithi County (2020) documented the practice’s psychological sequelae. Inductive coding isolated four intersecting impact areas: (1) traumatic recall, reported by 33 participants as flashbacks, nightmares, or sensory intrusions tied to the cutting event; (2) depressive withdrawal, described by 31 as chronic sadness, reduced self-worth, and social disengagement; (3) persistent anxiety, with 29 expressing anticipatory fear around childbirth, medical examinations, or community scrutiny; and (4) stigma-driven social limitation, where 28 cited diminished mobility, economic loss, or reluctance to seek care following disclosure. Only five women regarded the ritual as culturally affirming; most narrated ongoing tension between public belonging and private distress. Three service priorities emerged: (a) embed a brief trauma screen and referral protocol into all reproductive health visits; (b) equip sub-county facilities with trained female psychological counsellors able to coordinate counselling across departments; and (c) centre prevention messaging in survivor-led chama [a Swahili word, meaning society or organisation] forums and elder declarations, rather than relying on abstract clinical warnings. Women’s testimonies advance psychological understanding of FGM/C and offer practical, rights-based entry points for service design in Kenya and comparable high-prevalence settings.

Author Biography

Caroline Nkatha Ngondu, University of South Africa

Department of Sociology

University of South Africa

References

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Published

2025-08-07

How to Cite

Ngondu, Caroline Nkatha, and Nokuthula Caritus Mazibuko. 2025. “The Psychological Perspective of Female Genital Mutilation Cutting (FGM C) Among Women in Kenya”. New Voices in Psychology, August, 14 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2958-3918/18400.

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