Inconsistent reporting of female genital cutting status in northern Ghana:
explanatory factors and analytical consequences.
Navrongo Health
Research Centre, Northern Ghana. elizabeth_f_jackson@unc.edu
Although many cross-sectional social surveys have included questions about
female genital cutting status and correlated personal characteristics, no
longitudinal studies have been launched that permit investigation of response
biases associated with such surveys. This study draws upon the findings of a
longitudinal study of women aged 15 to 49 in rural northern Ghana. The
self-reported circumcision status of women interviewed in 1995 was compared with
the status they reported when they were interviewed again in 2000 after the
government began enforcing a law banning the practice and public information
campaigns against it were launched. In all, 13 percent of respondents who
reported in 1995 that they had been circumcised stated that they had not been
circumcised in the 2000 reinterview; this inconsistency reached 50 percent for
the youngest age group. Analysis shows that women who said they had not been
circumcised are significantly younger, more likely to be educated, and less
likely to practice traditional religion than are women who reported that they
were circumcised. Factors that may explain these correlates of denial are
discussed, and implications for research are reviewed.
PMID: 14558322