1. Vaginal practices as women's agency in sub-Saharan Africa: a synthesis of meaning and motivation through meta-ethnography
- Author
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Brigitte Bagnol, Ruth Garside, Shelagh Redmond, Sonja Merten, Elise Kenter, Nicola Low, and Adriane Martin Hilber
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,Sexual Behavior ,Population ,Health Behavior ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,Developing country ,Human sexuality ,HIV Infections ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Risk Factors ,Agency (sociology) ,medicine ,Body Image ,Humans ,education ,Ceremonial Behavior ,Africa South of the Sahara ,Anthropology, Cultural ,Qualitative Research ,Sexual Abstinence ,education.field_of_study ,Motivation ,Cultural Characteristics ,business.industry ,Reproduction ,Gender studies ,Hygiene ,Dry sex ,medicine.disease ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Vagina ,Women's Health ,Female ,Power, Psychological ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
This paper reports on a systematic review of qualitative research about vaginal practices in sub-Saharan Africa, which used meta-ethnographic methods to understand their origins, their meanings for the women who use them, and how they have evolved in time and place. We included published documents which were based on qualitative methods of data collection and analysis and contained information on vaginal practices. After screening, 16 texts were included which dated from 1951 to 2008. We found that practices evolve and adapt to present circumstances and that they remain an important source of power for women to negotiate challenges that they face. Recent evidence suggests that some practices may increase a woman's susceptibility to HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. The success of new female-controlled prevention technologies, such as microbicides, might be determined by whether they can and will be used by women in the course of their daily life.
- Published
- 2011