02447nas a2200313 4500000000100000008004100001260003400042653005700076653002100133653002800154653004100182653002200223653002000245653002400265653002400289100001400313700001300327700001500340700001100355700001400366700001500380700001500395245013100410856007500541300001200616490000700628520147300635022002502108 2024 d bOxford University Press (OUP)10aPublic Health, Environmental and Occupational Health10aGeneral Medicine10aHealth (social science)10aFemale genital schistosomiasis (FGS)10aMental well-being10agender dynamics10anarrative discourse10astructural violence1 aMasong MC1 aMengue M1 aMarlene NT1 aDean L1 aThomson R1 aStothard R1 aTheobald S00aIllness experiences and mental health challenges associated with female genital schistosomiasis in Cameroon: a gender analysis uhttps://academic.oup.com/inthealth/article/16/Supplement_1/i42/7636807 ai42-i510 v163 a
Background: This paper highlights the role of cultural and structural gaps that shape illness experiences of women with manifestations of female genital schistosomiasis (FGS) and their impacts upon mental well-being.
Methods: Using ethnography, case study narrative accounts of women manifesting symptoms of FGS, as well as interviews with health workers within FGS-endemic rural fishing communities in Cameroon, we present experiences of women affected by FGS, alongside information on FGS health service provision.
Results Our results show how gendered power dynamics in decision making, gendered experiences around menstrual health and structural gaps in service provision, combine and lead to poor mental well-being. Subfertility brings a heavy psychosocial toll from external blame and rejection, exacerbated by internalised stigma and the challenge of not being able to fulfil cultural and gendered social norms.
Conclusions: Gender analysis is key to developing context-embedded understanding and addressing FGS-related challenges. With context-specific experiences demonstrating FGS comorbidity with mental ill health, there is a need to prioritise mental health integration at policy level through a person-centred approach. Furthermore, to address stigma and discrimination, campaigns to raise awareness in Cameroon, and beyond, are needed.
a1876-3413, 1876-3405