When an adult female seeks ritual genital alteration: Ethics, law, and the parameters of participation

Julie D Cantor

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

Abstract
Ritual genital cutting for women, a common practice in Africa and elsewhere around the world, remains dangerous and controversial. In recent years, a 14-year-old girl living in Sierra Leone exsanguinated and died following a ritualistic genital cutting. Hoping to avoid that fate, women with backgrounds that accept ritual genital cutting may, when they reach majority age, ask plastic surgeons to perform genital alterations for cultural reasons. Although plastic surgeons routinely perform cosmetic procedures, unique ethical and legal concerns arise when an adult female patient asks a surgeon to spare her the tribal elder’s knife and alter her genitalia according to tradition and custom. Misinformation and confusion about this issue exist. This article explores the ethical and legal issues relevant to this situation and explains how the thoughtful surgeon should proceed.


Cantor JD. When an adult female seeks ritual genital alteration: Ethics, law, and the parameters of participation. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2006 Apr 01;117(4):1158-1164.