The Preventive Commitment is a tool that has been integrated into the common Protocol for Health Action for Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) (Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality of Spain, 2015) at the state level, and in various autonomous and municipal protocols . It is available both for professionals and for families traveling to their countries of origin.
This is a document designed in 1998 by an interdisciplinary group of professionals, advised by Dr. Adriana Kaplan, who empirically contrasted its use through the cases of 11 families, from 6 different villages, who would travel to Senegal and Gambia with their daughters. Dr. Kaplan followed up, visited families during the trip, studied how they used it, and verified its effectiveness.
This document model has been replicated in Belgium, with the name Stop FGM Passport and in the United Kingdom, where it is known as Statement Opposing FGM.
The Guide for the application of the Preventive Commitment for Primary Health Care professionals (Wassu Foundation, 2019) links the use of the document with the work of prevention, making special emphasis that the signing of the letter is not an aim in itself, but It is the culmination of a process of awareness from the professional with families, and not the first element of contact.
Other aspects to highlight, which can be extracted from the guide, are: it refers to the need to develop effective interventions at various levels and with interdisciplinary participation of the professional groups involved; underlines the importance of avoiding, with an appropriate approach, the judicialization of risk cases; acceptance and signing of the Preventive Commitment are voluntary; The letter is the property of the girls' parents or
guardians and must have the same degree of protection and confidentiality as the rest of the documentation in the medical record.
Application guideGuide for the application of the Preventive Commitment for Primary HCP(2019 update )
The Preventive Commitment is a tool that has been integrated into the common Protocol for Health Action for Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) (Ministry of Health, Social Services and Equality of Spain, 2015) at the state level, and in various autonomous and municipal protocols . It is available both for professionals and for families traveling to their countries of origin.
This is a document designed in 1998 by an interdisciplinary group of professionals, advised by Dr. Adriana Kaplan, who empirically contrasted its use through the cases of 11 families, from 6 different villages, who would travel to Senegal and Gambia with their daughters. Dr. Kaplan followed up, visited families during the trip, studied how they used it, and verified its effectiveness.
This document model has been replicated in Belgium, with the name Stop FGM Passport and in the United Kingdom, where it is known as Statement Opposing FGM
The Guide for the application of the Preventive Commitment for Primary Health Care professionals (Wassu Foundation, 2019) links the use of the document with the work of prevention, making special emphasis that the signing of the letter is not an aim in itself, but It is the culmination of a process of awareness from the professional with families, and not the first element of contact.
Other aspects to highlight, which can be extracted from the guide, are: it refers to the need to develop effective interventions at various levels and with interdisciplinary participation of the professional groups involved; underlines the importance of avoiding, with an appropriate approach, the judicialization of risk cases; acceptance and signing of the Preventive Commitment are voluntary; The letter is the property of the girls' parents or guardians and must have the same degree of protection and confidentiality as the rest of the documentation in the medical record.
Application guide