Towards a context-specific understanding of masculinities in Eswatini within voluntary medical male circumcision programming.

Alfred Khehla Adams, Sarah Day, Jacqueline Pienaar, Ndumiso Dlamini, Kudzayi Ndlovu, Paul Mangara
Author Information
  1. Alfred Khehla Adams: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Mbabane, Swaziland.
  2. Sarah Day: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Johannesburg, South Africa.
  3. Jacqueline Pienaar: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Johannesburg, South Africa.
  4. Ndumiso Dlamini: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Mbabane, Swaziland.
  5. Kudzayi Ndlovu: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Mbabane, Swaziland.
  6. Paul Mangara: Centre for HIV/AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS), Mbabane, Swaziland.

Abstract

Compelling evidence from three randomised controlled trials, which showed that voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) reduces HIV acquisition from women to men by up to 60%, led to WHO recommending that VMMC be implemented in 14 priority countries. As one of the priority countries, Eswatini aimed to reach 80% VMMC coverage among boys and men aged 10-49 years since programme inception in 2009. By the end of 2019, however, the country had reached a modest 40%. VMMC is intrinsically tied to perceptions of masculinity and male gender identity. Comprehending the role of context-specific masculinity as it relates to VMMC may contribute to our understanding of community attitudes towards VMMC and men's decision-making. Drawing on focus group discussion data, this study aimed to explore the linkage between sexuality, masculinity and health interventions within Eswatini. Using critical discourse analysis, the study identified two discourses: sexuality, masculinity and circumcision, and income, masculinity, and circumcision. In the first discourse, participants constructed discursive linkages between circumcision as an adult and loss of penile sensitivity, decreased libido and sexual performance, and adverse events. The second discourse, income, masculinity, and circumcision located circumcision within the social and material realities faced by Swazi men, gender norms and provision within family structures.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Circumcision, Male
Eswatini
Female
HIV Infections
Humans
Male
Masculinity
Sexual Behavior

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