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NIGHTMARE FOR AFRICA WOMEN: BIRTHING
INJURY AND LITTLE HELP
September 28, 2005- (New York Times) Dr. Kees
Waaldijk began surgery shortly before 10 a.m. one recent Saturday
in a cement-walled operating room in this city near Nigeria's northern
border. More than five hours later, orderlies carried the last of
four girls to the recovery ward. In the near-90 degree heat, Dr.
Waaldijk's light blue surgical garb had turned dark with sweat.
"We are finished for the day," he barked.
It was the last thing the dozen girls who squatted in the open-air
corridor outside wanted to hear. Leaping up, tracking wet footprints
and soaked skirts across the floor, they besieged the towering,
white-haired surgeon, holding out orange case files, their names
scrawled on them in black marker.
"Big eyes, with a question mark: 'When is it my turn?' "
he said later in his office, filled with medical books, suture-filled
suitcases and damp socks and T-shirts hung on chairs to dry. He
held up his hands. "The eyes are following you everywhere you
go. I tell them it is one man, two hands and many women."
What brings the girls to Dr. Waaldijk - and him to Nigeria - is
the obstetric nightmare of fistulas, unknown in the West for nearly
a century. Mostly teenagers who tried to deliver their first child
at home, the girls failed at labor. Their babies were lodged in
their narrow birth canals, and the resulting pressure cut off blood
to vital tissues and ripped holes in their bowels or urethras, or
both.
Now their babies were dead. And the would-be mothers, their insides
wrecked, were utterly incontinent. Many had become outcasts in their
own communities - rejected by their husbands, shunned by neighbors,
too ashamed even to step out of their huts.
Until this decade, outside nations that might be able to help effectively
ignored the problem. The last global study, in which the World Health
Organization estimated that more than two million women were living
with obstetric fistulas, was conducted 16 years ago.
Nor has a recent spate of international attention set off an outpouring
of aid. Two years of global fundraising by the United Nations Population
Fund, an agency devoted in part to improving women's health, has
netted only $11 million for the problem.
The number of new cases is far outpacing repairs - not just here,
but in other sub-Saharan nations like Kenya, Malawi and Uganda.
Despite recent strides, said Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, the Population
Fund's executive director, "at the current rate of action it
will take decades to end fistula."
Few doubt that the problem is most concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa,
where poverty and rudimentary health care combine with traditions
of home birth and early pregnancy to make women especially vulnerable.
In Nigeria alone, perhaps 400,000 to 800,000 women suffer untreated
fistulas, says the United Nations.
Dr. Waaldijk , a 6-foot-4, 64-year-old Dutchman who rides a circuit
nine months each year from his home in the Netherlands to Babbar
Ruga Hospital here and others in rural Nigeria, says he has operated
on 15,000 fistulas in 22 years here, repairing nearly all of them.
Obstetric fistulas are easily prevented by Caesarean sections. But
in sub-Saharan Africa - excluding the region's richest nation, South
Africa - the average doctor serves 6,666 patients and villages are
often linked by little more than dirt paths. Many rural women labor
fruitlessly for days before being taken, sometimes in a cow-pulled
cart, to a road leading to a hospital.
Dr. Waaldijk remembers one patient well. She managed to push out
only her baby's head before collapsing from exhaustion in her hut,
he said. Her brother carried her, balanced on a donkey, to a road,
where a bus driver demanded 10 times the usual fare to take her
to a hospital. She half-stood, half-sat for the trip, her dead baby's
head between her legs, her urethra ripped open.
"This is what is happening," the doctor said. "Nobody
will believe it." The fistulas point to the broader plight
of millions of African women: poverty; early marriage; maternal
deaths; a lack of rights, independence and education; a generally
low standing. One in 18 Nigerian women dies during childbirth, compared
with one in 2,400 in Europe, the Population Fund says. A larger
share of African women die in childbirth than anywhere else in the
world.
Were it widely available, the United Nations agency states, a $300
operation could repair most fistulas. But Mozambique, with 17 million
people, has just three surgeons who consistently perform those operations.
Niger, population 11 million, has but six, the organization reported
in 2002.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous country with 137 million people,
has eight fistula repair centers, and Dr. Waaldijk, a Health Ministry
employee, said he had trained 300 doctors in fistula surgery. Once
trained, though, many leave for better paid jobs in wealthier nations.
Nearly 600 women showed up, some arriving in busloads, when international
and Nigerian officials staged a 14-day treatment campaign at Babbar
Ruga and three other hospitals in February. Three hospitals ran
out of beds. The youngest patient was 12.
The oldest, more than 70, had been incontinent for a half-century.
"The health care system is not coping with it," Dr. Waaldijk
said. "You go to a hospital and they have no working facilities.
You say, 'You need this, this, this and this.' You go back. No water!
No water in the whole hospital! You go back again, no lights!
"So where do you start?"
Dr. Waaldijk started here at Babbar Ruga Hospital 22 years ago,
after a misspent youth followed by a lucrative surgical practice
in Europe mixed with public health stints. Only when he came to
this dusty town of open sewers and fickle electricity did he find
his life's calling, he said.
With help from government and private donors, he slowly built Babbar
Ruga into one of Africa's two biggest fistula centers, a small city
of yellow concrete wards and hostels that typically houses 200 patients.
Those recovering from his surgery walk awkwardly about the grounds,
catheters emptying between their legs into plastic buckets in girlish
colors of pink and purple. Relatives camp by the dozens under the
trees amid cooking pots, straw mats and tea kettles.
Dr. Waaldijk still hauls sutures, needles and anesthetics in big
black suitcases from Holland to be certain of a reliable supply.
He operates partly by the sun, wheeling his surgery table across
the room to catch the best light, and personally logs his results
on a laptop protected by a backup generator.
More than a third of his patients are 15 or younger; another 30
percent are between 15 and 20. His records indicate that most were
married at 11 or 12, before menstruation. Nearly all bring with
them tales of hardship, suffering and rejection.
Safiya, 23, was in the post-op ward after living for a year in the
hut of a traditional healer who tried to cure her by stuffing potions
into her vagina. Daso, 23, said she had leaked urine and feces for
five years. Her husband divorced her.
Rumasau, 16, unluckily began labor on a Saturday, when her local
hospital had no physician for her. She had to wait until the following
Tuesday for an emergency Caesarean section - not an uncommon delay
here, Dr. Waaldijk said.
For the few who get help, fistula surgery is life-changing. Zainabu
Ado, 19, said she had leaked urine and feces for a year before coming
to Babbar Ruga.
"People ran from me, even members of my own family," she
said during an interview in Sululu, a tiny village hidden on a barely
passable dirt road across the border in Niger. "My husband
abandoned me. Nobody talked to me. Nobody visited me. For that whole
year I stayed indoors."
At an impromptu gathering this month, Ms. Ado arrived resplendent
with beaded jewelry, and her neighbors made room for her on straw
mats in the sand.
Problems linger, she said. Her husband never bothered to divorce
her, leaving her unable to remarry. She suffers a slight limp from
lingering nerve damage. But compared with a fistula, such troubles
are nits. "I am completely healed," she said, flashing
a smile.
Her village is too small to appear on any map. Yet she is neither
Sululu's first nor last fistula patient. She heard of Babbar Ruga
Hospital from a neighbor who had undergone fistula surgery there.
Ms. Ado, in turn, told Gide Gero.
Four feet 10 and nut-brown, Gide arrived at the hospital in September
and spread her mat in the corridor outside the operating room. Her
eyes were lively, her smile gap-toothed. She looked perhaps 12,
but said she was 16.
Isolation and the traditions of her Fulani tribe governed her upbringing.
She never went to school. Once she reached puberty, each suitor
was allowed to specify that a decorative design be carved in her
face as a sign of his interest.
She said she had fallen in love with one, but her grandfather had
insisted that she marry her much older cousin, whom she did not
meet till her wedding day. At 13, her grandparents decided, it was
high time that she settle down. "Two reasons," her grandmother
said in an interview. "She had started menstruating. And she
had developed breasts."
Early this July, she started labor on a bed of bound sticks covered
with a straw mat. For two days she struggled. Finally it took five
hours for two cows to pull her family's wooden cart to the nearest
hospital, 10 miles away.
There Gide labored for two more days before managing to expel a
dead baby boy. When she discovered the next day that she could not
control her urine, she said, she was dumbfounded. As a solution,
she learned to wait as long as eight hours before allowing herself
a sip of water.
Her fistula, it turned out, was a small one. Twenty minutes after
she climbed atop Dr. Waaldijk's operating table, she was stretched
out in the first bed in the recovery room, her grandmother by her
side.
"She will be fine," Dr. Waaldijk predicted. Fine, that
is, unless her next labor begins in the same village, far from medical
treatment, as is all too likely. In which case, he said, her affliction
will simply repeat itself.
"To be a woman in Africa," Dr. Waaldijk said as he stitched
her last sutures, "is truly a terrible thing."
From: http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/nigeria/index.html?inline=nyt-geo
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