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Abandoning women who have
babies in poor, hot places:
Women with obstetric fistula are abandoned by their husbands due
to the embarrassing incontinence
February 24, 2006.- (Daily Times)-In Pakistan an overwhelming number
of women are facing obstetric complications during pregnancy and
only one in twenty women with complications have access to emergency
care.The country has one of the highest maternal mortality rates
across the globe as three women die every hour in Pakistan from
causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.This was stated by gynaecologists
at a seminar on 'Prevention and Treatment of post-partum complications
(Fistula) in Pakistan' organized jointly by the United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) in collaboration with the Pakistan National Forum on
Women's Health (PNFWH) at PMA House on Thursday.
Presentations were made by Prof Majeed Memon, Hamdard
Medical University, Dr. Shershah Syed, Dow University of Health
Sciences and Civil Hospital, Dr. Riffat Sultana Qatar Hospital,
Dr. Nighar Shah of Murshid Hospital, Dr. Samrina Hashmi, Noor Hospital,
Dr. Shaheen Zafar of Liaquat National Hospital and Dr. Aziz Abdullah
of LNH.Dr. Riffat Sultana of Qatar Hospital said that if women are
not cared for during pregnancy and have complications at the time
of delivery they can be left physically disabled for life.
One of the acute disabilities is fistula, termed by
some international agencies as the most devastating of all childbirth
injuries. An obstetric fistula develops when blood supply to the
tissues of the vagina and the bladder (and/or rectum) is cut off
during prolonged obstructed labor. The tissues die and a hole forms
through which urine and/or feces pass uncontrollably. Women who
develop fistulas are often abandoned by their husbands, rejected
by their communities, and forced to live an isolated existence.Such
women are sometimes abandoned by their family members, especially
spouses, are rejected by their communities and forced to live an
isolated existence. While accurate data is scarce, according to
the UN, an estimated 4,000 to 5000 new cases of fistula occur in
Pakistan each year. The problem appears to be particularly acute
in the country's remote regions. Ninety-nine percent of fistula
cases were reported from rural areas because women didn't have access
to prompt healthcare. All fistula cases are avoidable and more than
90 percent are treatable if pregnant women are well taken care by
their family members and provided immediate medical treatment after
experiencing labour pains. According to Dr. Nighat Shah of Murshid
Hospital some women with fistula are forced to take up begging or
prostitution.
According to the Fistula Foundation, more than two
million women live with fistula. Eradicated in western countries
at the end of the 19th century when the cesarean section became
widely available, obstetric fistula continues to plague women throughout
the developing world. It is estimated that there are 100,000 new
fistula cases each year, but the international capacity to treat
fistula remains at only 6,500 per year. The United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) estimates the world's population of fistula sufferers
at more than two million.
From: URL: http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006%5C02%5C24%5Cstory_24-2-2006_pg7_51
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