An obstetric fistula, where a hole forms between the birth canal and the bladder or rectum, is caused by a prolonged and obstructed labour.
This internal injury can often result in babies being stillborn, and leaves their mothers physically and emotionally scarred, often for years to come.
There are three primary causes of obstetric fistula and Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia works to address.
In many low-income, rural communities, many women do not have access to skilled healthcare professionals and medical facilities. This means that if there are complications during pregnancy and labour, a woman won’t have medical attention. A woman can remain in labour for days and this prolonged and obstructed labour can result in an obstetric fistula injury.
Trained midwives can offer child-bearing women pre- and post-natal care and be on the alert for an obstructed labour or other complications, in which case they refer their patients to specialist care.
Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia operates five regional hospitals across the country, offering surgical treatment to women who are living with obstetric fistula. In addition, the Hamlin College of Midwives is training a new generation of qualified rural healthcare professionals who can prevent obstetric fistula from occurring.
Poverty can impact the health of child-bearing women in several ways. A lack of food, or a poor diet, leads to malnutrition and weakens a woman’s overall physical health and wellbeing.
Living below the poverty line means families do not have the money to pay for healthcare, or the often-sizeable costs of travelling. Poverty is also accompanied by inadequate housing, water and sanitation, which all impact health outcomes.
Hamlin’s Desta Mender Rehabilitation and Reintegration Centre offers women with complex fistula injuries long-term care, but also prepares women for returning home. Patients are offered counselling, literacy and numeracy classes, as well as vocational and life skills training.
The Hamlin team helps women find sustainable employment which, in some cases, includes start-up grants so they can establish their own business to generate an income.
Low levels of education, particularly in healthcare matters, can leave women unaware that the childbirth injuries they have experienced can be treated.
Without an understanding of the complication and its causes, a woman is frequently blamed for her condition. Survivors are often subject to severe social stigma due to their smell, perceptions of uncleanliness, a mistaken assumption of venereal disease and, in some cases, infertility.
Obstetric fistula often leaves women trapped in a life of pain, shame, and isolation. Hamlin’s Project Zero team is using a woreda (district) by woreda approach to finding women living with obstetric fistula and organising care and treatment.