What $300 can do. (Pregnancy issues).

Pure

Fiel a Verdad
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Dec 20, 2001
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http://www.theroot.com/id/46561
What $300 Can Do

By Veronica Chambers | TheRoot.com


May 19, 2008--Last year, when I gave birth to my daughter and then experienced a range of complications that rivaled a plot line from the television show "House," I was shocked that such a thing was possible. Upon my release from the hospital, my doctor came to me and said, "Half a million women die every year from childbirth and its related complications. You were almost one of them."

Even then, I thought he must have been exaggerating. How can it be, in this day and age, that 500,000 women a year die in childbirth? But it's true. The World Health Organization estimates that 1,600 women die every day from complications in pregnancy and childbirth, bringing the annual total to over 580,000. And that doesn't include thousands more women who face serious complications from childbirth that have devastating effects on their lives.

Among the most serious life-threatening conditions related to childbirth is fistula, a serious vaginal rupture caused by prolonged, obstructed labor. In the U.S. and Europe, fistula has been almost eradicated. New York's famous Waldorf-Astoria Hotel stands on the grounds of what was the first fistula hospital in the world. It opened in 1857 and closed its doors in 1895; fistula has not been a maternal health issue in North America for over 100 years.

But the condition is still common in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and the Middle East. In the countries where it is still prevalent, lack of medical equipment and expertise can escalate an obstructed labor into a medical emergency. Sometimes the labor lasts for days at a time. The resulting delivery causes a rupture between the vagina and bladder or the vagina and rectum. Those who survive face ongoing indescribable pain and incapacitating leakage of urine and feces that renders them modern-day lepers in their communities. And in almost every case, the woman loses her baby.

It is believed that 2 million women are living with fistula in the world today. Sarah Omega Kidangasi was one of them. She was a 19-year-old Kenyan schoolgirl when she became pregnant as the result of rape. Like many fistula victims, she lived in a small village, far away from a hospital with the equipment and personnel to deal with a complicated pregnancy.

"Due to the distance, I was late to reaching the health facility," said Sarah, now 31. "I'd been laboring for 18 hours. It was unfortunate, in that village, they were lacking some of the equipment. I was transferred to another facility, a mission hospital, and I gave birth to a stillborn baby boy who weighed 4.8 kilograms [10.6 pounds]. Three days later, I was leaking urine, and I realized that I had developed fistula. I stayed in the hospital for two months, and I was discharged in the same condition."

Sarah's ordeal began in earnest when she returned to her village, where the leaking made her an outcast. This triple punishment of losing a child, living with a hole between her vagina and bladder and being isolated from her community is common, according to Kate Ramsey, global coordinator of the U.N.'s campaign to end fistula, which is now active in 45 countries. "In some countries, there's a misperception that women did something wrong, that she was adulterous," says Ramsey.

Fistula typically affects women who are the least prepared to cope with such an illness. It occurs most frequently in first pregnancies where the mothers are young. And because of the cultural climate of the countries in which it is most prevalent, it also often occurs in arranged marriages where the man is much older and the bond between the husband and wife is weak. In these cultures, when a woman cannot bear children, her status in the marriage and in the community is immediately lowered.

If a woman is the victim of rape, as Sarah was, or is rejected by her husband, the woman's birth family will bring her back to the household. But even then, the woman is set apart. "Many of these households are quite small, and the smell of the urine can be quite overwhelming," says Ramsey. "Caring for a fistula patient can be difficult even for loving family members. She can't participate in normal daily life, she can't cook, or farm or fetch water—she's considered unclean. In some families, she can't pray or eat with the family because she's considered unclean."

Sarah had been living with fistula for 12 years when the pressure of her situation began to consume her, "I suffered rejection, isolation. I lived the lonely life," she said. "Life with fistula traps you. It makes it impossible for you to interact with others. I was suffering from depression. Many times, I considered suicide."

In 2007, Sarah was taken to a teaching hospital by a neighbor where she received psychiatric support and corrective surgery. Fistula repair is actually a straightforward surgery that has been done in the U.S. and Europe for years. But after Sarah lost her child and suffered fistula, her local hospital told her there was no remedy.

Like Sarah, many victims of fistula are young and victims of rape. Girls under the age of 15 are five times as likely to die in childbirth or suffer a complication such as fistula than are women in their 20s.

"In a lot of the countries we're working in, women have such low
status," said Ramsey, who added that the reason there is not more of a global awareness of the condition is that it affects women who don't have a voice in their communities and countries. "When we make the procedure available and provide transportation," she said, "the women come out in droves. In one country we visited—I'd rather not say which one—the doctors said, 'We don't have fistula anymore.' But the centers were built, and women came forward. One woman gets the surgery, she goes home and seven more women from her village come."

What is stunning is that the cost of fistula surgery and the rehabilitative care is only $300. However, to put that sum into context, in Sarah Kidangasi[P2] 's Kenyan village, the average family makes less than a dollar a day. Since 2003, the U.N. campaign to eradicate fistula has raised more than $25 million and improved the lives of millions of women in the process. "The surgery really changed my life," said Sarah. "That was the moment I could offer a genuine smile."

These days, Sarah hopes to have the life that was denied to her, first by rape and then by fistula. "I hope to get married and have more children," she said. For now, she is focused on spreading the message about fistula and getting maternal care on the international health agenda—no small matter given the way that fistula, an uncomfortable subject to discuss under the best of circumstances, intersects with gender issues in developing nations.

For Sarah to even tell her story is a political act. Talking with The Root was her first American media experience. This week she will tell her story to members of Congress to further raise awareness about the condition that has dominated her life and that of millions of other women. "I'm going beyond our African culture and tradition, going public and telling my story, so that the victims know that there's help," she said. "Fistula can be repaired."

For more information about how to help women like Sarah receive this life-changing surgery, please contact One by One.

http://www.fightfistula.org/

If you're in Washington, DC, here are the events where Sarah will be appearing this week.
 
Wow, thank you for posting this. I'm pretty up on women's health issues, but had somehow missed this one.
 
Something else for the usual suspects to feel guilty about.
 
just a worthy cause jbj. each of us who are fortunate should pick a couple. :rose:
 
PURE

What I do is help an individual with a problem I can remedy. Like a school kid who needs decent clothes or a family needing a motel and meal for the night.

What I dont do is send money to poverty pimps.
 
PURE

What I do is help an individual with a problem I can remedy. Like a school kid who needs decent clothes or a family needing a motel and meal for the night.

What I dont do is send money to poverty pimps.

This isn't just a poverty issue. Having come VERY close to experiencing this problem myself, I know that for a fact. Even with a lower middle class income, with all the other complications of my births, it's taken literally years to pay off the medical debts caused by childbirth. This is not something to be belittled.

Maeve
(who also doesn't send money to large organisations)
 
You remind me of the person who does like whats for dinner and bitches cause theyre hungry.

Dont get pregant doofus.
 
STELLA Maybe, but I dont have a sexual identity disorder.
 
Lotsa people here are confused. So youre in good company and will feel at home.
 
PURE

What I do is help an individual with a problem I can remedy. Like a school kid who needs decent clothes or a family needing a motel and meal for the night.

What I dont do is send money to poverty pimps.

I dunno about the poverty pimps thing, but I'm more the kinda' guy who says, "yeah, this is happening over in that country but is rare in this country and that one. I'm more concerned about the kid with leukemia whose face is on the can at the corner store, given that he's living right down that street and all, and he's only six." I'd love to save the world and to help everyone. All I can do for now is pitch what I have in the can and hope it helps.

That's what I do.

Q_C
 
TRULYRED BEAUTY

Your sentiment is the motto of this board.

E PLURIBUS UNIM, SEMPER FIDELIS? "No need to deliberately add to confusion though, is there?"
 
QUIET COOL

It helps the Indians at the pledge call center, it helps the has-been celebrity who pimps the problem, and it helps the fat cat who dreamed up the con to get your money.
 
Get the odd impression, Truly, that these two are carrying on an already started, and most likely long-running, topic amongst themselves?

Q_C
That would be the wrong impression, in fact. Sure, james's bizzare conversational turns are of long standing-- practically since the day he showed up-- but I don't converse with him about them. Nothing could be more pointless.

As far as the topic goes, though-- fistulas happen a lot. Not only between the vagina and the bladder, but between the vagina and the rectum. So much for intelligent design...

As for charities, I'm pretty much in agreement with JBJ on that. It's very frustrating, to compute the twenty cents out of your dollar that actually go to help instead of paying salaries.
 
any evidence this is a con, jbj?

there are lots of greedy, ill run, so called 'charities', no doubt. many have huge overhead, or pay commisions. so i prefer the smaller ones. :rose:
 
I donate to "Doctors without borders" and I used to do volunteer office work for them. I'm thinking about habitat for Humanity, now that my kids are old enough to A: live without mommy, and B: swing a hammer themselves.
 
As for charities, I'm pretty much in agreement with JBJ on that. It's very frustrating, to compute the twenty cents out of your dollar that actually go to help instead of paying salaries.

And why should I feel I need to pay when Paris Hilton (and her socialite ilk) just threw down tons of dinero on another useless Balenciaga or Birkin bag that costs more than I pay for my monthly rent which she'll tote out twice this year during photo ops for equally useless celebrity magazines?

I have compassion on top of compassion for people's sufferings in the world and would help if my wallet overflowed like the Ganges, but for fuck's sake...WE are not the ones who need to be proselytized to here!
 
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And why should I feel I need to pay when Paris Hilton (and her socialite ilk) just threw down tons of dinero on another useless Balenciaga or Birkin bag that costs more than I pay for my monthly rent which she'll tote out twice this year during photo ops for equally useless celebrity magazines?

I have compassion on top of compassion for people's sufferings in the world and would help if my wallet overflowed like the Ganges, but for fuck's sake...WE are not the ones who need to be proselytized to here!
Yeah, resenting the haves when one has not. I keyed a Porsche once-- knowing who the owner was.

I don't have money, but I do have some time...
 
stella,

i think drs with borders is an excellent group. also habitat.

i'm sorry this thread had become a dumping ground for some people's hatred of 'organized charities' and 'liberals' and 'do gooders' and-- what was it-- 'poverty pimps'.

guys--those of you to whom this applies--take your generalized rants that dont specifically pertain to this thread to your own thread: "why i hate the salvation army."

==
stella I donate to "Doctors without borders" and I used to do volunteer office work for them. I'm thinking about habitat for Humanity, now that my kids are old enough to A: live without mommy, and B: swing a hammer themselves.
 
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Thanks for posting this. Either I hadn't heard about the problem or I'd forgotten. Very interesting.
 
i think drs with borders is an excellent group. also habitat.

i'm sorry this thread had become a dumping ground for some people's hatred of 'organized charities' and 'liberals' and 'do gooders' and-- what was it-- 'poverty pimps'.
YOu got the message out there, anyway. Some people will get it, some won't agree, some will try to make it all about them.
 
i think drs with borders is an excellent group. also habitat.

i'm sorry this thread had become a dumping ground for some people's hatred of 'organized charities' and 'liberals' and 'do gooders' and-- what was it-- 'poverty pimps'.

Don't think you're special, Pure.

The sun coming up makes the usual suspects start ranting about those things. ;)
 
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