THISDAY

Nigeria Records 12,000 New Cases of Obstetric Fistula Yearly

- Martins Ifijeh

At least, 12,000 new cases of obstetric fistula are recorded among Nigerian women every year, with majority of the victims not knowing there exist free surgical treatment for the health condition, a Clinical Associate, Fistula Care Plus, Dr. Suleiman Zakariya, has said. He noted that more worrisome was that only about 5,000 cases were being surgically repaired yearly, thereby creating a backlog of 7,000 victims per year, who are either not aware there exist surgical interventi­ons that can correct the health issue or are unaware there were centres for free treatment.

Speaking during a Media Roundtable Discussion on Fistula, organised by the Fistula Care Plus Project recently in Abakaliki, he said overall, about 150,000 women were living with the condition, with its most vulnerable group being the young, poor, illiterate and rural women who are economical­ly disadvanta­ged.

“A prolonged obstructed labour is the single most causal factor for Obstetric Fistula, but there are other factors, like female genital mutilation, surgeries, among others,” he said. Adding that, “communitie­s should stop associatin­g the problem with witchcraft or other myths.

“Ultimately, the best way out of it is prevention, through attending regular antenatal care, zero practise of FGM, good and proper nutrition during upbringing of a female child as well as during pregnancy, and through awareness campaigns,” Zakariya noted.

On his part, the Chief Medical Director, National Obstetric Fistula Centre (NOFIC), Abakaliki, Dr. Sunday Adeoye, decried that despite Federal Government’s gesture of providing free surgeries for women living with fistula in the country, there remains apathy among the victims in coming forward for treatment, as majority of them were unaware there exist cures for their ailments.

He called on various state government­s, organisati­ons and communitie­s to sensitise Nigerians on the need for women suffering the health condition in silence to come out and access treatment.

“In Abakaliki here, the surgery is totally free. So, women do not need to suffer in silence, as the government has put interventi­ons in place to address it. They should take advantage of this gesture because out there, we hear of fistula tourists (doctors who claim to do fistula repairs) collecting huge amount from victims, when as a matter of fact it is free here with the best experts available in the country.”

Adeoye, whose Centre has done 2,287 fistula repairs with 84 per cent success rate since inception in 2008, said they were growing into a centre of excellence in fistula prevention, treatment and management in the country, adding that the centre was providing ancillary services in prolapse treatment and cancer care as well.

According to the Reproducti­ve Health/Family Planning Advisor, Engender Health, Mrs. Jumoke Adekogba, who spoke on ‘Safe Motherhood, Importance of Hospital Delivery, ANC, Family Planning/Methods’, she said every woman was at risk of complicati­ons during pregnancy and delivery, but that principles of safe motherhood must be imbibed to overcome complicati­ons.

She said, “Every minute, a woman dies from pregnancyr­elated problems, and for every woman who dies, 30 to 50 of them suffer injury, infection, or disease. Pregnancy-related complicati­ons are among the leading causes of death and disability for women aged 15-49 in developing countries.”

She stressed the importance of hospital delivery, antenatal care and uptake of family planning methods as measures that can reverse the trend. She identified the following, among others; lack of skilled birth attendants, inadequate preparatio­n for childbirth and lack of family planning as major factors in birth complicati­ons, including fistula.

The Executive Director, Daughters of Virtue and Empowermen­t Initiative (DOVENET), Mrs. Ugo Nnachi, during her presentati­on, showcased the work her organisati­on had done and was still doing in Ebonyi State to prevent and help treat fistula.

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