Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Laparoscop­ic repair brings relief for humiliatin­g ailment

Kalubowila Hospital dispels misery of women who have suffered damage from bungled surgeries

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

It had been a living hell for them – unable to do their daily chores or their jobs and even unable to go out of their homes, terrified that others would get an inkling of what was ailing them.

Suffering in silence and shame, these women, along with their families, had hit rock-bottom physically, mentally and emotionall­y. They had also scraped bare the precious family budget not only going from this hospital to that hoping against hope that they will get cured but also spending on expensive adult pampers which had become a necessity.

After the long agony, now they are all smiles, for their embarrassi­ng ailment has been cured at the Colombo South ( Kalubowila) Teaching Hospital by Consultant Obstetrici­an and Gynaecolog­ist Dr. Dhammike Silva and his team.

These women’s secret shame has been vesico- vaginal fistulae which had caused urinary incontinen­ce without a moment’s respite, after they had under- gone hysterecto­mies awhile ago -- and there are numerous women from across the country still leading miserable lives, unaware that there is succour at the Kalubowila Hospital.

Skilful Dr. Silva, a laparoscop­ic or keyhole surgery expert, has provided these hapless women a solution -- a laparoscop­ic vesico- vaginal fistula repair without undergoing major surgery.

“Mata anduna,” says a respected teacher, 47- year- old Dhammika Wijesooriy­a from Rattota in Matale, explaining that she wept when Dr. Silva reassured her that he could heal her.

We meet her first in the Professori­al Unit before she undergoes the procedure at the Kalubowila Hospital and then see her later on the operating table.

All the women we speak to have similar histories. All have undergone hysterecto­mies ( womb removal) after which they have been assailed by vesico-vaginal fistulae.

A mother of three children in the age range 19 to 12, Dhammika had in October 2017 undergone a hysterecto­my. The trouble started soon after -- urinary seepage all the time, being on catheters for a long period and finally being told that she would have to “live” with that condition forever and being in adult pampers.

The first time we meet her, worry lines mar her beauty -- she does not know how to get more pampers because her husband is not able to travel to Colombo very often, while she is awaiting the laparoscop­ic repair.

Pampers have been her mainstay, essential to hold the urine from seeping down her legs and wetting her clothes.

“Mama godak peeda vinda,” she says, appreciati­ve of her husband for being her pillar of strength through thick and thin.

A Sinhala teacher, she had been an active participan­t in all school matters – usually leaving home about 6.30 in the morning and returning only about 6 in the evening. Then came the hysterecto­my and life changed.

As the incontinen­ce was there every minute of the day, she had to appeal to the school authoritie­s to get her students to come to the ground floor as she could not climb the stairs. “Imagine hilly Rattota and the inclines everywhere,” she says in dismay.

Across the short wall of the same ward of the Kalubowila Hospital, 50-year-old N.M. Ran Menika, a mother of four children, from Dehiattaka­ndiya is all smiles. After a year of agony, she is free of a

debilitati­ng and embarrassi­ng problem.

It was about a year ago that her womb was removed and three days later nikamma choo yanna patan gaththa. For 365 days, she battled this very personal and humiliatin­g problem. From Dehiattaka­ndiya where her home is, here and there she was sent, long hours on buses, hanging around hospitals but to no avail.

Avuruddak duk vinda. Hari giye ne, she says explaining that a year passed and nothing happened, even though many assured her that oka erila yayi (it will be alright).

But now, the smiles are evocative as Ran Menika says den hondai ( now I’m good) after the repair. She is back in the fields helping her husband.

We see the skilful repair of Dhammika’s vesico-vaginal fistula by Dr. Silva during a Pre-congress Workshop of the Annual Scientific Congress of the Sri Lanka College of Obstetrici­ans & Gynaecolog­ists.

On the second floor OT table of the Kalubowila Hospital was Dhammika, while clear images and succinct explanatio­ns were relayed to the seventh floor auditorium where foreign and local doc- tors were gathered to witness it.

Now Dhammika is home. Both Dhammika and Ran Menika represent only the tip of the iceberg of the numerous women who are suffering in silence every moment of the day.

On the phone, we hear a horror story from a 46-year-old in Galle who was cut open to remove an ovarian cyst. Not only had her abdomen been a scarred wreck but the very sensitive trigone ( the smooth triangular region of the internal urinary bladder formed by the two ureteric orifices and the internal urethral orifice) had been severely damaged. Sangili Maria, 41, from Madinnagod­a faced a similar ordeal after a hysterecto­my which left her work- life packeting pepper and cinnamon in shambles and her income dropping to zero. It is after the repair that she is getting back on her feet again.

Kalubowila Hospital has given them an answer to their agonising ailment and a reason to live after repairing the devastatin­g damage to their bodies.

The woman from Galle, after her ninehour repair last year speaks for them all: “Raththaran” Dr. Dhammike did not just heal us, he boosted our morale and reinforced us to think positively.

 ??  ?? N.M. Ran Menika from Dehiattaka­ndiya
N.M. Ran Menika from Dehiattaka­ndiya
 ??  ?? Dhammika Wijesooriy­a from Rattota. Pix by Amila Gamage and M.A. Pushpa Kumara
Dhammika Wijesooriy­a from Rattota. Pix by Amila Gamage and M.A. Pushpa Kumara

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