Public Agenda (Accra)
Baba Kofi Yaro
10 July 2009
Bolgatanga — Ten women suffering from Obstetric Fistula, have successfully undergone reconstructive surgery in the Bolgatanga Hospital to correct their condition.
Obstetric Fistula a severe medical condition, is a hole created between the vagina and anus or the bladder, it happens to women who undergo difficult prolonged labour during delivery when the pressure of the baby tears some tissues and creates a hole that leaks urine or faeces, thereby giving their victims a bad odour.
The condition, which is said to be the most devastating of all child bearing problems, can get so bad that the women are shunned by their neighbours and sometimes divorced by their husbands and unable to do any activity that involves other people because nobody wants to get near them.
Dr. Peter Baffoe, a Gynecologist at the Bolgatanga hospital who performed the surgeries said over one hundred such cases had been identified in the Upper East Region and about 30 operated upon with a success rate of 70 per cent.
He said some of the cases were old conditions, the women had the problem for more than 15 years, and that made it more difficult to correct successfully.
He said even though the treatment was covered under the NHIS, the women were too poor to register and so many of the operations done so far were being sponsored by the UNFPA and Pathfinder International-Ghana, an NGO that works to improve the Reproductive health of women, men and adolescents throughout the developing world.
The treatment for one woman cost at least 250 Ghana Cedis.
The women were also presented with 200 Ghana Cedis each, by Pathfinder, which sponsored the operations, to help them undertake small scale income generating activities that would facilitate their reintegration in their various communities.
Mr. Moses L. Nanang, Reproductive Programme Manager, Pathfinder, explained that the Organisation trained staff of Ghana Health Service to reach out into the communities to identify women with fistula and encourage them to come for treatment.
He appealed to family members and communities of fistula victims not to shun or stigmatize them, but rather show them love and understanding and support them to seek medical care as early as possible.
Dr. James Akpablie, Upper East Deputy Regional Director of Health Services noted that many of the women who suffered from Fistula were teenagers and appealed to men and Chiefs in the region to discourage early marriages, because it exposed the girls to a lot of health problems. He said 14 per cent of all pregnancies in the region were teenagers.
He said the Regional Health Directorate was increasing the number of CHIPS compounds in the communities, nurses living with the people in rural communities so that majority of deliveries would be supervised by trained personnel who would also refer difficult cases to hospitals in good time.
He said prevention was the best and urged all pregnant women to go to trained Health Personnel for delivery as that was free of charge.
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