'I'd rather be blind' — the curse of obstetric fistula
KARACHI: “It is better to be blind than to suffer from obstetrical fistula,” says Razia, as she recalls the stigma and struggle of living with the condition for over a decade.
She is talking about the debilitating injury that affects women from low-income groups and makes life a living nightmare. Sustained during pregnancy or childbirth, the complication causes a hole to form between the birth canal and bladder, resulting in continuous, uncontrollable flow of urine and sometimes faeces.
Blind since childhood, Razia was married at the tender age of 14 and developed fistula soon afterwards. Years of crushing poverty and being shunned by family and friends meant that life for her was one battle after another — all because of a condition that could have been prevented, if not treated, much earlier.
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Six months into her pregnancy, Razia's husband passed away. She had nowhere to go.
"I had no in-laws, and my own family abandoned me, repulsed by my disease and because they were fearful of contracting it themselves."
Her fistula made her pregnancy difficult: with no professional assistance available in Rahim Yar Khan, and no money to pay for help, her labour lasted for almost a week. The process of childbirth further aggravated her fistula, and she lost the baby.
Five months later, Razia travelled to Karachi to seek treatment. She had heard of the free-of-charge Koohi Goth Hospital in the city's Bin Qasim town. Here, she has been able to start life anew.
Ten years and seven surgeries later, Razia is re-married; settled in the city and also the happy mother of a healthy child. She is now 25 years old.
Left incontinent
In one case of obstetric fistula — rectovaginal fistula — an abnormal connection between the large intestine and birth canal causes gas and stool to pass through the vagina.
In another sub-type, vesicovaginal fistula, the urinary tract and vagina are linked and there is continuous discharge of urine.
“When a passageway is formed between the bladder and the vagina, or the rectum and the vagina due to prolonged obstructed labour, a woman is unable to control urine, or faeces, or both,” explains Dr. Shershah Syed, a gynaecologist based in Karachi. The problem results in a foul odor that often makes people averse to coming near patients with fistula.
Dr Syed says husbands and family members often reject and abandon women with fistula because of the foul smell.
Razia has suffered both kinds of fistulas. She developed the first one when she was pregnant with her first child.
In cases like Razia’s, where the girl is young, fistula poses a greater risk because of poverty, malnutrition and the absence of maternal healthcare.
In small towns, where resources are scarce and proper sanitation is a luxury, children often develop stunting. Their skeleton and pelvis do not fully mature, which, in girls, can contribute to obstructed labour, as in the case of Razia. Her first child was stuck inside her for five days. She acknowledges the fact that, had she been able to get treatment at Koohi Goth Hospital at the time, her baby may have survived.
A refuge for the poor
Dr Shershah Syed established the Koohi Goth Hospital in 2007 to help poor women suffering from gynecological issues, particularly fistula. Since its inception, the hospital has attended to over four thousand patients.