Frequently Asked Questions about Obstetric Fistula

* What is obstetric fistula?
* What is the Campaign to End Fistula?
* How does fistula occur?
* Why does it occur?
* Are there other kinds of fistula?
* How widespread is it?
* Why do so few people know about fistula?
* How can fistula be prevented?
* Is treatment available?
* Are there any risks associated with fistula surgery?
* What are the medical consequences of fistula?
* Is there a connection between female genital cutting (FGC) and  fistula?
* What has the Campaign accomplished?
* Why is UNFPA spearheading this effort?

What is obstetric fistula?

Obstetric fistula is an injury of childbearing that has been relatively neglected, despite the devastating impact it has on the lives of girls and women. It is usually caused by several days of obstructed labour, without timely medical intervention — typically a Caesarean section to relieve the pressure. The consequences of fistula are life shattering: The baby usually dies, and the woman is left with chronic incontinence. Because of her inability to control her flow of urine or faeces, she is often abandoned or neglected by her husband and family and ostracized by her community. Without treatment, her prospects for work and family life are greatly diminished, and she is often left to rely on charity.

 What is the Campaign to End Fistula?

In 2003, UNFPA and its partners launched the first-ever global Campaign to End Fistula. Its overall goal is to make the condition as rare in the South as it is in the North. This includes interventions to:
* Prevent fistula from occurring.
* Treat women who are affected.
* Renew the hopes and dreams of those who suffer from the condition. This includes bringing it to the attention of policy-makers and communities, thereby reducing the stigma associated with it, and helping women who have undergone treatment return to full and productive lives.
The Campaign currently covers more than 30 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and some Arab States.
In each country, the Campaign proceeds in three phases:
* First, needs assessments are undertaken to determine the extent of the problem and the resources to treat fistula.
* Second, each country that completes a needs assessment receives financial support for planning, including raising awareness of the issue, developing appropriate national strategies and building capacity.
* Finally, a multi-year implementation phase begins, which includes interventions to prevent and treat fistula, such as improving obstetric care; training health providers; creating or expanding and equipping fistula treatment centres; and helping women reintegrate into their communities.

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How does fistula occur?

Unattended obstructed labour can last for up to six or seven days, although the foetus usually dies after two or three days. During the prolonged labour, the soft tissues of the pelvis are compressed between the descending baby's head and the mother's pelvic bone. The lack of blood flow causes tissue to die, creating a hole between the mother's vagina and bladder (known as a vesicovaginal fistula), or between the vagina and rectum (causing a rectovaginal fistula) or both. The result is a leaking of urine or faeces or both.

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Why does it occur?

Fistula occurs when emergency obstetric care is not available to women who develop complications during childbirth. This is why women living in remote rural areas with little access to medical care are at risk. Before the medical advances of the 20th Century, fistula was quite common in Europe and the United States. Today, fistula is almost unheard of in high-income countries, or in countries where obstetric care is widely available.

Fistula tells us where health systems are failing.
—Mary Nell Wagner, EngenderHealth

Poverty, malnutrition, poor health services, early marriage and gender discrimination are interlinked root causes of obstetric fistula. Poverty is the main social risk factor because it is associated with early marriage and malnutrition and because poverty reduces a woman's chances of getting timely obstetric care. Because of their low status in many communities, women often lack the power to choose when to start bearing children or where to give birth. Childbearing before the pelvis is fully developed, as well as malnutrition, small stature and general poor health, are contributing physiological factors to obstructed labour. Older women who have delivered many children are at risk as well.

 
Are there other kinds of fistula?

A young woman awaiting fistula repair surgery in Niger.
waiting

Fistulas, or holes in organs, can occur for various reasons in different parts of the body, such as the lungs or digestive tract. Tissue damage resulting from prolonged obstetric labour and resulting in incontinence is called 'obstetric fistula'. Tissue damage between the bladder and vagina is called vesicovaginal fistula. Rectovaginal fistula, which is less common, refers to damage between the rectum and vagina. Often if the rectum sustains a fistula, the bladder will also have been damaged and a woman will leak both urine and faeces.
The vaginal canal can also be ruptured by violent rape. In 2003, thousands of women in eastern Congo presented themselves for treatment of traumatic fistula caused by systematic, violent gang rape that occurred during the country's five years of war. So many cases have been reported that the destruction of the vagina is considered a war injury and recorded by doctors as a crime of combat.


How widespread is fistula?

Fistula is most common in poor communities in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia where access to or use of obstetric care is limited. Good data on fistula are scarce. In 1989, the World Health Organization estimated that more than two million women remain untreated in developing countries and that at least 50,000 to 100,000 new cases occur each year. But the secrecy and shame that surround the condition make it difficult to get a reliable estimate of its prevalence. Needs assessments done as part of the Campaign to End Fistula suggest those numbers are far too low. In fact, WHO experts have also estimated that in areas of high maternal mortality, two to three women per 1,000 pregnancies develop fistula, which would mean that the prevalence is likely much higher than the 1989 estimates.

 
Why do so few people know about fistula?

Fistula is a relatively hidden problem, largely because it affects the most marginalized members of society: young, poor, illiterate women in remote areas. Many never present themselves for treatment. Because they often suffer alone, their terrible injuries may be ignored or misunderstood. The Campaign to End Fistula is working to break the silence around this condition and the stigma attached to it.


How can fistula be prevented?

Prevention, rather than treatment, is the key to ending fistula. Making family planning available to all who want to use it would reduce maternal disability and death by at least 20 per cent. Complementing that with skilled attendance at all births and emergency obstetric care for those women who develop complications during delivery would make fistula as rare in the South as it is in the North. These interventions are part of UNFPA's overall strategy to make motherhood safer. Addressing social issues that contribute to the problem - such as early pregnancy, girls' education, poverty and women's empowerment - are important areas of intervention as well.

 
Is treatment available?

Woman from Bangladesh who was treated at the Dhaka Medical College Hospital
for fistula
.
Photo: UNFPA/Bangladesh

Yes, fistula is treatable as well as preventable. Reconstructive surgery can mend the injury, and success rates are as high as 90 per cent for uncomplicated cases. (For complicated cases, the success rate is closer to 60 per cent.) Two weeks or more of post-operative care is needed to ensure a successful outcome. Counselling and support are also important to address emotional damage and facilitate social reintegration. The average cost of fistula treatment —including surgery, post-operative care and rehabilitation support—is $300.
When surgery cannot correct the problem, women undergo a procedure called a urostomy, and they wear a bag to collect their urine. If the surgery is successful, women can resume full and productive lives. They can usually have more children, but Caesarean sections are recommended to prevent a recurrence of fistula. Sadly, most fistula sufferers are either unaware that treatment is available or cannot access or afford it. In addition, treatment capacity in most areas where fistula is common cannot meet the demand. An estimated two million women with fistula await treatment. The key to ending fistula is preventing it from occurring so this backlog of cases will not continue to grow.

 
Are there any risks associated with fistula surgery?

As with any surgery, fistula repair does carry some risk. Possible complications of fistula surgery include blockage of the urinary catheter, infection, anuria (absence of urine) and breakdown of repair, most of which can be effectively managed. In rare cases, a patient dies. The documented fatality rate for fistula surgery ranges from 0.5 to 1 per cent in sub-Saharan Africa. Careful screening and management before surgery is vital, as women with fistula tend to be malnourished and may be more susceptible to disease. Post-operative care and close long-term follow-up to manage both the surgical and medical problems that may occur is also essential.

 
What are the medical consequences of fistula?

Left untreated, fistula can lead to frequent ulcerations and infections, kidney disease and even death. Some women drink as little as possible to avoid leakage and become dehydrated. Damage to the nerves in the legs leaves some women with fistula unable to walk, and after treatment they may need extensive physical rehabilitation. These medical consequences, coupled with social and economic problems, often contribute to a general decline in health and well being that results in early death. Some commit suicide. However, many women with fistula are strong - as demonstrated by their having survived prolonged, traumatic labour - and they can live a long time. Some women have lived with the condition for 40 years or more.

 
Is there a connection between female genital cutting (FGC) and  fistula?

Female genital cutting is condemned by most governments because of its devastating consequences on women's reproductive health, and UNFPA is actively working to end the practice. Nevertheless, the practice persists in many areas where obstetric fistula is prevalent as well. Although FGC can increase the risk of haemorrhage and infection during childbirth, it is not clear whether it is typically a causal factor in the formation of fistulas. However, two fairly radical forms of FGC, the Gishiri cut, which is practiced in northern Nigeria, and infibulation, the stitching up of the vagina, can contribute directly to fistulas.

 
What has the Campaign accomplished?

The Campaign, launched in 2003, has already brought fistula to the attention of a wide audience, including the general public, policy-makers, health officials and women with fistula [see press clips]. More than $10.5 million in funding has been mobilized from a variety of donors. Activities are underway or being planned in more than 30 countries.
Highlights include:
* In Bangladesh, where some 70,000 women are living with fistula, a Fistula Repair Centre at the Dhaka Medical College has been established. The Centre will help to manage cases and train service providers in South Asia.
* In Benin, a curriculum of study on reproductive health, including fistula, has been incorporated into the major health university and other public health schools. UNFPA plans to support two major hospitals.
* In Chad, fistula treatment centres have been established at the country's two main hospitals, where some 200 women are treated each year. Advocacy activities, including national radio and television broadcasts, are changing public perceptions
* In Niger, 140 fistula repairs were performed in 2004, 600 community health workers received special training on fistula and a concert was organized to raise funds for the construction of a fistula centre in Tahoua.
* In Nigeria, the Ministry of Health has set up a special committee to develop a coordinated national response to issues identified in the needs assessment. In addition, a 'Fistula Fortnight' is planned for February 2005. Over the two-week period, some 500 women will be treated, medical professionals will receive specialized training and awareness-raising activities are planned.
* In Sudan, a national campaign was launched under the slogan "We MUST Care." UNFPA has purchased medical equipment and supplies for the Fistula Centre in Khartoum. Eight volunteer doctors manage the centre, which relies on one operating room and faces a chronic shortage of medical equipment.
* In Zambia, the Campaign is supporting the fistula repair unit at Monze Mission Hospital. Initial efforts have contributed to increased awareness of the problem, increased referrals and improved quality of care.

 
Why is UNFPA spearheading this effort?

UNFPA's long involvement in programmes to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity make it uniquely qualified to tackle the challenge of fistula. Moreover, fistula touches on nearly every aspect of UNFPA's mandate, including reproductive health and rights, gender equality and empowerment, and adolescent reproductive health. Because of the many factors that contribute directly and indirectly to fistula, addressing this issue can serve as an entry point for overall improvements in women's reproductive health and rights. At the same time, fistula is a window allowing us to see where reproductive health services are failing to safeguard women's health, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable members of society. 

 


This page last updated May 8, 2008 16:52 .