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Friday, August 13, 2010

A tragedy that doesn't have to happen...


Kano -- Nineteen-year-old Maryam Audu became pregnant in 2006. She was in labor for three days at home with a traditional birth attendant because her mother had no money to take her to hospital. She had a stillbirth, and later discovered that her body was painfully damaged. Maryam, not her real name, had a fistula, a severe childbirth injury that leaves its victims constantly leaking urine and feces. As a result, she was shunned and abused by former friends and others in her community. She could not leave home for social events, to look for work or even to go to the mosque. She became depressed and contemplated suicide.

She was just one of the more than 500 women and girls in the North who suffere from obstetric fistula. Unless it is surgically repaired, it ruins their lives. With the G-8 planning to discuss maternal health at its summit meeting this week in Canada, I can't help but think of how these girls' and women's lives would not have been torn apart if they had access to appropriate health care, including family planning services, at the time of their pregnancy and childbirth.

--
AMIHIN INTERNATIONAL.
Giving mothers and newborns a surviving Chance!
amihn2000@gmail.com

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