Phebe Hospital and UNFPA Launch Mass Fistula Surgery Campaign

Health

Phebe Hospital and UNFPA Launch Mass Fistula Surgery Campaign

IPNEWS – With support from the EU-funded Spotlight Initiative, Phebe Hospital and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) have begun a two-week campaign to treat women and girls with fistula in Liberia. 

Fistula is an injury caused to pregnant women and girls who remained in labor for a long time without the help of a skilled birth attendant. It causes these women to leak urine or feces (peepee or poopoo). 

A team of local and expatriate medical doctors, including Dr. Ambereen Sleemi from the US-based International Medical Response (IMR), is treating more than 20 women and girls with fistulae at the Phebe Hospital in Suakoko, Bong County. 

According to the Medical Director of Phebe Hospital, Dr. Jefferson Sibley, these fistula survivors are from various parts of the country. 

Speaking on Wednesday, 22 June, at the start of the campaign in Phebe, Bong County, Dr. Sibley said it was unacceptable for women to go birth and come out with childbearing injuries that threaten their survival. 

He stressed the need for comprehensive support for fistula survivors in Liberia, including surgery, rehabilitation through psychosocial counseling, skills training, and social reintegration. 

Also Speaking, Bong County Health Officer Dr. Cynthia Blapooh said women with fistula endure enormous psychological and social trauma and must be empowered to reclaim their place in society.

Fistula survivors awaiting treatment

Meanwhile, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has called for substantial efforts to end obstetric fistula in Liberia.

UNFPA Sexual and Reproductive Health Specialist Ms. Woseh Gobeh-Weah, said: “correcting myths and misconceptions about fistula and providing accurate information about its causes and cure can help prevent it from occurring, encourage compassion for those who endure it and lessen the stigma that is often associated with the condition.” 

According to her, the key to ending fistula is to prevent it from happening in the first place. “The prevention of fistula is only possible when women have access to quality maternal health care services, including family planning, skilled attendance at the birth of their babies, and emergency obstetric care,” The UNFPA Liberia Reproductive Health Specialist said.

Ms. Gobeh-Weah reaffirmed UNFPA’s commitment to continue supporting the Ministry of Health and its efforts to strengthen Liberia’s maternal and newborn health system.

She used the occasion to thank the European Union for its support in delivering health and rights to women and girls in Liberia

The EU-funded Spotlight Initiative is a multi-year partnership between the European Union and the United Nations to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls.

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