Abstract

Obstetric fistula is a neglected public health and human rights issue. It occurs almost exclusively in low‐resource regions, resulting in permanent urinary and/or fecal incontinence. Although the exact prevalence remains unknown, it starkly outweighs the limited pool of skilled fistula surgeons needed to repair this childbirth injury. Several global movements have, however, enabled the international community to make major strides in recent decades. FIGO's Fistula Surgery Training Initiative, launched in 2012, has made significant gains in building the capacity of local fistula surgeons to steadily close the fistula treatment gap. Training and education are delivered via FIGO and partners’ Global Competency‐based Fistula Surgery Training Manual and tailored toward the needs and skill level of each trainee surgeon (FIGO Fellow). There are currently 62 Fellows from 22 fistula‐affected countries on the training program, who have collectively performed over 10 000 surgical repairs. The initiative also contributes to the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (1, 3, 5, 8, 10, and 17). The UN's ambitious target to end fistula by 2030 will be unobtainable unless sufficient resources are mobilized and affected countries are empowered to develop their own sustainable eradication plans, including access to safe delivery and emergency obstetric services.

Highlights

  • Obstetric fistula, caused by unrelieved obstructed labor, results in a hole between the vagina and the bladder and/or rectum

  • While these efforts have been invaluable in putting obstetric fistula on the global health agenda, a systematic and standardized training approach was still required to train the generation of competent fistula surgeons and to meet the treatment gap

  • After introducing the new Training Manual in workshops to more than 50 fistula surgeons and trainers in Africa and Asia, five busy, well-­ functioning fistula treatment facilities were identified as FIGO Training Centers in Ethiopia, Tanzania, Kenya, and Nigeria

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Obstetric fistula, caused by unrelieved obstructed labor, results in a hole between the vagina and the bladder and/or rectum. It is estimated that around two million women and girls in 60 under-­resourced countries currently live with a fistula and that between 50 000 and 100 000 new cases develop each year.[7]. The main curative treatment remains corrective surgery; due to a global shortage of fistula surgeons, current treatment rates indicate that only one woman in 50 receives a fistula repair.[8]. While these efforts have been invaluable in putting obstetric fistula on the global health agenda, a systematic and standardized training approach was still required to train the generation of competent fistula surgeons and to meet the treatment gap. FIGO (the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics), together with partners identified this need and decided to act

| BACKGROUND
| CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call