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Fight Fistula! Campaign

Country

Ethiopia

Region

Africa

Programme Summary

The Fight Fistula! Campaign, initiated under the German Foundation for World Population’s (DSW) Youth-to-Youth programme, intends to reach both men and women in East and West Gojam in Ethiopia. The project uses trained nurses and former fistula sufferers, who are trained as peer educators, to reach people in the region with reproductive heath information and improved health facilities. The project involves home-to-home visits, peer-to-peer learning in youth clubs, and mass edutainment.

Communication Strategies

As the campaign is based on the idea that prevention is the key to fighting fistula, the campaign’s main strategies are to promote awareness of fistula and improve family planning services. The organisers believe that peer-to-peer communication, supported by the provision of good health services, can be an effective way to encourage young women to take control of their sexual and reproductive health, thereby preventing incidences of fistula.


The campaign uses peer education as a means to engage young people and trains former fistula sufferers to conduct home visits and raise awareness about reproductive health issues through youth clubs. At the same time, the training of former fistula patients aims to assist in their reintegration, helps reduce stigma by normalising the condition, and gives other members of the youth clubs the opportunity to talk openly with someone who understands their concerns and experiences.

As part of the project, DSW is also working to increase the organisational and management capacity of 15 youth clubs that focus on young women. This includes establishing a referral system between youth clubs and health facilities to help improve access to reproductive health services. Local nurses, who have been trained on the treatment of fistula, liaise with the youth clubs, provide counselling services, and educate the community, notably parents and religious leaders, about topics linked to the prevention and treatment of fistula.


Through the mass edutainment aspect of the campaign, the project aims to engage a more diverse and wider audience than can be reached through the youth clubs. According to the organisers, the youth clubs are using folk media methods - including music, dance and drama - to promote social values, raise awareness, disseminate information, provide role models, and encourage positive attitudes and behaviour change.

Development Issues

Women, Reproductive Health, Maternal Health, Youth

Key Points

Fistula is a childbirth injury that leaves women incontinent, ashamed, and ostracised from society. An obstetric fistula is a hole, caused by prolonged obstructed labour, leading to damages to the tissues of the vagina, the bladder, and rectum. Apart from leaving women incontinent, they may also suffer nerve damage to lower extremities after prolonged labour in a squatting position and significant emotional damage from both the death of the baby, which happens in most cases, and the stigma that accompanies fistula.

DSW says that in Ethiopia alone, there are an estimated 100,000 women suffering with untreated fistula, either due to lack of awareness or shame derived from social stigma. Each year, another 9,000 women develop fistula, representing the highest prevalence of fistula world-wide. Fistula occurs disproportionately among impoverished girls and women, especially those living far from medical services. According to the organisers, the campaign aims to reach an estimated half a million people in the region.

Partners

Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital and DSW.

Contact

Pamela Foster
Director Development Programmes
German Foundation for World Population (DSW) - Uganda Office

P. O. Box 33 900

Kampala
Uganda
Tel: +256 414 200 801
Fax: +256 414 200 815

Source


Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site May 06 2008
Last Updated May 06 2008

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