Publisher's Synopsis
"'This is a terrible illness. I thought I should kill myself. You can't walk with people or travel. You can't sleep comfortably or eat well. You can't work because you are constantly in pain. You are always sad because you stain everything and you smell,' a 33-year-old woman who had lived with obstetric fistula for 17 years told Human Rights Watch. Obstetric fistula is a preventable and treatable debilitating childbirth injury that leaves its victims constantly leaking urine and feces. Thousands of women and girls unnecessarily get fistula each year in Kenya, while many more are living with untreated fistula. This happens because of government failure to provide sufficient and well resourced health facilities with the capacity to handle obstetric complications, to inform women that their condition can be treated, and the high cost of fistula repair. The Kenya government has taken some positive steps to make pregnancy and childbirth safe