An estimated 1 million women across Africa and Asia live with an obstetric fistula, a severe birthing injury, according to the Fistula Foundation. The injury is caused by obstructed, often dayslong labor during childbirth. Fistula leaves a birthing mother with holes between her vagina and bladder or rectum, causing incontinence. Babies born to women with the condition rarely survive.
Poor women with fistulas can’t afford corrective surgery, or even address incontinence, says Kate Grant, chief executive of the Fistula Foundation. These women are often pushed out of their communities because of their poor hygiene and are sometimes believed to be cursed, Grant says.
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