Tadias Magazine
By Tseday Alehegn
Updated: Tuesday, October 13, 2009
New York (TADIAS) – “It is the oldest medical cause in the world. There is currency dug out of pyramids containing images of fistula, yet in the 21st century it is the most neglected cause,” Dr. Catherine Hamlin tells us. While the last American hospital for fistula patients closed its doors in 1895, the first one of its kind opened almost 8 decades later in Ethiopia. Since its inception in 1974, the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital founded by Dr. Reginald and Catherine Hamlin has treated over 25,000 women, the majority of whom have been cured and have returned to their villages to live healthy, normal lives.
Obstetric fistula is a childbirth injury that affects one out of every 12 women in Africa and approximately three million women worldwide. In developing nations where access to hospitals in remote areas are difficult to find, young women suffer from obstructive labor which can otherwise be successfully alleviated with adequate medical support. Unassisted labor in such conditions may lead to bladder, vaginal, and rectum injuries that incapacitate and stigmatize these women. Most patients are ousted from their homes and isolated from their communities.
Until her journey to Ethiopia, Dr. Catherine Hamlin, a gynecologist and a native of Australia, noted “we had read in our textbooks about obstetric fistula but had never seen one.” After arriving in Ethiopia with her husband, she was warned by a colleague “the fistula patients will break your heart.”
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“When we first arrived we were rather taken with the country because we saw our eucalyptus trees,” Dr. Catherine Hamlin recounts. “I come from Australia and I felt very much at home straight away because the scenery seemed very familiar to us. Of course the people were different but we got a really warm welcome so we didn’t really have culture shock.” She described their professional environment as one were they “worked in a hospital with other physicians who were trained in Beirut and London.” However as the only two gynecologists on staff they found it difficult to get away even for a weekend. For the first 10 years of their work with the hospital Reginald and Catherine took weekend breaks at alternate times so as to have at least one gynecologist on call at all times, barely managing to take a month off each year to travel to the coast in Kenya. It is during their time at Princess Tsehai hospital that they first encountered fistula patients.
Dr. Reginald and Catherine Hamlin.
Recounting their mutual desire to open a hospital primarily dedicated to the fistula patients, Dr. Catherine Hamlin emphasized their keen focus on raising money for this cause. Both Reginald and Catherine worked arduously to create a place that would pay more attention to the large number of women who lived in tremendous hardship as a result of their childbirth injuries. Since operations to cure fistula were not considered life-saving operations, few operating tables and beds were available for such patients at Princess Tsehai Hospital. Fistula patients were also not welcome and were despised by other patients and it wasn’t long before Reginald and Catherine decided to build a hospital designed to help these women, some of whom traveled hundreds of miles to seek treatment.
Speaking of her late husband, Catherine noted, “When he saw the first fistula patient he was really overwhelmed. He devoted his whole life to raising money to help these women. He was a compassionate man and if he took on anything he would take it in with his whole heart and soul. He worked day and night to build the hospital.” The dream was realized in 1974 and soon the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital received 1 to 10 fistula patients at its doorstep on a daily basis. Women who heard about the possibility of being cured traveled to the Capital from distant villages across the country. Today the Fistula Hospital treats approximately 1,500 women annually. Five surgeons conduct surgeries three times a week and work alongside Dr. Catherine Hamlin in an operating theatre equipped with four operating tables. The majority of operations become success stories and the women who are cured happily return to their homes.
A very small percentage of women (three to four annually) who arrive at the hospital, however, have irreparable damage and cannot be completely cured. For these women a 60-acre plot of land has been set aside as a place for them to stay. This compound is known as ‘Desta Mender’ – Village of Joy. Describing Desta Mender, Dr. Hamlin states, “women who are unable to resume normal lives in their villages are allowed to reside permanently in Desta Mender. Since there isn’t a lot of beds available at the hospital, those young girls who need to be strengthened prior to their operations are also allowed to stay temporarily at Desta Mender prior to their scheduled surgeries. It is called Desta Mender because it is a place of joy and it is designed for the women to be able to live lives similar to the ones they had in their villages.” Women who are unable to have surgery right away are able to undergo physical therapy and recuperate from their long walking travels at Desta Mender while those who cannot return to their villages even after surgeries are able to live in their new homes enjoying their work on the farm land and producing their own food.
Dr. Hamlin with a patient (fistulafoundation).
Few individuals have dedicated a lifetime for a cause as noble as this. Asked what her greatest satisfaction has been in this endeavor, Dr. Catherine Hamlin responds “It is in knowing that I am working somewhere where God has placed me to work. And I think that we gained more by living there and working with these women than we lost by leaving our own countries.” She fondly speaks of her late husband and his infinite compassion for the fistula patients. “He loved the whole of Ethiopian society and when he was dying in England it was his final wish to return and be buried in Ethiopia,” she states.
Dr. Catherine Hamlin equally enthuses about her ‘home away from home’, emphasizing the joy she feels in seeing a happy, cured patient and her continued enjoyment of the landscape of Ethiopia. Amidst her busy schedule she has found time in the early hours of dawn to write down the story of her life in her book ‘The Hospital by the River’, which was a bestseller in Australia. Her humble personality is evident as she replies to our inquiries about her past nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize by saying she didn’t know about it. Indeed along with being nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999 she has also been awarded the Gold Medal of Merit by Pope John Paul in 1987, and an Honorary Gold Medal from the Royal College of Surgeons in England in 1989. In 2003 she was nominated as an Honorary Fellow of the American College of Surgeons.
Her message to Ethiopians in the Diaspora is clear and simple. “You can help spread the word,” she says. “There are approximately eight to nine thousand women annually who suffer from fistula in Ethiopia. We are currently working on building five regional hospitals and have received funding for two. We need doctors to come back to Ethiopia to help us in our work. There is no money in it but there is enormous joy to the doctors and nurses treating and curing these patients.” She challenges us to help raise awareness and the financial assistance needed to keep this work going. In light of her 50-year dedication to the eradication of fistula, answering her appeal is the very least that any one of us can do.
Tadias Magazine congratulates Dr. Catherine Hamlin on her well deserved recognition as the co-winner of the 2009 Right Livelihood Award!
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Interview with Dr. Hamlin conducted by Mahlet Teklemariam and Emmanuel Mekuria.
This year’s Nobel prize should have gone to this generous and dedicated woman and the hospital. Unfortunately, politics matters more than humanitarianism in this world. It is not for the fame. She does not need it because God already has blessed her but the money could have helped strengthen Africa’s lonely hospital for the poor fistula patients.
Thank you a million Dr. Hamlin!
Tank u. God bless u. This is the first time I am hearing about you. I am happy with what you are doing in ethiopia. Yes you are doing the right things. you will receive better than the Nobel Peace Prize from God. You know how to implement practical solutions for poor people.
Dr. Catherine Hamlin is more than deserving of the Nobel peace Prize. But it feels like Guest is taking a cheap shot at Barack Obama. Even though the two are unrelated topics.
Question: Is Dr. Catherine Hamlin still working or retired?
We are so excited to have her awarded this great prize!!!! She really should have had it years back but anyway we are so pleased to hear this news even now. Congratulations Dr Hamlin!!! We are proud of you and we love you a million times!!!!!
All staff of the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital.
Congratulations Dr. Hamlin,
You are an inspiration for many of us and thank you for the great work that you do for young Ethiopian women. God Bless!
I agree with Guest. Somebody should recruit Nicholas Kristof so he can recruit Oprah Winfrey to co-write an OP-ED urging President Obama to donate part of his prize money, about USD 1.4 million, to the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital. I bet you both will sign up. They are big supporters of Dr. Hamlin and her cause. At least it will be worth the publicity.
I attended School in Addis with Doctor Hamlin’s son…what dedicated parents they were, genuine, god-fearing people who gave their all without question. It was an honour to have known them.
If there exists an angel on this planet we have one in Dr Hamlin. I had a chance to visit and witness the dedication and hard work of this unsung hero and her equally committed staff members. Hope your good deeds will motivate us all to give back in any form. Congratulations and God bless
Kedist Geremaw
Washington, DC
Congratulations for a well deserved honor. You are doing
beautiful work. I am sharing your story with my friends.
Congratulations Dr.Hamlin for a well deserved award. She is doing what real doctors should do which is to help people who needed it. our physicians living abroad and only thinking about their comfortable life should at least look to her as an example. As Dr.Albert Einstein said, “A life not lived for others is not worth living”.
Congratulations Dr.Hamlin for a well deserved award! I know that the reward was not your goal.
I am not a doctor, but can I help? I develop many products that these women can produce and market. I can also teach new skills to women that will help them become economically independent.
I have just come across this article about Dr. Hamlin and her wonderful lifetime’s work in Ethiopia with her late husband, Dr.Reginald Hamlin. My wife, Evelyn, and I lived in Addis Ababa for more than five years (1961-66) and we knew them both well and have good reason to be grateful to them for safely delivering our three youngest children in the Princess Tsehai Memorial Hospital in 1962, 64 and 66.
I was present at the ceremony in the British Embassy when Dr. Reginald Hamlin was awarded the O.B.E. and still remember snatches from his amusing speech. I note that he is buried in Addis Ababa.
If Dr.Catherine (I recall she was known by her maiden name, Nicholson) is still in Ethiopia my wife and i wish her well.
you are an ethiopian………….no words