Lack of Access to birth attendants causing fistula, health experts say

ByΒ Sarah Tumwebaze & Agatha Ayebazibwe

Lack of access to skilled birth attendants is the major cause of fistula in Uganda, health experts have said. The commissioner clinical services, Dr Jacinto Amandua, said women get complications such as fistula because they lack skilled medical intervention during child birth.

β€œOut of every 100 women that give birth, 15 per cent of them need help that will require a skilled medical personnel but because the experts are rarely available, this explains why some women end up with conditions like fistula,” Dr Amandua said yesterday in Kampala during the launch of a report on fistula.

Fistula is an injury that occurs during childbirth, usually when a woman is in labour for too long or when delivery is obstructed. It causes an abnormal opening of the birth canal resulting into the continuous leakage of urine and stool leaving the woman with a persistent odour.

Dr Jane Aceng, the director general of health services, said fistula is one of the most devastating consequences of difficult labour to a mother. While Dr Aceng confirmed that fistula represents an important public health problem in Uganda, she added that the actual prevalence of this condition remains unknown.

High prevalence
Currently, the prevalence is based on a 2006 Uganda Demographic Health Survey which shows that 2.64 per cent (200,000) of Ugandan women have ever suffered from symptoms of fistula, while 1,900 new cases are registered yearly.

Speaking at the same event, Ms Edith Ronah Mukisa, the country manager of EngenderHealth, said another cause of fistula are delays. β€œDelay at home, delay to get to the health centre and delayed intervention while in hospital,” she said.

The report that is based on a four-year study revealed that transport was also a challenge to women in labour, forcing them to give birth from home with no medical personnel to attend to them.

Dr Amandua said although government has trained experts to attend to pregnant women, providing family planning services and bringing health centers closer to people, government needs to mitigate the magnitude of fistula in Uganda. β€œThis will help sort the challenges of planning, budgeting and service delivery,” he said.

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Do We Really have Drug Shortage?

Analysis by Paul Abusharizi

Nalongo’s son had just underΒ­gone an operation and it was long past the time he was supposed to get his final pain killer for the day. She looked on helplessly as he whimpered in pain as his father went in search of the doctor on duty.

The nurse on duty, when she came around three hours after the 6:00pm prescribed time for the young man’s doze, claimed the drugs were not in stock and that they should go outside the hospital to buy the drugs, which prescription she hastily scribbled on a piece of paper.

As it turns out the drug was very much in stock. For those in the know this was a subtle attempt by the nurse to extract some money from the parents of the in-pain boy.

All this happened at the national referral hospital β€” Mulago. While the end user is unΒ­der the impression that our health centres are suffering a perennial drug shortage, National Medical Stores is sitting on tons of drugs which are reportedly in short supply.

β€œMy warehouses are full of drugs to the point that I am asking my suppliers to hold with future deliveries as I try to work these ones out of the system,” NMS boss Moses Kamabare told Sunday Vision.

Clearly, between NMS warehouses and the end users, there is a bottle neck that is preΒ­venting the end users from accessing lifesaving drugs.

Three years ago in an attempt to alleviate the perennial drug shortages in public faciliΒ­ties, government centralised the procurement process under NMS.

Previously, the procurement of drugs was decentralised to the national referral hospitals ‑Mulago and Butabika, the regional referral hospitals and the districts, which supplied the health center II to IV.

By centralizing drug procurement governΒ­ment hoped to take advantage of the discounts possible with the ensuing economies of scale, create uniformity of supply and curb drug thefts.

Under the current system the referral hosΒ­pitals and the districts provide NMS with a procurement plan, which guides NMS as to the drugs and their quantities to buy for the year as well as how regularly they should be disΒ­bursed. NMS only procures according to these plans.NMS has a delivery schedule which is monthly for Mulago and Butabika and once every two months for everybody else.

Since the capacity to quantify needs was lacking at the lower health centres the health ministry came up with a basic kit, which has most of the essential drugs and supplies like gloves, which are supplied to the health cenΒ­tres two and three.

So NMS clients are supposed to requisition their drugs according to their pre-determined procurement plans and only then will they be supplied with the drugs.

β€œThat is where the problem starts. We quickΒ­ly found out that either they do not requisition, so we don’t dispatch or they requisition less than they already planned for leaving us with unused stock,” Kamabare said.

That is where the discrepancy between shortages at the health centres against the contradiction of NMS’ full warehouses begins.

By not requisitioning or under requisitionΒ­ing you have health centres without drugs for months or running out of supplies ahead if schedule respectively.

Why this happens is a mixed bag of motives that range from incomprehensible incompeΒ­tence to sabotage of an innovation that would expose the old practitioners to individual abuse of the system to meet personal needs.

β€œFor example some prescribers can prescribe medicines that are not on our national essenΒ­tial medicines list. The idea being the patient would have to go out of the hospital to order the drugs living the impression that the hosΒ­pital is short on drugs while the truth is that a perfectly adequate drug is readily available in the health facility’s dispensary,” Kamabare said.

Clearly a holistic solution to the probΒ­lem including increasing health workers pay and welfare and training many more health workers is required.

But as a start beyond the streamlining procurement Kamabare counsels the use of medicines only listed in the national Essential Medicines List and prescribe as stipulated in the Uganda Clinical GuideΒ­lines – which has detailed descriptions of common ailments in the country and how they should be prescribed for.

β€œArtificial scarcities are being created and sustained contrary to the truth, β€œ the NMS boss says. β€œAmong the drugs we are over laden with are those for cancer, TB, ARVs, family planning supplies, rabies vacΒ­cines, insulin and mama kits.

My concern is not that my warehouses are full but what is happening to the rightful patients of these drugs …. Aren’t they dyΒ­ing because of a failure of our systems?”

https://www.cehurd.org/2012/05/do-we-really-h…-drug-shortage