Mrs. Zainab, a 44-year-old business woman
never envisaged she will lose her only daughter, Ola, in an early age.
She had wanted her to read law in the university after her secondary
education, get a good job and then bring sunshine to the family, because
she was a very brilliant child, but all of that became tall wishes that
never saw the light of day. No thanks to unwanted pregnancy at the age
of 17.
Ola, despite being surrounded by parents
who were ready to give her the best of education even with their lean
resources, would slip through the hemmed alleys in the house to meet her
boyfriend who was staying in her neighbourhood in Agege, a Lagos
suburb. Mrs.
Zainab never knew her daughter was already seeing a man until the unexpected happened.
She had barely reached her shop one
Saturday morning when she received a call from the house that Ola was
bleeding profusely. Zainab rushed home only to see her daughter reeling
in pain, with blood stains all over her body. “At the first glance, I
knew what was happening to her must be pregnancy related. We immediately
took her to a nearby clinic where it was confirmed that the harm to her
body was due to abortion she had done to terminate a pregnancy.
Ola knew everyone in the house would be
disappointed in her if they know she has been impregnated, so she
connived with her boyfriend to terminate it. First, she drank large
quantity of spirits (ogogoro), caffeine, mixture of lime,aluminum and
potassium sulphate (popularly called alum), tetracycline mixed with gin,
different herbs, and several other substances prescribed by her peers
and boyfriend. None of these worked.
Oblivious of the consequences of the
various concoctions she was putting into her body, Ola and her boyfriend
then decided to see an abortionist, who did a D and C (dilation and
curettage) on her for N5,000. But the clean up wasn’t done properly as
part of the fetus was still left in her uterus, while there were
perforations in her womb too.
According to Ola, who mustered her last
strength to explain to her mother, noted that that was the beginning of
her troubles. “Ola told me since the abortion, she had been having
intense abdominal pain, dizziness, weakness and a whole lot until she
finally broke down.”
The doctor whom Zainab rushed Ola to for
help tried all he could to evacuate the fetus, but the damage had been
done. The uterus was infected, there were several perforations in her
womb, a 3cm small bowel defectand free air in the abdomen. Ola was
discharged after five days, but a week later, she died. The infection
had probably eaten deep into her, no thanks to the quack abortionist she
and her boyfriend visited.
Unlike Ola, Favour was lucky to still be
alive despite going through six different abortions in her five years of
relationship with her boyfriend. She said the last abortion she did
took her to hell and back. She has vowed never to engage in the
procedure again, especially in a country where it is illegal to perform
abortion, thereby making the practise unregulated as it is often done
underground, majorly by quacks and jacks of all trade.
“The last abortion I did almost killed
me, as I bled for days afterwards. It took me over a month plus before I
could gain myself back,” she said.
The bigger but scary picture
Ola and Favour are just a little drop among the several hundreds of thousands of Nigerian females who engage in unsafe abortion, which has no doubt caused the death of many in the country.
Ola and Favour are just a little drop among the several hundreds of thousands of Nigerian females who engage in unsafe abortion, which has no doubt caused the death of many in the country.
According to a researchconducted by a
United States-based Guttmacher Institute, in collaboration with
University of Ibadan (UI) and Ipas, a non-governmental organisation,
over 1.25 million abortions are carried out in Nigeria every year, with
majority of such procedures done in secret and mostly by unprofessional
hands. Traditional attendants and herbalists inclusive.
A recent BBC report suggests that of the
high number of abortions recorded in Nigeria, over 60 per cent are
unsafe, while 20 per cent of the 60 per cent are done by traditional
healers or the women themselves.
Comparison of the research from
Guttmacher Institute and the BBC report, clearly shows that of the 1.25
million abortions done in the country every year, about 750,000 are
unsafe, while about 150,000 unsafe abortions are done by traditional
healers or the women themselves, such that a chunk of these women do not
come out of it alive.
Precisely, Prof. Innocent Ujah, the
Director General of Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR), put
the number of deaths from unsafe abortions in the country at 34,000,
adding that this has contributed between 13 per cent and 50 per cent of
maternal and child mortality in the country.
Ujah said this in Abuja at a forum organised by the Federation of International Gynaecologists and Obstetricians (FIGO).
In a gloomier picture, the Chairman,
Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Ebonyi State Chapter, Dr. Chidi
Esike, said about 50,000 Nigerian women die yearly in Nigeria due to
complications caused by unsafe abortion, adding that majority of the
victims were teenagers and school girls.
With about 50,000 deaths occurring in the
country due to unsafe abortion every year, it therefore means that
about 137 women die every day in the country due to unsafe abortion
alone.
Using Ujah’s figure suggests that almost a hundred lives are lost daily due to the menace.
According to experts, abortion becomes
unsafe when a pregnancy is terminated by persons lacking the necessary
skills, or when it is done in an environment without standard medical
tools. However, in Nigeria it is illegal to perform abortion, except the
life of the mother is in danger.
What the World Health Organisation Says
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO) worldwide, an estimated five million women are hospitalised each year for treatment of abortion-related complications, such as hemorrhage and sepsis, adding that complications due to unsafe abortion procedures account for an estimated 13 per cent of maternal deaths worldwide, or 67,000 per year.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO) worldwide, an estimated five million women are hospitalised each year for treatment of abortion-related complications, such as hemorrhage and sepsis, adding that complications due to unsafe abortion procedures account for an estimated 13 per cent of maternal deaths worldwide, or 67,000 per year.
“Almost all abortion-related deaths occur
in developing countries. They are highest in Africa, where there are an
estimated 650 deaths per 100,000 unsafe abortions in 2003, compared
with 10 per 100,000 in developed regions. Nigeria still has one of the
highest maternal death rates in the world.
“Approximately 220,000 children worldwide
lose their mothers every year from abortion-related deaths. Additional
consequences of unsafe abortion include loss of productivity, economic
burden on public health systems, stigma and long-term health problems,
such as infertility,” adding that more than one-third of the
approximately 205 million pregnancies that occur worldwide annually are
unintended and about 20 per cent of all pregnancies end in induced
abortion.
The health body also noted that of the 23
million pregnancies that occur in developed countries, more than 40 per
cent are unintended, and 28 per cent end in induced abortion. Of the
182 million pregnancies that occur in developing countries, more than
one-third are unintended, and 19 per cent end in induced abortion (8 per
cent are safe procedures and 11 per cent are unsafe).
“Two- thirds of unintended pregnancies in
developing countries occur among women who are not using any method of
contraception,” WH0 says on its website.
Way forward
While experts are of the opinion that every adult has the right to sexual and reproductive life, they believed the low level of contraceptive use has contributed to the number of unwanted pregnancies in the country, which in turn spur abortion.
While experts are of the opinion that every adult has the right to sexual and reproductive life, they believed the low level of contraceptive use has contributed to the number of unwanted pregnancies in the country, which in turn spur abortion.
A gender advocate and human rights
lawyer, Hauwa Shekarau in a report, stated that Nigeria has a low level
of contraceptives use and as a result, about one quarter of the 9.2
million pregnancies that occurred in the country in 2012 were unintended
and more than half (56 per cent) of these unplanned pregnancy ended in
abortion and that, adding that it was important for all women to have
access to the highest attainable standards of health and safe
reproductive health choices, including safe abortion.
While advocating for a lasting solution
to unsafe abortion in Nigeria, Shekarau said “No woman should risk her
life, her fertility or well-being or the well-being of her family
because she lacks reproductive healthcare. Death and injuries from
unsafe abortion are traumatic because they can be avoided,” she added.
The WHO is also concerned that women in
Nigeria and other developing countries still have an unmet need for
contraception, meaning they are sexually active; are able to become
pregnant; do not want to have a child soon or at all; and are not using
any method of contraception, either modern or traditional.
The health body specifically called for
increased awareness on contraceptive use, as well as its availability in
developing countries, Nigeria inclusive, stating that it would give
women choices on whether or not to prevent pregnancies in the first
case.
There are also arguments on whether the
illegality of abortion in the country has caused the increase of unsafe
abortion or if it’s pruning it down.
But one thing experts are unanimous about
is the role of contraception in preventing unwanted pregnancies, which
would mean there will not be room for abortion to say the least. Source :ThisTime
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