Thursday, March 19, 2020

walking on



An inspiration forever.


If you aren't familiar with the work of Dr. Catherine Hamlin - or even if you are - 
I recommend watching the documentary A Walk to Beautiful.
~~~

The following excerpts are from the obituary written by
Carolyn Hardy, Chief Executive of the Catherine Hamlin Fistula Foundation

"The world is mourning the death of Australia’s most renowned obstetrician and gynaecologist, Dr Catherine Hamlin AC, who died, age 96 at her home in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on Wednesday March 18th, 2020.

Catherine, together with her late husband Dr Reginald Hamlin OBE, co-founded Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia, a healthcare network treating women who suffer from the debilitating effects of an obstetric fistula – a horrific childbirth injury.

Before the Hamlins arrived in Ethiopia, patients with obstetric fistulas who sought medical help at the Princess Tsehai Memorial Hospital were turned away as they had no cure for their humiliating condition. The Hamlins had limited knowledge about obstetric fistulas as they had never had to deal with one before. Confronted by the tragic plight of women with obstetric fistula, and never having seen this condition in Australia, Catherine and Reg had to draw on medical literature from the 1850s to develop their own surgical technique. The technique they perfected is still used today.

Over the past 61 years, more than 60,000 Ethiopian women suffering with an obstetric fistula have received life-changing reconstructive surgery and care, thanks to the Hamlins’ vision.

Catherine was most proud of her Hamlin Model of Care – holistic healing that is part of every patient’s treatment. “We don’t just treat the hole in the bladder, we treat the whole patient with love and tender care, literacy and numeracy classes, a brand-new dress and money to travel home.”

Today, Hamlin Fistula Ethiopia is a healthcare network of over 550 Ethiopian staff – many trained by Catherine – servicing six hospitals, Desta Mender rehabilitation centre, the Hamlin College of Midwives and 80 Hamlin supported Midwifery Clinics.

Hamlin is the reference organisation and leader in the fight to eradicate obstetric fistula around the world, blazing a trail for holistic treatment and care that empowers women to reassert their humanity, secure their health and well-being, and regain their roles in their families and communities."
~~~

I cannot imagine a life better-lived.
~~~~~

11 comments:

  1. I agree. A life well lived. I read about her work some time ago, and was so happy she and her husband had the willingness to address this awful, socially isolating and agonizing injury. She really gave people their lives back. And a new dress, that part was especially inspired, attending the patient's self pride as well as her physical needs.

    Thanks for this post.

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    1. Thank you for your comment, Liz. I wrote a blog post about Dr. Hamlin's work back in 2013 - I may have learned of it from a list of "charity knitting" opps (but with a clearinghouse in Australia, of course donating cash made much more sense from the US) because a donated, handknit blanket is also given to each woman.
      The movie made a huge impact on me, followed by more and more reading. It's not information one is likely to forget. It's good to know the work will continue!

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  2. I don't recall being aware of Dr. Hamlin. Thank you for bringing her life to our attention. It should be an inspiration to us all.

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    1. Thank for your comment, Leigh. I was glad I could find a working link to the documentary - it is powerful and positive. Such a huge problem in so many ways, tackled initially on the smallest scale by two individuals. Profoundly moving.

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  3. Definitely an inspiration to read this - thank you! Some people are heroes and Dr. Hamlin is one of them.

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  4. She lived a full and meaningful life, and I cannot imagine a better one. I want to watch that documentary.

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    1. I hope you will, KB. It's not always easy to watch, but it's very well made and the overall message is one of achievement and hope :)

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  5. I learned a lot from this post and I think the last sentence says it all. Thank you! Stay well.

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