Perhaps it’s my own “marketing” here that is bad, and my own wording that is sloppy in this post.
Fistula Foundation doesn’t use this phrase “a lot” and looking around their site, starting with their homepage (where they don’t use this phrase), it’s not at all vague what they are ending. They are ending this condition being a permanent and horrifying disability for one million women around the world. And moving it to be the easily and quickly cured condition that it is. (And already they have funded over 100,000 surgeries with an 88% cure rate, so on this front they do have some potential to actually end this condition as a disability.)
Perhaps it’s my own “marketing” here that is bad, and my own wording that is sloppy in this post.
Fistula Foundation doesn’t use this phrase “a lot” and looking around their site, starting with their homepage (where they don’t use this phrase), it’s not at all vague what they are ending. They are ending this condition being a permanent and horrifying disability for one million women around the world. And moving it to be the easily and quickly cured condition that it is. (And already they have funded over 100,000 surgeries with an 88% cure rate, so on this front they do have some potential to actually end this condition as a disability.)