by Kate Grant (Author), Abraham Verghese (Foreword by)
INSPIRATION FOR HOW TO CREATE A LIFE OF PURPOSE, NO WOMAN LEFT BEHIND IS THE UNLIKELY STORY OF HOW ONE WOMAN LEAVES MADISON AVENUE AND TACKLES THE GLOBAL MATERNAL HEALTH CRISIS HEAD ON.
The day a woman gives birth is also the day she is most likely to die or suffer severe injury--a sobering reality that comes into sharp focus when Kate Grant visits the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital in Ethiopia's capital. There, she sees row after row of beds occupied by young women afflicted with obstetric fistula, a childbirth injury that leaves them incontinent and too often shunned by their communities, modern-day lepers. She soon learns that surgery is the only way to end their suffering.
In
No Woman Left Behind, Grant recounts her decision to abandon a promising advertising career, and the ups and downs of building Silicon Valley-based Fistula Foundation from a modest start-up into the global leader in fistula treatment. Through vivid firsthand accounts of surgeons toiling in remote corners of Africa and Asia, we see inside the fight to restore hope to some of the world's most vulnerable women.
A compassionate army of donors spanning nearly seventy countries makes such life-changing care possible. Grant demonstrates the profound power of individual action to change lives at scale, since Fistula Foundation takes no government money.
No Woman Left Behind is a compelling personal journey and a how-to guide for anyone looking to make a lasting difference in the lives of others.
100% of the author's net proceeds from No Woman Left Behind
will go to Fistula Foundation's Love a Sister program to fund free surgeries for women with childbirth injuries.Author Biography
Kate Grant is the founding CEO of Fistula Foundation, the world's largest charity devoted to treating childbirth injuries. She joined the Foundation in 2005, expanding the Foundation's global footprint from one country to more than 30 in Africa and Asia. Grant is a graduate of UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business and earned an MPA from Princeton University. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Abraham Verghese is Professor and Vice Chair for the Theory and Practice of Medicine at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The founding director of the Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics at the University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, he is the author of
My Own Country, a 1994 National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist and a
Time Best Book of the Year;
The Tennis Partner, a
New York Times Notable Book; and, most recently, the critically acclaimed novel
Cutting for Stone, which was a national bestseller. A graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, his essays and short stories have appeared in
The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Atlantic Monthly, Esquire, Granta, The Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere. In 2016 Verghese received a National Humanities Medal from President Obama. He lives in Palo Alto, California.
Number of Pages: 256
Dimensions: 1.2 x 9.1 x 6.3 IN
Publication Date: June 24, 2025