 In 1994, I had met a woman in her fifties during one of health camp. While examining her, I got shocked to find a small piece of flip-flop inserted by her inside her body to hold her falling home. Her story revealed that she had been married at the age of 12 and had three children before series 21. For us, as a medical professional, at that stage it was a medical problem, needing medical solution. However, if we look closely, that was a problem of modern day slavery requiring to change the situation. Right now, I coordinate national lines of women human right defenders. And beside that, I have several programs. Like, one thing is against slavery, against trafficking. Second thing, we have safe houses for women in need. And there, we provide mental and medical support, psychological, medical, and social support. And beside that, we have big problem on women's health because women's health is also, we in Nepal, we see that uterine prolapse is as an outcome of early enforced marriage. So for me, I think that as a doctor, we can reach to many more people than others. And we have big role to play definitely.