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Cisse, a health promoter, carries buckets with kits given to every patient who comes to receive treatment for diphtheria from the logistics tent set up on the ground of the Centre de Traitement Epidemiologique to the waiting area where patients are at the center in Siguiri, Guinea. The kit was made to allow them to spend five days there and to easily clean and dispose of it, as necessary. MSF has helped treat over 2100 patients as of Jan. 4, 2024, and has been responding to a diphtheria outbreak in the region since mid-August, the likes of which has not been seen in the country for the last 30 years.

Guinea

Cisse, a health promoter, carries buckets with kits given to every patient who comes to receive treatment for diphtheria at the centre de traitement epidemiologique in Siguiri, Guinea, December 2023.
© Andrej Ivanov/MSF
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Our teams support HIV testing and treatment activities in Guinea’s capital city, Conakry, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health. We also support in responses to disease outbreaks, such as diphtheria.

Our activities in 2024 in Guinea

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF in Guinea in 2024 Providing care for people living with HIV remains a key activity for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Guinea. In 2024, our teams were also active in the north of the country, responding to a diphtheria outbreak.
Country map for the IAR 2024.
Country map for the IAR 2024.
© MSF

MSF has been responding HIV/AIDS in Guinea for over 20 years. In 2024, one in four people living with HIV in the country received treatment at health centres in the capital, Conakry, where MSF provided direct care, training, and medication donations. Providing HIV services within general health facilities allows us to both treat HIV as a chronic condition and integrate specialised care into the national health system. With this strategy, we also aim to reduce the stigmatisation around HIV, which is still strong. Many activists, both HIV-positive and -negative, support it, as it helps to combat the stereotypes surrounding the disease.

MSF collaborates with the Ministry of Health in nine health facilities in Conakry, supporting HIV testing and treatment, with a focus on prevention of mother-to-child transmission and paediatric HIV care, as well as treatment for opportunistic infections. In 2024, we increased our services for victims and survivors of sexual violence, including access to safe abortion care. In addition, we manage a 31-bed facility at Donka hospital for people with severe complications of HIV.  

Training is another important component of our project; we have trained over 300 medical staff in HIV care.  

In Siguiri, in northern Guinea, MSF teams were involved in an emergency response to a diphtheria outbreak that started in August 2023. We supported treatment, referrals, and community awareness-raising campaigns – which led to a reduction in the deaths linked to the epidemic – until May.

 

In 2024

Guinea

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