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An MSF staff (health promoter), Shehu Alkali, accompanying Patience Lawan with her child (Ruth Daniel) after being discharged from the under-six ward of the Nilefa Kiji nutrition centre. Five-month old Ruth Daniel, who spent 15 days on admission, was treated for severe acute malnutrition and watery diarrhoea.
Nigeria

MSF warns of catastrophe as unprecedented number of malnourished children need lifesaving support

MSF teams are receiving unprecedented numbers of malnourished children in therapeutic treatment centres and warns of impending catastrophe if prevention and treatment activities are not scaled up immediately. Press Release - 26 Apr 2023
 
Hannatu Bello, 27 and her twin daughters Hassana and Hussena, 1.5 months, at MSF’s ambulatory therapeutic feeding center (ATFC), Kende Primary Health Center, Bagudo, Kebbi, Nigeria, 20 July 2022.
Nigeria

UN must recognise ‘critical emergency’ malnutrition crisis in northwest Nigeria

A severe malnutrition crisis in northwest Nigeria - described as catastrophic - must be urgently recognised by the UN to enable funding and humanitarian response. Press Release - 27 Sep 2022
 
The arm of a child with severe acute malnutrition in Kofar Marusa ATFC, Katsina State, Nigeria, June 2022.
Nigeria

Out of sight: the neglected malnutrition crisis which threatens thousands of children’s lives

A largely ignored malnutrition crisis across five states in northwest Nigeria is threatening the lives of tens of thousands of children as MSF urges the international community to immediately respond. Press Release - 7 Jul 2022
 
Mothers sitting with their children in the triage area of Nilefa Kiji nutrition hospital run by MSF in Maiduguri, Borno State in Nigeria. All the children are triaged and then moved to the emergency room, ambulatory or inpatient feeding centres depending on their condition.
Nigeria

Urgent humanitarian response needed to avoid deadly consequences in Borno

MSF teams are seeing an unprecedented influx of malnourished children in our nutrition centre in Maiduguri, Nigeria - without an urgent response thousands of children could die. Press Release - 30 Jun 2022
 
MSF health promoters, Joseph Ibeabuchi (male) and April Ozibo Chinezon (female) educating the public about lassa fever in Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, Nigeria. They are creating awareness about the disease to stop the spread and reduce the stigma towards patients of the disease.
Nigeria

Tackling deadly and difficult-to-diagnose Lassa fever

In Nigeria, Lassa fever is endemic. Since 2018, our teams have been working closely with the Ministry of Health to treat patients suffering from Lassa fever. Our health promotion teams are also educating people about the disease to prevent its spread and reduce stigma and misinformation. Project Update - 25 Feb 2022
 
MOTHER ASMAU RABIU AND HADIZA AT KOFAR MARUSA COMMUNITY, KATSINA STATE
Nigeria

Amid hunger, people are “lucky to be alive” in northwest Nigeria

The short documentary, “Lucky to be Alive”, highlights the nutrition crisis currently affecting northwest Nigeria, against a backdrop of recurrent attacks by armed gangs. Documentary - 15 Feb 2022
 
Treating a child during an outreach activity in Maiduguri
Nigeria

Extra-long malaria season in Borno claims lives

MSF teams in Nigeria’s Borno state have witnessed a spike in malaria cases, even into the dry season. Project Update - 14 Dec 2020
 
In Gwoza, a garrison town (towns occupied and controlled by the military as strategic bases in the ongoing conflict) in Borno state, more than 60’000 people live in very precarious conditions and are dependent on humanitarian aid and healthcare.
Nigeria

“Children can draw assault rifles better than a football” in Borno state

In Gwoza, northeastern Nigeria's Borno state, children who have witnessed traumatic events - including those who have been abducted - are receiving care from MSF mental health teams. Interview - 8 Sep 2020
 
An MSF medical team performs a blood transfusion on Bawagana, a patient being treated for malaria in MSF’s clinic in Bama.
Nigeria

Malaria season ends, but healthcare challenges remain in Borno state

As the seasonal malaria peak ends in Nigeria's Borno state - where MSF staff treated thousands of children - a lack of affordable healthcare options means many people struggle to access healthcare. Project Update - 13 Dec 2019
 
Manfred  at Ndamera Health Centre. After Manfred had been discharged from Nsanje District Hospital, he was told that after two weeks he should go to Ndamera health centre for medical checkup. However, within less than two weeks he got ill again. In the picture, Manfred is at Ndamera Health Centre with his medical passport in hand going for a consultion..
HIV/AIDS

AIDS death toll stagnating due to lack of testing at community level

Hundreds of thousands of people still die from AIDS because countries are ill-equipped to detect and treat them, new MSF report "No time to lose" reveals. Press Release - 1 Dec 2019
Four mothers posing in a corridor of the Hospital in Bili. All four of them are staying in the hospital with their child, that's suffering from a severe case of malaria. Since the beginning of the project in 2016, the pediatric ward already treated more than 4.000 cases of complicated/severe form of malaria.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

Independent medical humanitarian assistance

We provide medical assistance to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from healthcare. Our teams are made up of tens of thousands of health professionals, logistic and administrative staff - most of them hired locally. Our actions are guided by medical ethics and the principles of independence and impartiality. We are a non-profit, self-governed, member-based organisation.

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