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Pakistan

People returning home after Pakistan floods has impact on feeding programmes

With the emergency phase of the Pakistan floods over, people are returning to their homes, leaving the camps and settlement areas where they were receiving emergency aid. Project Update - 25 Oct 2010
 
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Pakistan

As emergency phase ends, Pakistan flood victims show symptoms of excessive stress

Flood waters have largely receded and people have begun to return to what remains of their homes. Project Update - 21 Oct 2010
 
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Pakistan

Letter from the field: One day in my life - A midwife in Balochistan, Pakistan

Olivia Lowe is a midwife working in Kuchlak, near Quetta in Pakistan's volatile Balochistan province. She manages the antenatal and postnatal care as well as the birthing unit at MSF's mother and child healthcare centre in Kuchlak. This is her first MSF mission. Voices from the Field - 20 Oct 2010
 
Pakistan

Boosting maternal and child healthcare in Dera Murad Jamali, Pakistan

"People in Pakistan, unfortunately, believe that a good delivery has to be short and, as such, practitioners often give large of amounts of oxytocin" sometimes eight times as much as allowed in order to have the quicker deliveries which then leads to more complicated and dangerous births. This is the biggest problem we face here and we are deeply concerned," said Dr Ekdahl. Project Update - 5 Oct 2010
 
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Pakistan

MSF expands Pakistan emergency response into newly flooded areas in the south as concern mounts for waterborne diseases

More than five weeks since the first floods overwhelmed regions in the north of Pakistan, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) emergency medical and water and sanitation teams expand operations to the south of Punjab and in hard-hit Sindh province, where millions of people have been displaced by fresh flooding. Project Update - 8 Sep 2010
 
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Pakistan

Pakistan's flood affected need safe water and healthcare, not politics

"Humanitarian assistance in any conflict environment must be based on principles of independence and neutrality. Warring parties, governments, and political parties, cannot claim these principles" said Thomas Conan, MSF representative in Pakistan. "We therefore do not accept any funds from donor governments for our work in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Our reliance on private funds that are gathered from the general public worldwide ensures that we remain strictly independent from any government or military and allows us to be responsive to the needs that we identify". Press Release - 26 Aug 2010
 
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Pakistan

Pakistan flood response by MSF increases as needs remain

More than four weeks since its first response to the floods that overwhelmed Pakistan, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continues to scale up its activities in the flood-affected areas, while also preparing to expand its scope to include new locations where the floods have left thousands cut off from assistance they vitally need. Project Update - 25 Aug 2010
 
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Pakistan

Patience and distributions in Pakistan's flood zones

"I walked from Gul Bela, a village nearby to come here. I know that this distribution being held right now by Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) is for the community of Jala Bela. I heard people talk about it around a health center in my village that MSF has been supporting since displaced people arrived from the conflict affected areas. These women and I haven't registered our names but we are still hoping to get something, because our homes are completely destroyed, our men are sick from drinking bad water. The floods have left us with nothing." Project Update - 18 Aug 2010
 
Pakistan

Working for the best, preparing for the worst

In the aftermath of any disaster suddenly hitting a population, the immediate impact in terms of deaths and injuries is often followed by other health risks that can be linked to difficult living conditions, lack of hygiene and restricted access to clean water and basic health care services. The recent Pakistan floods are no exception; presently, MSF and others are working hard to avoid outbreaks of disease and to provide essential health care to a population in need. Project Update - 17 Aug 2010
 
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Pakistan

MSF scales up distribution of relief goods as worrying gaps remain

Two weeks after the first floods hit Pakistan, the situation remains extremely dire for millions of people. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Baluchistan, MSF is intensifying its activities and remains focused on medical care, clean water provision and distribution of essential goods. More assessments are also ongoing in these provinces, as well as in Punjab Sindh. Project Update - 12 Aug 2010
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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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