Skip to main content
1402 Results
 
msf-placeholder
Lesotho

Lesotho's painfully slow fight to treat HIV

Despite all the money and attention, the rollout of treatment in Lesotho has been glacially slow. This raises some alarming questions, because in many ways, this ought to be a comparatively easy country in which to respond to AIDS: It's tiny; it's culturally, ethnically and linguistically homogeneous; and it's peaceful and democratic. Project Update - 6 Apr 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Kala azar

In southern Sudan, this tree is the only hospital for miles

Seriously ill patients are put on a drip and plastic bags of fluid can be easily hung from the branches. Nyadat Wie sits in the shade of the tree with her six-year-old daughter and her baby of a few months old, ill with kala azar. She will soon get her first injection. Project Update - 5 Apr 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Somalia

MSF launches new health care project in Galgaduud

MSF increases its efforts to bring desperately needed medical aid to the people of Somalia. The organisation's new project aims at providing free health care to the impoverished population of the country's Galgaduud region. Project Update - 3 Apr 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Uganda

Two decades of conflict take toll on northern Uganda

As the sun sets, the ragged children begin to arrive. By 11pm, the huge plastic tents that make up the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) shelter are filled with shapes wrapped in blankets, safe for a few hours at least. Project Update - 30 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Democratic Republic of Congo

DRC measles vaccination campaign ends - numbers fall but coverage is complete

A two week long vaccination campaign in the DRC is over and 97.6% of the target population has been vaccinated. However, unlike the first information where some 550,000 children were anticipated, the final tally came to 359,318. Project Update - 29 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
South Sudan

Those too ill to walk or too poor to be carried, in time, simply die

Getting to an MSF health post can be a challenge for the sick. Few roads, many swamps and the constant threat from people in the villages en route. Project Update - 27 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Democratic Republic of Congo

DRC diary: The last day has come and gone

Listen to Lina explaining the vaccination campaign. French.
Lina, a nurse, is from Sweden and has been working with MSF for a year and a half - and is already on her fifth field mission.
Two weeks ago, she started working in the city of Mbuji Mayi, in the Kasaï Oriental province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Project Update - 23 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
South Sudan

Treating TB in southern Sudan

In the last four years, 991 patients have been treated for tuberculosis (TB) at the health center that MSF set up in Akuem, southern Sudan. The teams have established a streamlined treatment method, but caring for patients with this disease is still a complex undertaking. Project Update - 23 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Kenya

Treating HIV/AIDS co-infection: MSF's project in Homa Bay, Kenya

Since 1997, MSF has been running an HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB) treatment project in the regional hospital of Homa Bay, Kenya. The HIV/AIDS prevalence in this province, with a population of around 300,000, is estimated to be 30%. For the MSF team, the treatment of co-infection - meaning people affected by both HIV/AIDS and TB - is critical. A new integrated approach was put in place under one roof at the end of 2005 to do just that. Project Update - 23 Mar 2006
 
msf-placeholder
South Sudan

Health needs already start to dwarf the new peace accord

People tell MSF that things are better, enjoying the improved security situation - even as they continue to die from lack of food, clean water and diseases such as diarrhoea, malaria, tuberculosis and kala-azar. Project Update - 21 Mar 2006
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.

Learn more