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Lake Tchad Crisis: Responding to the humanitarian consequences of violence  (Extreme North Cameroon)
Lake Chad Crisis

Lake Chad: Years of Forgotten Crisis

Located in west-central Africa at the junction of Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon, Lake Chad was once among the continent’s largest bodies of water. Owing to a combination of climate change and overuse, however, Lake Chad’s size has steadily dwindled, putting the region’s population of roughly 30 million people under increasing strain. But diminishing resources are not the only thing they have to fear. Medium.com - 31 Oct 2016
 
Closure Of MSF Projects in Conakry, Guinea
Haemorrhagic fevers

MSF closes final Ebola projects for survivors

Project Update - 21 Oct 2016
 
Ebola in Paynesville, Liberia
Liberia

The psychological scars of Ebola

Interview with MSF psychiatrist Frédéric Gelly Project Update - 20 Oct 2016
 
Kyrgyzstan - Decentralized care for TB patients
Access to Healthcare

Global commitments to stop killer diseases put to the test – lives are hanging in the balance

Falling short of the Global Fund’s modest pledging target would not only seriously undermine progress, but also be costly, both financially and in human lives. Project Update - 16 Sep 2016
 
Niger: NFI distributions in Toumour
Niger

MSF assists hundreds of newly displaced people in eastern Diffa

“Given the critical situation in the areas of Nigeria and Chad that border Niger, it is likely that Toumour will continue to receive more refugees in such a precarious condition as this last group,” explains Youssouf Demdelé, MSF’s deputy head of mission in Niger. Project Update - 9 Sep 2016
 
Health promotion in the VVF (Fistula) camp of Shamwana
Democratic Republic of Congo

Vesico vaginal fistula camp living with dignity in solidarity

In July and August 2016, MSF organised a fistula camp in Shamwana, where 40 women received operations to repair their fistulas. Project Update - 31 Aug 2016
 
MSF intervention in Alaback, Niger
Niger

Floods leave hundreds of families homeless with increased risk of disease

“We see that the families in this area, who are already have very little, have now lost everything. Despite the presence of government health facilities, many parents do not have the money for treatment for such illnesses as respiratory infections, diarrhoea and skin diseases,” said Adolphe Masudi, MSF project manager for this intervention. Project Update - 26 Aug 2016
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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