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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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In Epworth, near the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, medical, humanitarian, aid agency, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has set up HIV support groups where adolescents can meet others living a similar reality. Through sharing their stories, and connecting with one another, the newfound solidarity gradually helps them to become more self-confident.

Epworth is a semi-urban area located just outside the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, where the majority of the population lives below the poverty line. The HIV test positivity rate in Epworth remains just below 20%, which is higher than reported at the national level (15%). In 2014, MSF placed 165 HIV positive patients aged under 20 years on ART in Epworth. Eight percent of these patients were under 15 years of age. In 2015 MSF will continue to advocate for increased access to HIV testing and treatment for children and adolescents.
Zimbabwe

Stigma, confusion, silence: life as a young girl with HIV in Zimbabwe

Telling a child that they have HIV can be a long and delicate process. Voices from the Field - 5 Mar 2015
 
Dr Armel KONE (medecin Duekue) *** Local Caption *** Bien que les affrontements aient cesse, fin mars 2011, dans la plupart de l\'Ouest du pays, des populations deplacees vivent toujours dans des camps, comme celui de la Mission catholique a  Duekoue et celui de Nazareth a  Guiglo, ou MSF a ouvert des centres de sante. Des equipes mobiles de MSF donnent des consultations dans des villages touches par les violences entre Guiglo et Blolequin ainsi qu\'au nord-est de Duekoue. Les cas graves et les urgences chirurgicales, medicales, pediatriques et obstetriques sont traites a  l\'hopital de Duekoue. Dans le petit hopital de Nikla a  Guiglo, MSF prend en charge les urgences medicales, donne des consultations externes et refere les urgences chirurgicales a  l\'hopital de Duekoue. A Abidjan, les equipes de MSF prennent en charge les urgences chirurgicales et medicales ainsi que les cas de gynecologie-obstetrique et donnent des consulations externes dans l\'hopital d\'Abobo sud . Pour desengorger cet hopital surcharge, MSF intervient dans les hopitaux d\'Anyama et Houphouet-Boigny. MSF apporte par ailleurs un soutien a  cinq centres de sante dans le quartier d\'Abobo.
Central African Republic

From Bangui to Carnot: a year in CAR with MSF

From the horrors of Bangui to the exodus of Muslims from Central African Republic to Sido in Chad, Dr Armel recounts his frenetic year in a country in utter chaos. Voices from the Field - 5 Mar 2015
 
Ansongo hospital, Gao region, in northern Mali. MSF started working in Ansongo in September 2012, nine months after the conflict broke out in the north of the country between the security forces and Tuareg and Islamist groups. Currently, MSF is working at the Ansongo referral hospital, a 31-bed facility, where the organisation carries out OPD, IPD, ANC consultations and assist deliveries.
Mali

“Today, humanitarian aid is more necessary than ever in the north”

Seïdina Ousseini has been MSF field coordinator in Ansongo, in the north of Mali, for one year. He explains us the difficulties facing the MSF teams to provide medical aid to the population affected by the political crisis and insecurity in the African country. Voices from the Field - 4 Mar 2015
 
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Kenya

International Women's Day: “If he asks me to get pregnant again, I will advise him to wait until our baby is two or three years old.”

Nineteen-year old Laventa lives in Kibera, a slum area in Nairobi, and discusses the importance of family planning with her husband. Voices from the Field - 3 Mar 2015
 
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Mozambique

Cholera in Mozambique: a worrying situation

MSF's medical coordinator describes the situation in Tete province. Voices from the Field - 27 Feb 2015
 
Maria Cristina Manca, health promotion team leader in Macenta.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

“To create awareness among a population, you must listen”

Creating awareness is a key component of the response to an Ebola epidemic. Voices from the Field - 26 Feb 2015
 
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Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Fighting Ebola, Ending Stigma

Voices from the Field - 12 Feb 2015
 
In December 2014, MSF rapid response Team intervened on a remote Ebola outbreak in Quewein, Grand Bassa County, Liberia. Rapid response teams are employed across the affected countries to quickly identify, investigate and follow new cases and contacts, as well as quickly setting up isolation units within existing health structures.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Catching up with Ebola

MSF’s outreach strategy considers every new case as a full-fledged epidemic and implements simultaneously all the various aspects of the response. Voices from the Field - 12 Feb 2015
 
Nearly 700 people have been living for ten months in a church, the last refuge for the Muslims of Carnot - third largest city of the country. They came to shelter reprisals targeting Muslims (following the atrocities committed by the rebels Seleka, a predominantly Muslim coalition). Men, women and children are condemned to live within four walls until the situation resolves. Almost all have lost family members and / or been victim of violence. The entrance to the church is guarded by armed soldiers.
Every Sunday, the Muslim refugees who live in the nave of the church move their luggage into the yard to allow Christians to pray. The inter-communal conflict that continues to tear the country apart is not a religious war but a struggle for power.
There are over 50 enclaves like this one in the country.
Central African Republic

“There’s not one single Muslim left in Bocaranga”

MSF logistician Djamilou speaks of the violence and the plight of his family scattered among three different countries after fleeing from Central Africa. His testimony illustrates only too well the suffering endured by our Central African teams. Voices from the Field - 11 Feb 2015
 
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, MATCHIKA, 29 SEPTEMBER 2014  People line up to have an MSF-nurse examine them, at a mobile clinic in the village of Matchika, a village almost 30 kilometres from Bambari, Ouaka province.
Central African Republic

‘The suffering of the people is fuelling the armed conflict in CAR’

Interview on the evolution of conflict in the Central African Republic Voices from the Field - 5 Feb 2015
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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