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MSF first began supporting Old Fangak hospital in Jonglei state, South Sudan, in 2014, to provide hospital-level care to remote communities.
South Sudan

Three vaccinations that are critical to women’s health

Hepatitis E, tetanus and hepatitis B all pose significant but under-reported threats to the health and lives of women and girls, especially in low-income countries with limited access to healthcare. Project Update - 7 Mar 2025
 
Hortense, a 25-year-old mother of 5, gave birth to a baby girl 3 days ago, while alone at home, handing her newborn baby to Melanie, 16, 6 months pregnant, while both were waiting for a consultation at the Klouékanmè health centre, Benin, on 16 January 2025.
Benin

Giving birth without dying in Benin

To address high infant and maternal mortality rates in Benin, MSF staff train women who carry out most of the outreach and health promotion activities in villages in Couffo. Photo Story - 6 Mar 2025
 
In the camps of Bulengo and Lushagala, MSF teams have installed two clinics named Tumaini (“Hope” in Swahili) to provide free and confidential medical and psychological support to women. Women of all ages come to the clinic, survivors of sexual violence but also to access family planning, seek psychological advice or treat sexually transmitted diseases.
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF has and continues to treat more than two victims of sexual violence per hour in DRC

MSF teams treated over two survivors of sexual violence every hour in DRC in 2023, urging action from international and national stakeholders. Press Release - 30 Sep 2024
 
Anhar Hassan Mohammed Omar, 29 years old, lives in the Jir South neighborhood of Nyala. She faced many challenges, including not having enough money to reach the hospital. She worked 16-hour shifts continuously to cover the costs of treatment and nutrition from the beginning of her pregnancy until her ninth month. She arrived at Nyala Teaching Hospital, underwent a C-section, and received all the necessary medical services. She mentioned that many pregnant women in this critical period lack proper healthcare and expressed her deep gratitude to all the staff.
Conflict in Sudan

Pregnant women and children dying in shocking numbers in South Darfur

A newly released MSF report details the shocking number of maternal and newborn deaths our teams are seeing in South Darfur, Sudan. Press Release - 25 Sep 2024
 
Health workers attend to patients in the outpatient department at the MSF supported Bay Regional Hospital in Baidoa, Somalia.
Somalia

Barriers to care have deadly consequences for women and children in Baidoa

People in the Bay region of Somalia's South West state face significant challenges in accessing healthcare. Women and children often bear the brunt, with delays in accessing care causing unnecessary deaths. Project Update - 8 Aug 2024
 
People continue to be displaced due to surging conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, seeking refuge near Goma. Basic needs such as food, water and sanitation are unmet, and there is a critical lack of measures to protect people from further harm. The lack of security and means to survive has proven particularly dangerous for women, as evidenced by the high number of cases of sexual violence seen in Kanyaruchinya’s health facilities supported by MSF.
Women's health

Women on the frontline: Defying the consequences of conflict to care for each other

Women’s regular health needs don’t disappear when conflict or war breaks out, they only become more critical. This International Women's Day, we share stories of women affected by conflict caring for their own communities. Project Update - 8 Mar 2024
 
Women wait at the outpatient department (OPD) supported by MSF at Jahun general hospital.
Nigeria

An arduous journey for pregnant women to access healthcare in northwest Nigeria

Nigeria is the third country in the world where a woman is most likely to die giving birth. MSF collaborates with the Jigawa state Ministry of Health to provide comprehensive emergency obstetrics, newborn care and care for fistula. Project Update - 7 Mar 2024
 
In June, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, MSF team has started supporting Umdawanban hospital in Khartoum State, to improve healthcare services for the communities. Our teams are working to enhance essential paediatric, nutrition, and maternity services. Additionally, we provide vital support in energy, water, sanitation, and hygiene, in the hospital. MSF bought a generator for the hospital and is working on the water supply lines. In the first two weeks of the intervention, we've reported: approximately 250 admissions in maternity, 107 normal deliveries, and more than 80 admissions for paediatrics with 20% newborns.
Conflict in Sudan

Addressing myriad medical needs amidst conflict in Sudan

Our deputy medical coordinator in Sudan, Dr Mohammad Bashir, shares his experiences in providing desperately needed healthcare in the country amidst the relentless conflict. Voices from the Field - 15 Feb 2024
 
An MSF speed boat leaves Toch to deliver hepatitis E vaccines to the MSF hospital in Old Fangak, Jonglei State.
South Sudan

MSF launches mass vaccination campaign amid deadly hepatitis E outbreak in South Sudan

As hepatitis E spreads in Old Fangak, we aim to vaccinate over 12,000 women and girls, who are at greatest risk of death from the deadly disease. Press Release - 30 Jan 2024
 
MSF gynecologist following up on a patient in the maternity section for women having given birth through a C-section, Klouékanmè Hospital.

Dr Dieudonné has been on assignement at the Klouékanmè Hospital since October 2023. He supports the medical team, provides training in Obstetrical care and helps organize the Department.
Benin

Limiting maternal and child loss in communities in Benin

After a 15-year absence, MSF launched two projects in Benin last year. One targets better healthcare for mothers and children in the southwest, while the other assists those impacted by malaria and recent violence in accessing medical care in the north. Project Update - 21 Nov 2023
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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