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Kenya

Majority of patients with suspect Zidolam-N receive follow-up consultations

MSF has followed-up nearly 3,000 of the HIV/AIDS patients who received antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) from falsified batches and provided them with replacement ARVs. MSF is working hard to get in contact with the remaining patients who might need to have their drugs switched. Press Release - 30 Nov 2011
 
Malawi 2011 : 10 years ARV
Malawi

10 Years of Antiretrovirals: Treatment in Malawi by MSF

MSF introduced ARVs in Chiradzulu in 2001. Today, more than 55 per cent of the patients who started treatment in 2001 in are alive, healthy, and still on treatment with MSF. In September 2011, MSF was treating 30,000 HIV-positive patients in Chiradzulu. Report - 29 Nov 2011
 
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Kenya

The reduction of activities may have dramatic consequences on refugees in Dadaab

In the second half of 2011, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) witnessed increased insecurity in the camps located near Dadaab, Kenya. The kidnapping of two MSF international staff members in October forced the organisation to halt activities in Ifo camp and to temporarily reduce services in Dagahaley camp to life-saving activities in the hospital only.
Despite the situation, MSF medical teams never stopped providing medical care in the biggest refugee camp in the world, and MSF has now resumed all medical activities in Dagahaley.
Project Update - 28 Nov 2011
 
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Cholera

Cholera epidemic - MSF supports overwhelmed local health authorities

A cholera epidemic has spread across all districts of Cameroon’s economic capital, Douala, home to 2.1 million people. The epidemic, which was officially declared 14 months ago, in September 2010, has peaked and troughed a number of times. In March and April, during the short rainy season, cholera peaked with an average of 120 cases per week. But since September the number of cases has been increasing further, with more than 400 cases per week reported in mid-October. Project Update - 28 Nov 2011
 
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Somalia

MSF treats tens of thousands affected by crisis

Thousands of people have been forced to flee Somalia and are seeking humanitarian aid in refugee camps in Kenya and Ethiopia. A measles epidemic is spreading. The lack of infrastructure and services is worsening the population’s vulnerability. Project Update - 14 Nov 2011
 
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Ethiopia

Surge in the number of Somali refugees demands increased capacity

The number of refugees crossing the border into Ethiopia has increased to around 300 per day, numbers not seen since July. “The capacity to receive more people and provide the necessary food, nutritional care, medical care, drinking water, sanitation and more is grossly insufficient,” said Wojciech Asztabski, MSF Project Coordinator in Dollo Ado. Press Release - 2 Nov 2011
 
Social violence and exclusion

Urban Survivors

Over the last decades, rapid and sustained urbanisation has swelled existing slums, and spurred the creation of new ones around the world. Today, more than one out of ten people on the planet live in a slum. To highlight the critical humanitarian and medical needs that exist in urban settings worldwide, MSF is now launching Urban Survivors - a multimedia project in collaboration with the NOOR photo agency and Darjeeling Productions. Voices from the Field - 2 Nov 2011
 
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Somalia

MSF treats wounded after camp for displaced is hit by bombardment in Lower Juba

MSF staff are treating dozens of injured following an aerial bombardment on the town of Jilib that hit a camp for internally-displaced people at around 1:30 pm on Sunday. MSF is transporting the wounded to the hospital in Marere for stabilisation and treatment, and may have to refer some patients to other facilities due to limits to the surgical capacity at the hospital. Statement - 30 Oct 2011
 
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Somalia

Vaccination campaign suspended due to fighting in Dayniile

After heavy fighting erupted on 20th October in Dayniile, on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) was forced to suspend its measles vaccination campaign in the area. Project Update - 24 Oct 2011
 
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South Sudan

In 100-day young South Sudan, is a theoretical future endangering the present?

Today, Monday 17 October, independent South Sudan is 100 days old. Many will have preoccupations other than celebrating. The families of the 20 people killed by a freshly laid landmine in Unity State last week will not celebrate. Project Update - 17 Oct 2011
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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