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Cholera

Cholera outbreaks across West Africa: MSF sends more staff and supplies

A number of factors conspire to make the outbreak during this year's rainy season much worse than in most years, including bad conditions of hygiene, overcrowding in certain areas, and a lack of safe drinking water. Project Update - 14 Sep 2005
 
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Niger

MSF repeats call for rapid mobilisation of aid agencies to increase assistance in areas of acute malnutrition

MSF again calls for a rapid mobilization of aid agencies to increase targeted food distributions in areas affected by acute malnutrition. Press Release - 13 Sep 2005
 
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Somalia

The Lancet: 'Catastrophic' violence continues unchecked in Somalia

This article first appeared in the Sept 3, 2005 edition of The Lancet. Project Update - 3 Sep 2005
 
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Mauritania

Major cholera outbreak in Nouakchott

When MSF arrived, there were 10 patients in a hastily constructed cholera camp in Riyad, just south from the capital. But, with the main water supply thought to be infected, in one day 137 new patients arrived. The situation will likely get worse before it gets better. Project Update - 29 Aug 2005
 
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Niger

For many in Niger, a child's life depends on reaching an MSF centre

She knows at least four malnourished children in her village who have not yet come to Zinder for treatment. The children's mothers do not want to take them so far away or simply cannot. Project Update - 19 Aug 2005
 
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Niger

Niger Food Crisis: 'Therapeutic food should be considered an essential medicine'

These specialized foods are ready to eat, do not require cooking or water, come in individual sachets and cannot become contaminated. All of this eliminates the risk of having to add water, which prevented MSF from giving milk to kids at home before. Project Update - 12 Aug 2005
 
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Niger

Africa's miracle food: plumpy'nut

Plumpy nut, a fortified peanut butter stuffed with milk and vitamins is the undisputed hero of the current crisis in Niger, where 3.6 million people 800,000 of them children face severe food shortages. Project Update - 12 Aug 2005
 
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Niger

A taste of salvation for Niger children deemed not ill enough for a hospital

Aid has come in the nick of time for those infants weakened by the country's famine.
This article first appeared in The Guardian.
Project Update - 8 Aug 2005
 
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Niger

August will be the worst month in Niger

The Guardian, August 8: A taste of salvation for Niger children deemed not ill enough for a hospital







Since January, medical teams have treated nearly 16,000 children for severe malnutrition, and they expect to treat more than 30,000 by the end of the year. While it offers no consolation to parents grieving the loss of a child like Moussa, the overwhelming majority of children treated by MSF survive.
Project Update - 8 Aug 2005
 
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Nigeria

'Without medical support hundreds of children might die'

During a measles outbreak in Borno state, northern Nigeria, in March 2005, MSF conducted an emergency intervention. While the number of measles cases decreased, the nutritional status in the area was of great concern, notably among small children. MSF's feeding centre filled up with malnourished children, many of them fighting for their survival.
Emergency coordinator Ton Koene talks about the situation and MSF's reaction.
Project Update - 4 Aug 2005
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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