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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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View of the entrance of Bambari hospital, the Central African Republic, on December 5th, 2020.
Central African Republic

Medical care at arm’s length: the continuous struggle of the people of Ouaka

Caretakers of patients in Bambari hospital, CAR, tell of their struggles to access healthcare due to insecurity, a lack of financial and medical resources, and the lack of functioning health facilities. Project Update - 24 Dec 2020
 
Refugees are getting ready to board the buses that will transfer them from Al Hashaba transit camp to Um Rakuba refugee camp.

Ethnic Tigray, Ethiopian, refugees who fled the central goverment's military offensive against what is perceived as separatism by the Tigray regional governement and its military branch TPLF.
When crossing into Sudan the refugees settle in unoccupied, unfinished houses at Al Hashaba Village 8, built for local Sudanese being resettled after the building of a Tekeze river dam.
Some Sudanese families and military live in the camp, village Al Hashaba.
The Sudanese governement tries to move the refugees into the Um Rakuba camp.
MSF runs the water supplies and has an emergency clinic in the camp.

SUDAN, Gedaref Region, Eastern border with Ethiopia/Tigray Region. Al Hashaba. 2020/12.
Ethiopia Tigray crisis

“Services for the refugees need to increase, otherwise it will be a disaster”

MSF’s acting emergency coordinator in Sudan describes the situation in Um Rakuba camp, where 15,000 people who fled violence in Ethiopia are sheltering. Voices from the Field - 23 Dec 2020
 
Neglected crisis in central Mali, and especially in Mopti region. In this area, an important humanitarian disaster and the harsh realities that populations face remain unknown to national and international public opinion. Civilians are abused and caught in fighting between different actors. Some of them are also target of daily attacks, sometimes suspected to have links with armed groups identified as terrorists as a result of counter terrorism. This explains why public health providers have reduced their activities or left the region, especially in rural areas where the armed conflict is at its most intense.
Mali

Central Mali: no choice but to flee

Civilians in central Mali face extreme violence every day and armed conflict has displaced many. They have limited access to basic services. Project Update - 22 Dec 2020
 
MSF has been working in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia since 1997. Activities started in the hospital in the town of Humera in Tigray region, on the border to Sudan, and in 2003 shifted to nearby farming town in Amhara region. The focus of MSF in the region is the treatment, diagnosis and prevention of kala azar and snakebite - two neglected tropical diseases. In the area MSF mostly treated migrant workers, who work barefoot on the vast farms during harvest season in one of the most fertile regions in northern Ethiopia. 

In early November, tensions between the national government in Addis Ababa and the northern region of Tigray escalated into a full-blown military conflict. One month into the conflict, the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate. 

On 5 November 2020, our MSF team in the Amhara region heard shelling and bombing of the first military escalation. They quickly started to support a Ministry of Health-run health centre receiving an influx of war wounded from the border areas. In just a few hours, the team had to switch from our regular medical project activities to emergency medical assistance for treating wounded. Within only a week, our team treated 265 casualties, many of them with severe war injuries.
Ethiopia Tigray crisis

“They saw soldiers and civilians coming in, wounded or dead”

MSF and Ministry of Health staff in Ethiopia’s Amhara region, next to Tigray, treated many people with severe injuries. It deeply affected them. Project Update - 18 Dec 2020
 
Lantana is an orphan, and is here with his grandmother in MSF Shinkafi hospital,in the paediatric ward of Shinkafi hospital, Zamfara state, northwest Nigeria.
Nigeria

Killings, looting and abductions in Zamfara state

People in Nigeria’s Zamfara state face daily violence and attacks and struggle to find food, water, shelter and basic items. MSF calls for assistance. Project Update - 9 Dec 2020
 
Families seeking shelter in abandoned shops and factories in Bentiu town, in South Sudan. January 2020.
South Sudan

Fear of violence, poor living conditions in South Sudan’s largest displacement camp

People in South Sudan's Bentiu Protection of Civilian's site fear regional violence and worry that the UN mission's withdrawal will leave them unprotected. Project Update - 3 Dec 2020
 
(EN) Benjamin was admitted to the advanced HIV unit of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Communautaire (CHUC) in Bangui. He just received a visit from the doctors who are responsible for his care. He has been admitted to the hospital following complications linked to an opportunist infection.

(FR) Benjamin, patient admis à l'unité VIH avancé du Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Communautaire (CHUC) de Bangui, vient d’avoir la visite des médecins qui assurent le suivi de sa prise en charge. Il a été admis suite à des complications liées à une maladie opportuniste.
HIV/AIDS

HIV is in a state of silent crisis in Central African Republic

While CAR has the highest HIV prevalence in West and Central Africa, access to information, early detection, treatment and care remains extremely scarce for people. Project Update - 30 Nov 2020
 
The Hamadayet border crossing, where refugees from Ethiopia cross the river into Sudan. New arrivals take whatever belongings they can carry with them, some have their livestock’s and  others left with nothing.
Ethiopia Tigray crisis

MSF providing medical care and assistance in Sudan to people fleeing violence in Ethiopia

In the wake of fresh conflict in northern Ethiopia, thousands of people have fled north into neighbouring Sudan, where MSF is providing medical care and assistance. Project Update - 27 Nov 2020
 
Children playing in the street
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF denounces ongoing violence in Salamabila

Statement following further violence In Salamabila, Democratic Republic of Congo, where attacks on civilians and other human rights violations are frequent. Statement - 19 Nov 2020
 
Dr Tathy, an MSF doctor, sees patients considered as non-Ebola suspects in consultation, as part of the mobile intervention clinic and training of local medical staff in the Ebola context, in the village of Bobua. This decentralization-based device aims to detect and isolate, if necessary, any person presenting symptoms close to Ebola (fevers, diarrhea, headaches, bleeding, etc.). But at the same time to treat other pathologies which are rife in the area, such as malaria or severe acute malnutrition. This is in order to increase the acceptance of MSF by the population in the area, and to avoid the stigmatization that affects Ebola patients, by getting as close as possible to the patients, and taking care of them where they live. Bobua.

***

Dr Tathy, médecin MSF, reçoit en consultation des patients considérés comme non suspects Ebola, dans le cadre des activités de clinique d'intervention mobile et de formation du personnel médical local en contexte Ebola, dans le village de Bobua. Ce dispositif axé sur la décentralisation, a pour but de déceler, et isoler le cas échéant, toute personne présentant des symptômes proches d'Ebola (fièvres, diarhhées, céphalées, saignements...). Mais de soigner en même temps d'autres pathologies qui sévissent dans la zone, telles que le paludisme ou la malnutrition aïgue sévère. Ceci afin d'augmenter l'acceptance de MSF par la population dans la zone, et d'éviter la stigmatisation qui affecte les patients Ebola, en se rapprochant au plus près des patients, et en les prenant en charge sur leur lieu de vie. Bobua.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Improved medical response sees the end of DRC’s eleventh Ebola outbreak

Almost six months since the eleventh outbreak of Ebola was declared in DRC, new tools and an improved medical response have seen the epidemic come to an end. Project Update - 19 Nov 2020
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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