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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Between 600 and 620 families are living in the Fariya camp. (=3600 people).
1070 children under 5. Unofficial camp. Until our intervention, they had very little support. Latrines ACF, shleter by IOM. Most people are shuwa arab (ethnic group) coming from Marte. 
ACF just open an OPD on Monday. 
This was our second distribution there. 
300 living in 150 IOM shelters (2 families in 1 shelter). Others live in makeshift tents. 
People have been here for 10 months more or less. 
3 boreholes but only 1 working solar
Nigeria

After two years of crisis, what does the future hold for the displaced in Borno?

Interview with Isabelle Mouniaman-Nara, MSF programme manager in Nigeria Voices from the Field - 3 Feb 2016
 
General view of a displaced persons camp in Benzvi, Bangui.
Central African Republic

No hope of returning home anytime soon

"The living conditions in the sites are very difficult. They live in tents built of waste tarpaulins that are full of holes," says Reims Pali, MSF Assistant Field Coordinator in CAR."They sleep on mats on the ground and are exposed to mosquitoes which may carry malaria. Unless the security situation gets better, they will have to stay here in these camps.” Voices from the Field - 27 Jan 2016
 
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Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

End of Ebola outbreak in West Africa: World must learn lesson for future outbreaks

As Liberia celebrates 42 days without any new Ebola infections - effectively marking the end of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa - MSF calls on the global health community to draw on lessons learned in order to be better prepared for similar outbreaks in the future. Project Update - 14 Jan 2016
 
Expectant mothers at the Waiting Mother's Lodge, St. Joseph’s District Hospital, Roma, Lesotho.
Lesotho

Free maternal care has an impressive return on investment

Free maternal healthcare is a relatively cheap measure that has a large impact in saving lives of women and newborns. Press Release - 3 Nov 2015
 
MSF is working in the district hospital of Degahbour. Medical help is provided in the fields of Tuberculosis, malnutrition for children under five, maternity and in the emergency room of the hospital.
Ethiopia

"I don’t want to go without my baby!"

One woman’s bravery secures her a safe birth Voices from the Field - 16 Oct 2015
 
Senior VVF surgeon Dr. Said and VVF Nurse Manager Kate Norgang discuss a VVF repair. Dr. Said is an avid teacher; all staff involved with the VVF program learns from him on a regular basis.
Nigeria

“Providing a safe childbirth to Nigerian mothers”

Interview with Dr Sivapalan Namasivay, MSF anaesthesiologist, back from Jahun Hospital in the North of Nigeria, where MSF is responsible for maternity care. Voices from the Field - 30 Sep 2015
 
An MSF boat ambulance reaches patients in remote communities in northern Jonglei State, South Sudan.
South Sudan

Boat ambulance reaches patients in remote communities into northern Jonglei State

“The ambulance boat is important,” says Mut, an MSF staff working in South Sudan, as it approaches the Old Fangak shoreline. “Before this system, people used to die because there was no transportation to the hospital.” (...)“We are lucky here to have access to healthcare.” Voices from the Field - 25 Aug 2015
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

The Rose of Masisi

A counselor at the Village d’Accueil gives us a tour of the MSF-supported Masisi general hospital in North Kivu, where women with high-risk pregnancies stay as they wait to give birth. Project Update - 27 Jul 2015
 
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Mali

MSF continues its activities in Timbuktu despite insecurity

Since 2014, deteriorating security, explosive devices on roads and the risk of carjacking have forced MSF to reduce its activities in Timbuktu. In spite of all this, MSF continues to fully support three community health centres on the outskirts of Timbuktu with primary, emergency obstetric and neonatal care, immunisation and nutrition programmes. Project Update - 24 Jul 2015
 
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Ethiopia

A tale of a desperate midwife

“Had these mothers arrived in good time, we would have saved their lives and their children’s. I feel very sad to see women die from avoidable conditions just because of lack of awareness,” said Aisha Akello, MSF midwife. “It’s heart-breaking, and sometimes I stay up at night, just contemplating what has happened and pondering ways to find a solution to prevent these avoidable maternal deaths.” Voices from the Field - 23 Jul 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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