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Rann
Nigeria

Rann bombing - one year on

On the one year anniversary of the bombing, we remember the victims. Project Update - 17 Jan 2018
 
Ngala IDP camp, Nigeria - July 2017
Nigeria

“I feel ashamed of relying on others to live, but we can’t go home”

"People are stranded and in need of assistance. It is hard to see how their situation will improve in the near future." Voices from the Field - 17 Jan 2018
 
Innovations to save lives in north-east Nigeria
Nigeria

No red lights to saving lives

Innovative use of small, three-wheeled vehicles to transport patients helps MSF overcome restrictions on movement in northeast Nigeria. Voices from the Field - 15 Jan 2018
 
Violence hit Paoua region
Central African Republic

Thousands displaced by fighting north of Paoua

Those forced to flee tell of torched villages, extortion and indiscriminate attacks. Voices from the Field - 8 Jan 2018
 
Tondo project in Philippines
Photo story

A year in pictures 2017

MSF's Pictures of the Year collection looks back on a year of providing medical care in extreme conditions and contexts across the globe. Through the lens of its photojournalists, MSF remembers and pays tribute to those who have struggled, those who have persevered and those who have perished. Photo Story - 18 Dec 2017
 
User fees - testimonies from CAR
Access to Healthcare

8 ways user fees for health are harmful to people

When people simply don’t have the means to pay either formal or informal healthcare fees, they are de facto excluded or delayed from receiving care and aren’t treated in time. This can lead to death or complication from treatable diseases such as malaria and can happen even when seemingly small amounts are requested. Project Update - 11 Dec 2017
 
End of intervention in response to a Marburg fever outbreak
Uganda

MSF ends its intervention in response to the Marburg fever outbreak

“This is the first time that Marburg fever has been diagnosed in these districts of Uganda, but strong national surveillance meant that the epidemic was noticed and confirmed early enough to allow for a rapid and effective collaborative response” Project Update - 11 Dec 2017
 
Zemio hospital, where thousands of people had been sheltering from violence.
Central African Republic

“The only people left in Zemio are those who couldn’t run away”

Recent attacks on Zemio, in southeast Central African Republic, have closed down the hospital and forced the city’s population, including MSF staff members, to flee. MSF medical coordinator Wil van Roekel describes the ramifications of the violence, including on some 1,600 HIV patients who need daily medication to survive. Voices from the Field - 9 Dec 2017
 
Auto mechanic, Holger Hornauf, in Bangui, Central African Republic, December 2017.
Central African Republic

My first week in Bangui: A warm welcome!

Holger Hornauf is a trained auto mechanic and in 2016 he went on his first assignment with MSF in the Central African Republic. One year later he’s back in Bangui as our workshop manager and is blogging about his experiences. blogs.msf.org - 7 Dec 2017
 
Batangafo Hospital : the last place to hide
Central African Republic

“In Batangafo, people are afraid for their lives. It’s the only thing they have left.”

Since late July 2017 fighting between ex-Seleka and Anti-balaka factions has once again set Batangafo and its surroundings on fire. The fighting in the area, in the north of the Central African Republic, has forced tens of thousands of people to abandon the temporary shelters where they had been seeking refuge since the crisis began in 2013-2014. Many have found refuge in the compound of the hospital supported by MSF.
Project Update - 6 Dec 2017
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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