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3342 Results
 
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Sudan

Nearly 200,000 people vaccinated against yellow fever in Kordofan, Sudan, in two weeks

Maintaining the cold chain that keeps the vaccines at the correct temperature meant 600 kilograms of ice had to be produced, packaged and transported every day. Project Update - 28 Dec 2005
 
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Haiti

Treating bullet wounds and delivering babies

Two women in the maternity yard's waiting room. Since the beginning of the MSF intervention in Choscal, 400 children have been delivered.
"It is difficult to work in this area," says Loris de Filippi, the MSF head of Mission. "But we found it simply unacceptable that a population of a quarter million, the equivalent of a small European city, would be cut off from medical care."
Project Update - 27 Dec 2005
 
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South Africa

Where the stigma of Aids became the killer

This series of articles and audio/video files was researched and written by Guardian newspaper journalists and was a feature series running in the UK publication and website throughout the Christmas season. Click logo to access the full series on the Guardian website
A new frankness has replaced darkly ironic euphemisms as Khayelitsha battles to overcome epidemic.
Project Update - 24 Dec 2005
 
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Serbia

Forgotten people of the Balkans

Six years have passed since the NATO intervention in Kosovo. Talks on the province's status have begun, but on the other side of the border, the ethnic Serbs who fled are living in appalling conditions. Project Update - 23 Dec 2005
 
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HIV/AIDS

Nolist - surviving AIDS and TB in South Africa

When I was sick, I wished that God could take me and I did not wish to be in this world. Now I'm going to spend many more years here because I am fine. Project Update - 22 Dec 2005
 
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Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka- One year operational review

MSF's initial assessments revealed an uneven destruction of the coastal villages and found health practitioners taking care of the wounded, most of whom were treated within the first three days. Local communities organised accommodation and communal kitchens for the displaced people. Project Update - 20 Dec 2005
 
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Indonesia

Tsunami one year review

MSF was already active in Indonesia before the tsunami struck, assisting patients suffering from infectious diseases and helping victims of violence and natural disasters. On December 28, the first team arrived in Aceh's regional capital of Banda Aceh. They started seeing patients in a medical clinic and began assessments and relief operations. Project Update - 20 Dec 2005
 
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India

Tsunami one year operations review

Because of quick government and community mobilization, emergency medical needs caused by the tsunami were mostly covered in this country. The principal problem for many communities was psychological trauma, with some people suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. Project Update - 20 Dec 2005
 
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Thailand

Tsunami one year operations review

In general, the Thai emergency response was found to be fast and well-organized. MSF decided to help improve the situation for Burmese migrant workers affected by the tsunami. More than 50,000 Burmese migrants are registered as workers in six provinces along the western coast of southern Thailand, but as many as 500,000 are actually thought to live in the area. Project Update - 20 Dec 2005
 
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Tsunami

Use of tsunami funds

A summary of the use of tsunami funds Project Update - 20 Dec 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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