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Democratic Republic of Congo

Kinshasa and war-torn Bukavu region celebrate first year of ARV treatment

The Bukavu AIDS project in the Democratic Republic of Congo is the only one of its kind for MSF in a true conflict setting yet it has shown that it is possible to provide quality medical care for people living with AIDS in such environments. MSF also runs a second AIDS project in the DRC capital, Kinshasa, with the same record. Project Update - 15 Oct 2004
 
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Haiti

Situation at Haiti floods still difficult

Over 15 days after the floods that hit the city of Gonaives, Haiti, the situation is dramatic for tens of thousand people. Large parts of the city are still under water and mud. Houses are destroyed and the refugee centers are filled with people who have not received any aid so far. Project Update - 6 Oct 2004
 
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Haiti

Nurse, psychologist and patient: Three views from the Haiti floods

From Gonaives, Haiti, three people give their impressions of work, needs and life immediately after the floods. Project Update - 6 Oct 2004
 
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Sudan

Violence and mortality in West Darfur: excerpts from the four MSF surveys

Violence in Darfur, Sudan, has rendered more than one million people internally displaced. An epidemiological study of the effect of armed incursions on mortality in Darfur was needed to provide a basis for appropriate assistance to internally displaced people. Project Update - 1 Oct 2004
 
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Sudan

Part 1 of 2: MSF establishes first medical care for thousands in Darfur village

A two-part series with Dr. Matthias Hrubey, an MSF volunteer from Germany working in Darfur, Sudan.

"Getting the clinic set up was a challenge. We started preparations as soon as I got here by identifying a site for it and then designing and building a structure with local materials. We ordered the medicines and supplies we would need and began hiring staff in preparation for opening. The biggest difficulty was not building the clinic, but trying to find the qualified medical staff and translators we would need to run it. We decided to start small by building just one local-style stick and straw structure called a "rakuba". We opened with this one building, some tables, benches and mats, and a small pharmacy." - Dr. Matthias Hrubey.
Project Update - 30 Sep 2004
 
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Sudan

Measles vaccination campaign in North Darfur, Sudan, hampered by insecurity

"We estimate there to be about 40,000 children between the age of 5 and 15 in these two towns and our surveys suggest that vaccination coverage in the past has been extremely poor. But we have, sadly, been forced to postpone our plans to vaccinate children in the more isolated mountainous region due to security concerns," said Dr. Natalie Civet, head of mission for Darfur. Project Update - 29 Sep 2004
 
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Haiti

Mental health work alongside health care at the Haiti floods

"Most people who come to our health center have lost everything," explains Ilse Casteels, MSF psychologist in Gonaives, Haiti. "Sometimes, they have lost members of their family. Many have lost their home and their job. Others have great difficulties to find some food. This creates a lot of despair." Project Update - 29 Sep 2004
 
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Malnutrition

Sebastio Salgado book to be sold in aid of MSF

Sebastio Salgado book to be sold in aid of MSF. Project Update - 28 Sep 2004
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF opens ground-breaking sleeping sickness project in the DRC

The principal objective will be the clinical trial of a treatment which is more effective and significantly less dangerous for the patient. This means the current drug, an arsenic-based compound, which has a potential mortality rate of 10% and was developed over 50 years ago, may be discontinued in MSF projects. Project Update - 27 Sep 2004
 
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Sudan

Malnutrition: a political problem

In Darfur, Sudan, the current violence and mass exoduses have had serious consequences on the food supply. In certain refugee camps, the high malnutrition rate among children under five has reached 25%. Project Update - 23 Sep 2004
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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