Skip to main content
7692 Results
 
msf-placeholder
Haemorrhagic fevers

Crisis update - 2 November 2015

The emergency is not over – the Ebola epidemic in West Africa continues in Guinea where three new cases were recorded last week. Crisis Update - 3 Nov 2015
 
Seeking malaria treatment around Aweil, South Sudan
South Sudan

Searching for malaria care in South Sudan

South Sudan’s Northern Bahr el Ghazal State sits in the remote northwestern corner of the country. It is South Sudan’s poorest state and it has only one full service hospital—a facility in the town of Aweil run by MSF, in conjunction with the Ministry of Health—serving an estimated population of 1.2 million people. Photo Story - 2 Nov 2015
 
msf-placeholder
Syria

At least 550 wounded in horrific market-bombing in Damascus besieged area

At least 70 people have been killed and 550 injured in an airstrike on a marketplace in the Douma neighbourhood near Damascus, Syria. "This was an extremely violent bombing," says the director of a nearby MSF-supported hospital who assisted in the first wave of mass-casualty response. "The wounds were worse than anything we've seen before, and there were large numbers of dead." Press Release - 31 Oct 2015
 
MSF staff in Kunduz
Afghanistan

MSF staff gather In Kunduz

Three weeks after the bombing in Kunduz, Afghanistan, our MSF colleagues gathered together for the first time on the grounds of the ruined hospital. Project Update - 30 Oct 2015
 
South Sudan

Trapped by violence in Unity state

Spiralling violence in Unity state is having a devastating effect on the civilian population and leading to an unprecedented humanitarian crisis. “The civilian population is being subjected to repeated and targeted violence,” says MSF emergency manager Tara Newell. “MSF has not seen this level of violence and brutality before.” Press Release - 30 Oct 2015
 
Yemen

Denial of hospital bombing by Saudi-led coalition contradicts all facts

Despite denials by the Saudi-led coalition, it is beyond doubt that it struck and destroyed a hospital supported by MSF in Haydan on 26 October.
Press Release - 29 Oct 2015
 
The tough decision to leave your country
Syria

The tough decision to leave your country

Testimonies from MSF staff who made the tough decision to leave Syria. Voices from the Field - 29 Oct 2015
 
Sana’a. Yemen
Yemen

Antiretroviral treatment beneath the bombs

More than 1,300 people living with HIV/AIDS are receiving antiretroviral treatment in Yemen, around half of them in Sana’a, the capital. Dr Abdulfattah Al-Alimi, Field coordinator and medical team leader of MSF's HIV/AIDS project in Yemen, discuss how the current war is affecting the patients' treatment. "In the end, this is our job and responsibility: to find a way so no one has to interrupt their treatment because of the war," says Dr Abdulfattah Al-Alimi. " These are difficult times for my country, but we are trying to prevent them from being even more so for people living with the virus." Voices from the Field - 29 Oct 2015
 
Massive displacement
Syria

Massive displacement in Northern Syria as violence escalates and intensifies

At least 35 Syrian patients and medical staff have been killed, and 72 wounded, in a significant increase of air strikes on hospitals in Northern Syria, according to health staff supported by MSF inside Syria. As a result of the wider attacks in the region, tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes. Crisis Update - 29 Oct 2015
 
District Headquarter Hospital
Pakistan

Earthquake response – after initial influxes of injured, MSF assessing further needs

Following the 26 October earthquake that rocked parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan, MSF's medical projects in north western Pakistan were faced with an initial influx of seriously wounded. After treating the injured, the next priority is to assess the needs and identify if there are any urgent follow-up requirements. Crisis Update - 28 Oct 2015
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.

Learn more