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Mozambique

Mozambique and AIDS; The Silent Atomic Bomb - A Magnum photo gallery

In October 2002, Magnum photographer Francesco Zizola visited MSF operations in Mozambique where HIV+ and AIDS patients are being treated. You can view the complete Magnum collection of images from Mozambique on the Magnum feature page. Photo Story - 6 Feb 2003
 
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HIV/AIDS

US commitment to AIDS funding welcomed - with caution - by MSF

MSF welcomes President Bush's commitment to scale-up access to affordable AIDS treatment, but warns US against breaking promises, taking a unilateral approach. Press Release - 30 Jan 2003
 
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Vaccination

The Vaccine Gap: NY Times editorial

As the world struggles to fend off mysterious and complex plagues like AIDS and malaria, it must still find a sustainable way to ensure that children do not die from diseases that vaccines can prevent. Project Update - 30 Jan 2003
 
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Mozambique

Hope in small doses: MSF new AIDS programmes in Mozambique

A few patients, such as Graca, have already been in the program for some time but enrolments began in earnest in January: the Chamanculo project, for example, will take in 20 new patients each month over the next 24 months, to a total of 500 people. Project Update - 30 Jan 2003
 
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Mozambique

Positive lives: ART care brings new hope in Mozambique

"We're all well aware that there's an enormous problem here and that our operation is only small. But in the end for us it's about helping the person in front of us, hoping that our assistance can help them fight the disease." - MSF doctor in Mozambique Project Update - 27 Jan 2003
 
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South Africa

Once 'illiterate' from her infections, a Khayelitsha township HIV+ patient climbs back

"After I had treated her for the meningitis and we could talk a bit," said Francoise Louis, a doctor at the MSF clinic. "Boniswa told me 'I cannot read anymore. I can see the letters of posters on the wall, but I cannot understand the words.' " Project Update - 23 Dec 2002
 
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South Africa

Scientific American honours MSF Head of Mission for South Africa

In the December edition of Scientific American has named the MSF South African Head of Mission, Eric Goemaere, as the 'Medical Policy Leader of the Year' for the work he and his team have undertaken in the South African township of Khayelitsha. MSF carries the entire article below along with a comment by the recipient Eric Goemaere. Project Update - 18 Dec 2002
 
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HIV/AIDS

No agreement reached in talks on access to cheap drugs

Project Update - 14 Dec 2002
 
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HIV/AIDS

Glimmers of hope seen in treating patients

Knowing that it will take strong medicine to stem the AIDS avalanche, some doctors in South Africa are doing what the government still won't do - provide anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs to AIDS sufferers. Project Update - 12 Dec 2002
 
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South Africa

Mandela joins MSF to scale up AIDS treatment in South Africa

An estimated six million South Africans are HIV-positive. Only one in every thousand people who currently need antiretroviral treatment (ART) in South Africa, receive it through public services - half of them through the AIDS clinics in Khayelitsha. Press Release - 12 Dec 2002
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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