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Rescue on MV Aquarius - June 2016
Mediterranean migration

Aquarius returns to Central Mediterranean: humanitarian assistance at sea desperately needed

The rescue boat Aquarius, run by SOS MEDITERRANEE and MSF, sets sail from Marseille after an extended port call. Aquarius is heading back to the Central Mediterranean to render assistance to people in distress at sea. Press Release - 1 Aug 2018
 
Haroon, 8 months old, is treated in in the intensive care unit so he can be stabilised, before being transferred to the therapeutic nutrition center (CNT). He shows symptoms of severe malnutrition and anaemia. His physical condition worsened because of blood loss as the result of a traditional 'scarification' ceremony, where marks are cut into the face and body to indicate social and tribal affiliations. 

Haroon had been bleeding and getting weaker for three days, before he was brought to the hospital by his mother.
A nurse is preparing the baby for a blood transfusion. Haroon will be treated in the intensive care unit for at least four days, with transfusions, antibiotics and therapeutic milk.
Chad

MSF opens emergency nutrition programme in N’Djamena

It is urgent to increase inpatient capacity to treat severely malnourished children and to provide early treatment in outpatient facilities as acute malnutrition reaches alarming proportions in N’Djamena, the capital of Chad. Press Release - 27 Jul 2018
 
Tanya is not at school, because her father cannot afford the fees. She spends a lot of time in and around the house. “When the other kids are playing outside my home, I try and use my crutches to keep up but they don’t slow down for me because I can’t walk as fast. When it happens, and they run away from me, it hurts me a lot. I start calling out to them. If they don’t come back, I go inside my home. When they run away, it’s very painful to me, sometimes it even gives me a pain in my stomach, deep down, and that’s why I end up sleeping and I will wish that my Daddy will come home and that he will be with me. When Dad comes home and I tell him what happened, he says, don’t worry about them, they are just kids playing around,” she says.
HIV/AIDS

Pfizer and GSK’s HIV/AIDS division, ViiV, prevents children with HIV from getting needed medicine

Tanya is ten years old and is unable to walk. She was diagnosed with HIV when she was just a few months old. Zimbabwe, 2016. Press Release - 23 Jul 2018
 
Thun Mina Aung, 18, from Myammar inside the MSF's Insein clinic in Yangon.

Thu Min Aung is 18 years old and lives with his aunt. Back in June 2017, he was working as an air conditioner installer in Sang Jae township when he started to feel sick. He went to a nearby clinic and they gave him medications, but the drugs did not treat his symptoms. 

Soon after, he moved to Hlaing Tharyar, where he went to another clinic and discovered that he has MDR-TB. Treatment has greatly impacted his day-to-day life. Everyday, he wakes up at 7am, eats breakfast, and takes the bus for 45 minutes to the MSF clinic to take his medication. The pills make him feel very dizzy. When he gets home from the clinic, he has to lie down and sleep for the entire afternoon. His whole life revolves around treatment right now because the side effects are very severe. He has 12 more months of this day-to-day before finishing treatment.
Tuberculosis

Last-minute pressure to drop language on protecting access to affordable medicines from TB Summit declaration negotiations

MSF's Access Campaign appeals to all countries to urgently stand up right now against bullying that aims to keep medicines out of the hands of your people who need treatment. Press Release - 20 Jul 2018
 
MSF and SOS Mediterannee Search and Rescue personnel from the vessel, Aquarius, intervene to rescue refugees and migrants from an over-crowded wooden boat, 28 December 2016, in the Mediterranean sea off the northern coast of Libya.
Mediterranean migration

Drowning skyrockets as European governments block humanitarian assistance on Central Mediterranean

In the last four weeks, the number of deaths in the Central Mediterranean has skyrocketed, with over 600 people drowned or are presumed drowned, including babies and toddlers. Press Release - 12 Jul 2018
 
Nashwan, 42, is prepared for surgery at the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) post-operative care facility in east Mosul. Nashwan is one of the many war-wounded patients still trying to recover a year after the conflict in Mosul officially ended. 

“On 11 March 2017, our neighbourhood was retaken [from the Islamic State group],” Nashwan recalls. “Two days later, we went out to buy food and we were happy. But fighting was continuing in the neighbourhoods around ours. There was a tall building nearby and there was a sniper on top. He started hunting us down. My neighbour was shot in the head and killed. My brother was shot in the leg. The sniper shot me in the back and in the leg.”

Nashwan went to several hospitals outside Mosul for treatment. He then returned to his home in west Mosul where the conflict was still raging. 

“I waited in my home for several months for the bombs to stop,” he says. “When I was at home during these seven months the pain started to grow in my leg and hip, and eventually it became unbearable. So in October 2017 I went to the general hospital in west Mosul. They did x-rays and tests and they said I needed a huge operation and they didn't have the capacity to do the operation.” 

Nashwan’s neighbours helped him pay for a private doctor to do the operation, but it was unsuccessful and Nashwan was soon in agonising pain again. He was forced to go back to the general hospital, which then referred him to MSF’s surgery and post-operative care facility in east Mosul.

“Life has been really hard. My injury has had a negative impact on my life - my family, the way I interact with my kids. I can’t play with them. I can't work and we haven’t had an income. I've been really depressed and I cannot talk to people. Even to go to the bathroom I need someone to come with me. And I need the crutches to go everywhere. It's been really hard for me. But thankfully the hardest part has passed now that I am here.” 

The MSF facility provides free surgeries, post-operative care, rehabilitation and mental healthcare, especially for war-wounded patients. MSF works closely with local health authorities to refer the most urgent patients for care.  

The facility is run by a team of 30 highly qualified international and Iraqi medical experts and has a 33-bed capacity.
Iraq

A year on from battle, Mosul’s healthcare system is still in ruins

National authorities and the international community need to urgently rebuild public health infrastructure, provide patients with access to affordable medication and ensure medial facilities are supplied with the necessary equipment. Press Release - 9 Jul 2018
 
Aquarius leaves Valencia harbour. The search and rescue vessel leaves Valencia  after an unacceptable 8 days odyssey and 3 days in Spain. Aquarius will be heading back to the international waters off the coast of Libya to keep on saving lives. After disembarking 106 people rescued in Valencia last Sunday, Aquarius has been doing resupplying works.
Mediterranean migration

European government policies condemn people to be locked up in Libya or drown at sea

European governments must come to their senses and end policies which trap extremely vulnerable people in Libya or leave them to die at sea. Press Release - 29 Jun 2018
 
Patient counselling is one of the important parts of the Test and Treat Programme.
South Sudan

HIV Test and Treat pilot project in Yambio comes to a close

The Médecins Sans Frontières, Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization's Test and Treat HIV study project in Yambio county finished in June 2018. The objective of the study was to assess feasibility and acceptability of the “treat all strategy” coupled with a community-based, patient-centred approach, based on HIV testing and same day antiretroviral treatment. Press Release - 27 Jun 2018
 
Migrants also use the shelters to gather information on routes to continue on their way through Mexico.
Mexico

An unsafe country for thousands of refugees fleeing violence in Central America

Migrants and refugees fleeing danger in Central America are trapped and exposed to more violence in Mexico due to ever tighter and more callous United States border control policies, said Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on World Refugee Day. Press Release - 20 Jun 2018
 
People disembark search and rescue vessel Aquarius, operated by SOS Méditerranée in partnership with Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF), in Valencia, Spain. The disembarkation is the end of a terrible ordeal for the men, women and children who spent multiple days at sea.
Mediterranean migration

European governments must put people’s lives before politics

MSF denounces Italy’s closure of its ports to prevent 630 rescued people from disembarking and European governments’ choice of political point-scoring over saving lives at sea. Press Release - 17 Jun 2018
Four mothers posing in a corridor of the Hospital in Bili. All four of them are staying in the hospital with their child, that's suffering from a severe case of malaria. Since the beginning of the project in 2016, the pediatric ward already treated more than 4.000 cases of complicated/severe form of malaria.
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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