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Guatemala

New Guatemalan law and intellectual property provisions in DR-CAFTA threaten access to affordable medicines

The majority of patients in MSF's treatment programmes are prescribed generic ARVs, whereas Guatemala's social security system has spent 20 times more for some originator drugs. Press Release - 11 Mar 2005
 
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HIV/AIDS

Global AIDS treatment efforts not on track

Since July 2004, only 260,000 new patients have benefited from ARV therapy in developing countries. Treatment expansion is moving at a snail's pace. From the perspective of a medical humanitarian organisation working in resource-poor countries to treat people with AIDS, the global picture is bleak. PEPFAR could be treating thousands more people with the funds it is spending. Press Release - 28 Jan 2005
 
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Global

Beyond the headlines: MSF issues list of the year's 'Top 10' most underreported humanitarian stories

"Millions are living through catastrophes in places that are never even mentioned," de Torrente said. "But people we meet all over the United States tell us they are eager for information, because they want to play a part in speaking out and acting against such crises."
Read the 2004 Top Ten list
Press Release - 19 Jan 2005
 
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HIV/AIDS

Access to AIDS care increasing at snail's pace

Overall, the AIDS pandemic remains undefeated. At today's briefing, MSF also highlighted the lack of paediatric formulations of antiretroviral medicines and the lack of reliable diagnostic tests to detect tuberculosis, the number one AIDS-related opportunistic infection, in HIV-positive individuals. Press Release - 1 Dec 2004
 
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HIV/AIDS

Children with AIDS in developing countries die needlessly

MSF: further development of drugs and treatment for children needed. "There is a limited selection of ARVs available," says doctor Heather Culbert of the MSF team in Bukavu, in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). "The problem is that these are difficult to dose and to administer, especially to older children, which makes our work highly frustrating." Press Release - 1 Dec 2004
 
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HIV/AIDS

The gap is growing: More resources needed now for neglected diseases

The pipeline of drugs for neglected diseases is virtually empty. From 1975 to 1999 of the 1393 new drugs marketed only 13, or a mere one per cent, were for tropical diseases. This imbalance is unacceptable in the second millennium.New drugs for neglected diseases: From pipeline to patients in PDF format. Press Release - 11 Nov 2004
 
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HIV/AIDS

Time to stop fooling ourselves: TB is spiralling out of control

The combination of MDR-TB and HIV/AIDS is a time-bomb waiting to go off in Africa. Press Release - 26 Oct 2004
 
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Uganda

Two pills a day: treat HIV/AIDS now!

Two years of antiretroviral treatment in Arua, Uganda commemorated
amid calls for urgent expansion of free treatment.
Press Release - 29 Jul 2004
 
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Belgium

Access denied in the Belgian healthcare system

Legal grey areas and a lack of coordination concerning medical care for illegal immigrants among Public Centres for Social Assistance have created a disparate and unpredictable system. Press Release - 13 Jul 2004
 
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HIV/AIDS

Children being neglected in AIDS fight, with paediatric AIDS medicines scarce

The estimated worldwide number of children with HIV/AIDS was over 2.5 million in 2003. In the same year, 700,000 children under the age of 15 were newly infected with HIV/AIDS, 88.6% of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa. Approximately 50% of children with HIV/AIDS die before the age of two. Press Release - 13 Jul 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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