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A family Support Centre at Minj Hospital, Jiwaka Province, Papua New Guinea.
Papua New Guinea

Building a support system for victims and survivors of violence in Jiwaka

Women in Papua New Guinea's Highlands region face sexual violence, domestic violence, and sorcery accusation-related violence. MSF is strengthening access to care for victims and survivors. Project Update - 24 Apr 2026
 
The MSF hospital in Agok is the only facility providing secondary care in the entire Abyei region of South Sudan. This structure deals with emergencies, surgeries, treatments of HIV, tuberculosis, chronic diseases as well as neglected diseases, such as snake bites, a real scourge in the region. In 2019, in order to improve the quality of care, a radiology room was set up and the pharmacy was extended. A lack of specialized structures in the surrounding states forces some patients to travel very long distances to get to Agok hospital, some have to walk for up to 10 hours. This phenomenon illustrates the need for a comprehensive hospital in a country where health care is almost non-existent
Iran

Iran: Despite ceasefire, access to essential medical care remains fragile

MSF teams are working in South Tehran, Mashhad, and Kerman province in Iran, responding to people's growing medical needs. Project Update - 23 Apr 2026
 
MSF health promoter Kenia Donaire prepares sexual and reproductive health kits to be distributed during the team’s weekly outreach activities in marginalized communities, including LGBTQI+ people and sex workers.
Honduras

A safe space for LGBTQI+ patients in San Pedro Sula

In San Pedro Sula, Honduras, MSF teams provide medical and mental health care tailored to the needs of LGBTQI+ people and people who engage in sex work. Project Update - 22 Apr 2026
 
Hanna Dudnyk, MSF emergency doctor, examines, Svitlana, 67, who was brought to the emergency room by ambulance with complaints of loss of consciousness, and severe pain. 

"Svitlana was already treated at this hospital with the same symptoms, but she needs more extensive diagnostics than this hospital can provide. We can see that the patient has lost a significant amount of weight in four months, which is alarming. But, of course, the hospital will provide all the necessary medical care here and now to stabilise the woman's condition," said Hanna Dudnyk.   

This is far from an isolated case in Mykolaiv region, in the south of Ukraine. People are admitted to hospital with complex conditions, stabilised, and recommended for further examination, but they are often unable to travel to hospital in nearest city like Mykolaiv due to financial difficulties, limited mobility, and fear of leaving their homes due to the possibility of shelling.
Ukraine

When chronic illness turns critical in Ukraine

In Ukraine, war-related insecurity and extreme stress are causing people to delay seeking medical care, leading them to develop preventable complications. Project Update - 21 Apr 2026
 
Médecins Sans Frontières brings its activities closer to communities in Ciudad Juárez, reaching people where they live and where risks are greatest.
Mexico

MSF shifts response in Ciudad Juárez to address chronic violence

After years of working with a focus on migrants in Ciudad Juárez, northern Mexico, MSF teams are shifting response to address the city's chronic violence. Project Update - 15 Apr 2026
 
Surgical suite in the MFH
Gaza-Israel war

Gaza: Israeli entry restrictions cause critical shortage of medical supplies

Dr Randa Abu El-Khair Masoud, MSF medical adviser, describes shortages in chronic disease medications and dressing materials at our hospitals and clinics in Gaza. Project Update - 3 Apr 2026
 
A home in Khallet Athaba photographed by MSF in 2024, now completely demolished by the Israeli forces. This picture shows the building before being demolished.
Palestine

West Bank: Palestinian daily life consumed by new wave of violence as world looks elsewhere

In the West Bank, Palestine, people live with constant fear and trauma from intensifying violence as the world focuses on the conflict between the United States, Israel and Iran. Project Update - 27 Mar 2026
 
MSF staff offload non-food relief items transported by United Nations  Mi-26 helicopter in Chuil, Jonglei State, South Sudan, where displaced communities are receiving emergency assistance following recent violence.
South Sudan

Displaced people in central and northeastern South Sudan need urgent support

After escaping violent attacks in Jonglei and Upper Nile states, South Sudan, thousands of people are surviving outdoors with little food, water, or medical care. Project Update - 19 Mar 2026
 
In less than two weeks, more than 800,000 people have been forced to flee their homes and towns in Lebanon, due to relentless Israeli bombings and blanket evacuation orders that are not sparing anyone.  

Across Lebanon, our teams mobilized to bring essential medical care closer to people displaced by the war.
Our Mobile Medical Units travel to reach communities in need in the southern city of Saida, in Mount Lebanon, Beirut, Bekaa, and the north.
Lebanon

Lebanon: Families face uncertainty under bombardment and new evacuation orders

As new evacuation orders and bombardments force people from their homes in Lebanon, MSF is providing care to people arriving in displacement shelters. Project Update - 13 Mar 2026
 
Caroline Chestnutt, MSF water and sanitation team lead, and MSF technical logistics manager, walk towards the well near the temporary safety centre in Aagarathenna, Badulla district, Uva Province, Sri Lanka. The team is assessing the logistics of bringing a water supply to the safety centre from the nearest water source.
Access to Healthcare

MSF concludes emergency response to cyclone Ditwah

We've concluded our emergency response to cyclone Ditwah, the worst natural hazard to hit Sri Lanka in two decades. Project Update - 12 Mar 2026
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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