Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
1993 Results
 
The return of the displaced to Khan Younis and another from Rafah, during the end of last April and during the beginning of this month.
Gaza-Israel war

MSF denounces Israeli attack on camp sheltering displaced people in Rafah

MSF strongly denounces attack on camp sheltering displaced people, which comes days after the International Court of Justice ordered Israel to halt military operations in Rafah. Project Update - 28 May 2024
 
The extreme rainfall and flooding that hit the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul isolated and forced the evacuation of whole cities. Roads were destroyed, bridges were knocked out and the main airport, in the capital city of Porto Alegre, is indefinitely closed. More than 460 state´s municipalities, out of a total of 497, have been hit.
Brazil

Unprecedented flooding in Brazil leaves millions affected and hundreds of thousands displaced

As rescue teams face challenges in reaching people affected by extreme flooding in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, we are focusing on supporting those in the most vulnerable conditions. Project Update - 20 May 2024
 
Since the start of the war in Sudan, healthcare facilities and medical staff have faced repeated attacks, including lootings of hospitals. In Zalingei, the teaching hospital has been looted and attacked multiple times throughout the year. During one attack by armed men in the hospital, a doctor was shot while operating on a patient. The doctor survived the shooting, but one patient died.

After over year of attacks on healthcare, Sudan's health system is barely functioning, and people have been cut from life-saving care. Often those most impacted are the ones displaced, unable to reach health services or buy medicine after losing their homes, belongings, and livelihoods. In Zalingei, MSF teams are providing secondary care in the Zalingei teaching hospital and supporting the Ministry of Health with rehabilitation, training and incentives for staff. In April, the teams re-opened the emergency, maternity, inpatient therapeutic feeding center and pediatric departments.
Sudan

People abandoned amidst horrific violence and humanitarian void in Central Darfur

As conflict escalates in Zalingei, Central Darfur, Sudan, people displaced by extreme violence have been left without basic services amidst a humanitarian void. Project Update - 17 May 2024
 
Palestinians on their way back to their homes after visiting MSF mobile clinic in the Al-Majaz community in Masafer Yatta south of Hebron. 

In the Hebron district of Masafer Yatta, for Palestinians, frequent roadblocks, military raids and attacks by settlers make accessing health facilities increasingly difficult. And to make matters worse, no local organisations can provide basic healthcare services due to a lack of funds, restrictions by the Israeli army and poor road infrastructure that leads into the town.
Gaza-Israel war

Palestinians face increase in extreme violence and restrictions in the West Bank

Since the eruption of war in Gaza on 7 October, MSF medical teams have witnessed a massive increase in extreme violence against Palestinians across the West Bank, in Palestine. Project Update - 15 May 2024
 
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, June 21, 2022.
   After being treated and stabilized by the MSF team in Turgeau, these patients, victims of a road accident, were discharged from the hospital and returned home.
  MSF/Johnson Sabin
Haiti

People cut off from vital healthcare as intense violence grips Port-au-Prince

Violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, has escalated dramatically, with armed groups expanding to new areas, leaving people too afraid to seek vital healthcare. Project Update - 3 May 2024
 
A photo of the partially functioning fifth bridge, once known as the city’s biggest bridge, near the remnants of the historic Qera Serai Castle (The Black Palace). Due to the ongoing rehabilitations of this bridge, crossing the Tigris River from this point still takes a lot of time for the people of Mosul as the work provokes traffic congestions at peak times.moh
Iraq

MSF hands over activities after six years of healing wounds in Al-Wahda

MSF has handed over medical services at Al-Wahda hospital in Mosul, Iraq, to the Directorate of Health, as the city advances in its recovery after years of deadly battles. Project Update - 3 May 2024
 
Patients waiting at Al Aqsa hospital. 29 November 2023, Middle Area, Gaza.
Gaza-Israel war

Gaza’s healthcare workers grapple with the mental health impact of an unyielding war

After over six months, the relentless war in Gaza, Palestine, has taken a toll on the mental health of medical workers. Project Update - 26 Apr 2024
 
Rita Dmitrenko, 61 years old. From Kobzartsi, Mykolaiv province. In this former frontline town, MSF supported the only health post for weeks. Everyone here is very grateful to MSF. Rita was one of the patients and she still goes to the health post, where a nurse (from the Ukrainian health system) is still working. The war was coupled with a delicate family situation. "My husband has depression. When I told him I had cancer, he started to get worse and lose weight". She underwent surgery and is feeling better. MSF gave her psychological support.

PERSONAL
Rita Dmitrenko, 61, is from Kobzartsi in the southern Ukrainian province of Mykolaiv. In this village that was close to the frontline, MSF supported the only health post for weeks. Everyone here is very grateful to MSF and the medical and psychological help it provided. Rita was one of the patients and still goes to the health post, where a nurse (from the Ukrainian health system) is still working. The war was coupled, in her case, with a delicate family situation. "My husband has depression. When I told him I had cancer, he started to get worse and lose weight". She underwent surgery and is feeling better. 
"MSF helped us a lot," says Rita, wearing a scarf. "The medical team saw us and referred us to the psychologist. I thought I didn't need psychological help, but it went very well. My husband and I used the counselling they gave us". 
War is not only the direct victims, the wounded people, but also those who are left without medical care at a critical moment. It happened to Rita. When the battlefront was close to here, Rita could not go to Mykolaiv, the nearest big city, the provincial capital, for check-ups. "I got worse. I think they could have checked my cancer better. The stress deteriorated her physical and psychological health: she was displaced with her husband for ten months some 50 kilometres from this village. And along with the war and her cancer came another terrible piece of news: one of her sons died of leukaemia. 
Now, after radiotherapy, surgery and psychological support, Rita is physically and mentally better. In a few months she is due to return to the hospital for a check-up.
War in Ukraine

War-torn minds: navigating mental health issues amid war in Ukraine

The war in Ukraine has a significant toll on people's mental health. Our teams have provided mental health support for both doctors and patients affected by the war. Project Update - 25 Apr 2024
 
MSF nurse checking the vital signs and glucose level of a diabetes patient at the MSF-run clinic for non-communicable diseases in the Hawija General Hospital in Hawija, Kirkuk.
Iraq

Eight years in Kirkuk: following along the journey of Hawija’s recovery

MSF started working in Kirkuk, Iraq, in 2016 to assist people affected by the war. As Hawija is on its way to recovery, we handed over our activities to the health authorities. Project Update - 29 Mar 2024
 
MSF staff provide medical consultations at one of the gathering sites in Kassala, Sudan. This site has received a large number of people with disabilities, who were relocated due to violent clashes in areas of Khartoum and Wad Madani with the help of local Sudanese activists and charitable groups.
Conflict in Sudan

Displaced by war, people in eastern Sudan urgently need food, water and shelter

Displaced people in Kassala, eastern Sudan, experience limited access to food, clean water and healthcare services. The scale of the crisis demands urgent and coordinated action from the international community. Project Update - 26 Mar 2024
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.

Learn more