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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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1993 Results
 
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Kenya

The dilemma of HIV pediatrics

The figures show that 33% of children with HIV positive mothers are born with the disease and 50% of suspected HIV positive children are dead by the time they reach two years of age. Project Update - 1 Dec 2005
 
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Kenya

HIV does not mean a death sentence

"HIV is not a death sentence. It's a new life that starts" - Portrait of Siama Musine, 30 years old, on antiretroviral treatment since April 2004. Project Update - 1 Dec 2005
 
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Uganda

Kibera: one of 1.4 million Aids orphans

"My friends would avoid me if I told them I have HIV/Aids" - Hawa, 13, on antiretroviral treatment since 2003, and her grandmother, Hamida Project Update - 1 Dec 2005
 
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World AIDS Day

Children under two and AIDS

Across the globe last year, 700,000 children were newly infected with HIV – half a million of them live in Africa, compared to only 250 in Europe and North America. But there are no affordable AIDS tests that work in babies or medicines that kids can take easily. Project Update - 28 Nov 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Fighting leads to renewed displacement in Katanga province, DRC

Hundreds more families are suspected to have been displaced in the region. Exact figures are not known since MSF has no access to areas close to the frontline because of heavy fighting. Project Update - 25 Nov 2005
 
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Pakistan

Goods distribution in Pakistan quake region

In a race against the clock, an MSF team works through the villages in the area - actually a series of houses scattered along the steep sides of the valley - to identify the families where the needs are most urgent. Project Update - 23 Nov 2005
 
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Pakistan

Safdar Chok becomes first 'health-care village' in the heart of Pakistan earthquake region

To ensure that patients treated at the district hospital and their families have proper housing before winter comes in the earthquake affected areas of Pakistan, MSF has built small camps inside the town of Mansehra, where winterized tents, health infrastructure, and medical care are provided. Safdar Chok, the first of these 'health-care villages', opened its doors during the second week of November. The second village opened on November 15. Two more are under construction. Project Update - 21 Nov 2005
 
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Pakistan

Risk of a second wave of mortality in Pakistan

"Winter is already there and as it progresses, roads will become even less passable. To say the least, the environment is hostile for emergency assistance. Given the information currently available, MSF is planning to stay at least for the winter and probably longer."
Project Update - 21 Nov 2005
 
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Tuberculosis

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: no tools to properly treat people

The very costly and complex treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is only accessible to a very small minority of the millions of people with the disease worldwide. What is worse, those who have started taking the medicine are subjected to devastating side effects, and barely half of them end up recovering. Project Update - 15 Nov 2005
 
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Pakistan

'We will continue to struggle with enormous challenges'

Providing aid under these circumstances means that you have people queuing up in front of the MSF warehouse because they see that you are loading tents on a truck. You would tell them: "Sorry, these tents are meant for a particular village where people have lost everything." But the desperate people will reply: "Why don't you give me a tent." And there will be no doubt that they also deserve one.
An interview with MSF emergency coordinator Vincent Hoedt
Project Update - 4 Nov 2005
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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