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

MSF ends Marburg operations in Angola

After over three months working at the Marburg fever outbreak in Uige province, Angola, MSF has ended its intervention. A few new Marburg cases have been recorded in the last weeks and it is likely that some sporadic cases will appear in the town and in the province of Uige for some months. However, the Marburg center is running well and the local staff are capable of handling these sporadic cases. Project Update - 15 Jul 2005
 
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Haiti

Violence intensifies in Port au Prince

One injured man, transported to St. Joseph's by a local taxi, was arrested right in front of two stretcher-bearers before they could take him out of the vehicle, and driven by the police to Port-au-Prince's general hospital, where he died an hour later, under police guard and without care. Project Update - 13 Jul 2005
 
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Angola

Marburg outbreak: When saving lives seems cruel

In late March, when MSF teams first arrived at the Marburg outbreak site in Angola, they were forced to take drastic - seemingly uncaring - measures to contain one of the most deadly and contagious viruses known to man. Project Update - 11 Jul 2005
 
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Ethiopia

Kala azar outbreak in Ethiopia as rainy season begins

A severe outbreak of kala azar, a rare and fatal disease, has struck the region of Amhara, northwest Ethiopia. In the small rural community of Bura (pop: 6,000) more than 150 people have died and over 230 infected persons have already been recorded. Project Update - 27 Jun 2005
 
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Natural hazards

Post-tsunami: six months financial overview

In an extraordinary outpouring of support, MSF sections worldwide received €105 million in donations to provide emergency relief to people affected by the tsunami. By the end of April 2005, MSF had spent 17.9 million Euros on tsunami-related operations in South Asia. In total the organisation will most likely spend 24.5 million Euro for activities in the regions affected by the tsunami in 2004 and 2005. Project Update - 24 Jun 2005
 
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Indonesia

Broken forests and ghost-white remnants in Lamno

Since MSF first arrived in Lamno in January 2005, they have conducted 3,011 medical consultations, built community latrines and cleaned wells in every camp, distributed relocation kits containing the basic tools for building homes and held individual counselling sessions with an average of 26 new patients a month. They have done this amongst a cacophony of aid agencies, working hard to attend co ordination meetings and ensure all activities are filling a medical need no one else has met. Project Update - 24 Jun 2005
 
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Natural hazards

Tsunami - three stages of MSF intervention

Graziella Godain, Deputy Director of Operations for the France section of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), reviews MSF's intervention following the catastrophe of last December 26 in South Asia and explains the scope and limits of MSF's action. Project Update - 24 Jun 2005
 
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Indonesia

MSF fights malaria outbreak on islands in Indonesia

"If we manage to successfully limit the infestation by mosquitoes and give prompt and effective treatment to the sick, we can literally help the community get back on their feet." - MSF doctor Project Update - 13 May 2005
 
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India

The future of generic medicines made in India

Prognosis: Short-term relief, long-term pain. The long-term impact of the Indian Patent Act is bad news for those relying on affordable new medicines - in MSF's own HIV/AIDS projects, for instance, approximately 70% of all patients currently take generic ARV medicines made in India. Worldwide, an estimated 350,000 people on ARV treatment depend on Indian generic production - that's half of all those on ARVs in developing countries. Project Update - 21 Apr 2005
 
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Natural hazards

Asian tsunami: Three months financial overview

In an extraordinary demonstration of public support, MSF offices worldwide saw an unprecedented surge of spontaneous donations. Project Update - 8 Apr 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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