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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Staff getting dressed in full PPE in the ETC (Ebola Treatment Centre) in Bikoro.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

MSF response to second Ebola outbreak in DRC since 2016

Our teams are responding to an Ebola outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo. It's the second outbreak of Ebola in DRC since the West African epidemic ended in 2016. Update as of 22 May 2018. Project Update - 23 May 2018
 
Nurse Salma attends to a patient in the maternity ward of MSF's hospital in Dagahaley camp, Dadaab.
Kenya

MSF responds to cholera outbreak amid heavy rains and flooding

Over the last two months, Kenya has been receiving heavy amounts of rainfall, causing floods, which have so far claimed the lives of over 170 people and displaced more than 300,000. Project Update - 18 May 2018
 
Preparation of the outreach teams in Bikoro.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Ninth Ebola outbreak in 40 years hits urban area

An outbreak of Ebola has been declared in Equateur province, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The outbreak, in the northeast of the country, has affected 44 people who have presented symptoms of haemorrhagic fever in the region; 3 confirmed as Ebola, and and 23 deaths have been notified by the national health authorities. Project Update - 17 May 2018
 
Ali, a student, was shot in the stomach during the events of April 10th. The bullet is still lodged in his body, he is waiting for surgery.

Ali, étudiant, a reçu une balle dans le ventre durant les événements du 10 avril. La balle est encore logée dans son corps, il attend d'être opéré.
Central African Republic

Days of violence and mass casualties in Bangui

For over 18 months, Central African Republic (CAR) has yet again been subjected to extreme violence inflicted on a population left traumatised by the civil war in 2013 and 2014. Until recently, the capital city Bangui appeared to have been spared the attacks and fighting that have erupted in the provinces. Project Update - 17 May 2018
 
People waiting in front of the Bambari general hospital, Central African Republic. In Bambari, second city of CAR, MSF supports the paediatric and maternity wards and the national surgery team. MSF teams in Bambari treated 22 people for violence-related injuries in May 2017, in contrast to just eight in April. Four children were among the wounded from Alindao treated by MSF, including a three-year-old who had been shot in the face. Most of those injured in Alindao had gunshot wounds, but some had knife injuries and burns.
Central African Republic

Fire and bloodshed in Bambari, a town symbolising peace

Since 14 May 2018, a new cycle of inter-community violence has taken hold in Bambari, a city in the Central African Republic (CAR) that, in 2017, remained relatively stable while the rest of the country spiralled into increasingly fractured conflict. MSF’s surgery team, which supports the local hospital, cared for 17 wounded, two of whom unfortunately succumbed to their injuries. Project Update - 17 May 2018
 
Noora is ten years old girl that is diagnosed with thalassemia.  The MSF team in Syria met Noora and her mother, Jawhara, in Tal Abyad hospital. 

Noora’s mother said: "We started doing blood transfusion for Noora when she was two months old."

"We fled from Deir ez-Zor to Tal Abyad. It takes us 15 minutes to arrive to the hospital for the blood transfusion sessions. Noora has a blood transfusion session once every 14 days, but it’s still quite a challenge. The most worrying part is not finding the medication to reduce the iron in her blood. There is limited awareness about the disease in the country and due to conflict in the country sometimes the medication or the blood units are not available."

"Noora couldn't play like other kids, sometimes she used to come back home crying." 

"We hope we will find a bone marrow transplantation donor but so far we haven’t and we can't afford it."

MSF has started providing chelation treatment to children with thalassemia in Tal Abyad national hospital.
Syria

Treating patients with chronic conditions in a war context

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has started providing chelation treatment to children with thalassemia in Tal Abyad national hospital, northeast Syria. After seven years of war, patients with this chronic disease have not received the regular treatment or blood transfusions they need. Project Update - 16 May 2018
 
Qalaat al-Madiq buses
Syria

Newly displaced Syrians face multiple challenges in Idlib and northern Hama

Over the past two months, huge numbers of Syrians have been displaced from formerly besieged areas to northwest Syria, with more than 60,000 of them arriving in the governorate of Idlib and in northern Hama. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is providing assistance throughout the area, and has strengthened the medical response in Qalaat al-Madiq in northern Hama, a location known as ‘zero point’ where new arrivals descend from buses. Project Update - 14 May 2018
 
A nurse vaccinates a young Syrian girl against measles and pneumonia in Al-Atareb, Syria. MSF conducted a vaccination campaign targeting tens of thousands of children in partnership with the Syrian Immunization Group and Health Directorate of Aleppo, Syria. -Al-Atareb-14-4-2018 Roaa Hasan.
Syria

Thousands of displaced kids in Aleppo catch up on vaccinations

Since 2016, the countryside west of Aleppo, in northern Syria, has been one of the main destinations for internally displaced people (IDPs) evacuated from besieged areas, including East Aleppo City, Homs, South Hama and, recently, East Ghouta.
Project Update - 7 May 2018
 
Newly displaced people carrying their belongings set foot inside the hospital compound where most of the people arriving in Pulka first settle.
More than 42,000 people are estimated to be living in Pulka now, according to local authorities. They are made up of internally displaced persons (IDPs), returnees and members of the host community who did not flee when Boko Haram attacked the town.
Since January, Pulka has registered more than 11,300 new arrivals.
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Nigeria

Parched Pulka searches for water

Amidst the conflict in Pulka, north-east Nigeria, displaced people struggle to access basic amenities like safe water. Project Update - 27 Apr 2018
 
In Alqsa Hospital, MSF team of surgeon, anesthesiologist and OT nurse, support the team of the local hospital with the massive influx of injured due to gunshots
Palestine

MSF teams in Gaza observe unusually severe and devastating gunshot injuries

Since 1 April, MSF teams in Gaza, Palestine, have provided post-operative care to more than 500 people injured by gunshots during the March of Return demonstrations. Project Update - 19 Apr 2018
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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