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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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1993 Results
 
Ndegue Michel (left) has been trained by MSF to treat malaria cases in the community so people don?t have to travel to the hospital. Here, a two-year-old girl is tested in the Rosin neighborhood on the outskirts of Carnot.
Central African Republic

Don't turn off the life support

Project Update - 17 Nov 2016
 
More than 300 people arrive each day in Nduta camp, originally designed for 50,000 people but now hosting over 65,000. New arrivals come by bus, first crossing the border point, then to transit camps and and then staying a few nights in the camp reception centre on arrival to Nduta. While they are being registered by UNHCR and before a family shelter is allocated to them, they live in overcrowded communal tents, facing poor hygiene and a high risk of malaria transmission.
New arrivals have to queue for hours in the reception centre to receive their daily meals. Some of these people have already been allocated a shelter, but have not received their refugee card and dry food rations. They have to come back every day to the reception centre to get a warm meal.
MSF is present at the reception centre to screen all new arrivals. “A lot of them arrive exhausted and in bad health condition. We do their medical check-up and send those in need to MSF clinics or refer them to the hospital. They also get vaccinated and pregnant women are scheduled for antenatal consultations.”
Medical teams have seen a big increase in the number of consultations, both at the reception centres and in MSF’s four health posts and hospital. The number of deliveries has risen as well. “When I arrived a few weeks ago, there were around five deliveries per day. Now we have around 12,” says Sally Parker, midwife.
Tanzania

Urgent increase in assistance needed as refugee camps now full

"With total refugee numbers in the three camps predicted to hit more than 280,000 by the end of 2016, this is rapidly becoming one of Africa’s biggest refugee crises," says David Nash, Head of Mission for MSF. Project Update - 16 Nov 2016
 
Nurses Lucien and Enoch change the bandages of a 28-year-old who was attacked with a machete in an attempted robbery not far from Kabo, Central African Republic, where violence is rife. MSF has been working in Kabo since 2006, and runs a health centre in the town, which includes a maternity, an operating theatre, a laboratory, a pediatric centre and a hospitalisation ward.
Central African Republic

A protracted crisis that must not be forgotten

Project Update - 16 Nov 2016
 
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Yemen

Record number of babies born on hospital’s one-year anniversary

On 7 November, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) marked the one-year anniversary of its mother and child hospital in Taiz, assisting in the deliveries of 24 babies in a single day. Project Update - 10 Nov 2016
 
The waiting room of the MSF-supported Mbalazime health centre, Bangassou sub-prefecture, Central African Republic.
Central African Republic

Great humanitarian need, little international attention

Project Update - 1 Nov 2016
 
In Kousseri city, the number of displaced people who have fled violence could reach 40 000. They are scattered around the city and are hosted by local families. 
MSF is supporting 3 health centers in the city of Kousseri (Madana, Madagascar, Amchidiré) including ambulatory therapeutic treatment centers (ATFC) for severe acute malnutrition. In Madana and Amchidiré, under five OPD and cover up vaccination is also provided by MSF, along with mental health support. Activities are open several times a week (from 2 to 5 times according to the number of patients seeking care). The main illnesses are diarrhea, malaria skin diseases and respiratory tract infections. Complicated cases are referred to Kousseri regional Hospital.
Lake Chad Crisis

Lake Chad: Years of Forgotten Crisis

Located in west-central Africa at the junction of Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon, Lake Chad was once among the continent’s largest bodies of water. Owing to a combination of climate change and overuse, however, Lake Chad’s size has steadily dwindled, putting the region’s population of roughly 30 million people under increasing strain. But diminishing resources are not the only thing they have to fear. Medium.com - 31 Oct 2016
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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