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1993 Results
 
MSF mobile clinic in Gari Wanzam where thousands of newly displaced people from Bosso district have have sought refuge in the last days.
Niger

Humanitarian aid is barely in place in the Diffa region

MSF delivers water supplies and provides healthcare to people recently displaced by violence in the southeast of Niger. Project Update - 21 Jun 2016
 
95% of the patients who are coming to the health facilities in Pawa and Boma-Mangbetu areas are tested positive to malaria. After one month of intervention, 40000 patients have been taken care of.
Democratic Republic of Congo

40,000 people treated for malaria as disease surges

Project Update - 21 Jun 2016
 
The operating theatre is an essential part of emergency health services for women and children in Aweil. Young Wol Wol is deceptively tall at only 5 years old. He was climbing mango trees with his friend when he fell. And because it is the end of the season mangos only remain higher up in the trees, so he had to climb higher to reach the very last fruit and then fell.
The boy sustained a head injury, open elbow fracture and displaced wrist fracture (in a displaced wrist fracture the bones are misaligned and won’t heal correctly unless they are realigned). Armelle will put the child to sleep under general anaesthetic, and the MSF medical team will do the debridement (removing damaged tissue) and washing of the wound, then the Ministry of Health surgeon will do the reduction of the wrist fracture. After surgery, Wol Wol’s arm had to be put in a plaster cast. 
The operating theatre team undertakes surgery for an average of more than 200 children like Wol Wol per month. The team manages many dressings for burns, orthopaedic cases like fractures, and drainage of abscesses. “For maternity patients we also do emergency obstetrics surgery. We complete around 20 to 15 caesarean sections every month”, explains Armelle Vanderhaghen, anaesthetist nurse.
South Sudan

Paediatric care and treating malnutrition in Aweil

Project Update - 9 Jun 2016
 
6-year old Nyajinma was bitten by a snake as she was sleeping. Her mother carried for an hour and a half to the nearest health centre only to discover that no treatment was available. She was referred to the MSF hospital in Agok where she immediately received two doses of antivenom.
South Sudan

Little hope of a cure for the most vulnerable

Project Update - 3 Jun 2016
 
BEIRA, MOZAMBIQUE : July 8, 2016 - Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PreP) that prevents HIV infection amongst HIV negative women, which is particularly interesting for sex workers who are at high risk of infection and subsequently transmitting the virus. Photo by Morgana Wingard
Mozambique

Reaching out to sex workers in the Beira corridor

Most in need of HIV care, but with low access Project Update - 2 Jun 2016
 
Constance, a 22-year old woman from Kaniosha, Burundi lost her husband and child, who have been killed, while she has been beaten, strangled and left for dead. She just arrived in Manyovu. "I cannot walk anymore. My legs hurt, and I have pain in my head. Militias came to my house. They killed my husband and my son in front of me. I have been beaten up everywhere. They strangulated me and left me on the floor thinking I was dead also. But I wasn’t dead, I was unconscious. The next day I managed to find enough strength to stand up and escape. I will never go back to Burundi. "
Tanzania

One year of turmoil for Burundian refugees

Project Update - 1 Jun 2016
 
A Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) staff member carries cold boxes containing yellow fever vaccines on the first day of the vaccination programme in Matadi, DRC.
Angola

MSF teams help curb yellow fever

Project Update - 31 May 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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