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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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MSF fistula camp in Boguila, CAR: Exterior of main hospital in Boguila. 
Approximately two million women in Africa suffer from a fistula, which is a hole between the vagina and the bladder or rectum, through which urine or feces leak continuously. Fistulas can be caused by prolonged obstructed labor and childbirth or sexual violence in addition to lack of medical facilities. Women with fistulas are often outcasts from their communities because of the smell associated with their incontinence, and in some cases they are abandoned by their husbands. Chances for women to have their fistula repaired are slim, as many hospitals or health clinics do not have the proper instruments or knowledge and skills to carry out such a procedure.
Central African Republic

Thousands of people flee fighting in Boguila town

7,000 people flee the town, 40 women and children seek refuge in hospital Project Update - 12 Apr 2014
 
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South Sudan

80,000 South Sudanese refugees in Ethiopia

Video: South Sudanese refugees in Ethiopia Project Update - 10 Apr 2014
 
An overview of the MSF Ebola treatment centre in the Guinean capital Conakry. Once completed, the expanded centre will have 30 beds for suspected and confirmed cases of Ebola. MSF, the Guinean Ministry of Health and health actors are working to contain the Ebola outbreak in the country, which by the beginning of April had been recorded in four locations in the country, including the capital Conakry.
Guinea

Successes and challenges in response to Ebola outbreak

MSF is successfully treating victims of the Ebola crisis in Guinea Project Update - 7 Apr 2014
 
A woman went to the MSF structure as she thinks she might be infected by the ebola virus. Sisille, an mSF nurse, is talking with her to evaluate if she presents any symptoms of the disease.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

MSF strengthens response to Guinea Ebola outbreak

MSF continues to reinforce its teams to respond to an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in Guinea. Project Update - 3 Apr 2014
 
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Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Ebola in Guinea - an unprecedented epidemic

Video: Ebola in Guinea - an unprecedented epidemic Project Update - 1 Apr 2014
 
MSF medics treat an IPD patient at Kunduz Trauma Centre in Kunduz, Northern Afghanistan.
Afghanistan

MSF treats 17 wounded after Kunduz bomb blast

MSF received 23 patients at its trauma centre following a bomb blast in Kunduz city yesterday. Project Update - 26 Mar 2014
 
Las familias de presos requieren, por lo general, atención psicológica. Mujeres, madres o hijos acusan todos  la ausencia del familiar preso. En el caso de Adel,  que se puso en huelga de hambre, agravó la condición de la familia. 
Prisoners’ families usually need psychological attention. Women, mothers, fathers, children, they are all affected by the absence of the prisoner. Adel’s case, who went into hunger strike, worsened the condition of his family.
Palestine

Growing up quickly in a West Bank refugee camp

A six-year-old growing up on the West Bank is helped by an MSF psychologist Project Update - 26 Mar 2014
 
MSF nurse, Dorothy Wanjiru, treats Sajen Mading, a severely dehydrated 7 month old baby girl. 

The baby arrived in Nadapal, on the Kenyan border with South Sudan, with her mother, her father and her six siblings. The family, originally from Bor, walked for 11 days to reach Nadapal. 

Sajen’s mother also received treatment from MSF’s medical team.
Ethiopia

MSF races against time to provide assistance to South Sudanese refugees

MSF is providing assistance to South Sudanese refugees arriving in Ethiopia fleeing violence and persecution in their country. Project Update - 26 Mar 2014
 
Kaluamba, isolation unit for suspected cases. An MSF team of nine Ebola specialists from the capitals Kinshasa, DRC, and Brussels, Belgium, is currently working in Western Kasai. Logisticians are building an isolation ward in the village of Kampungu, and putting in place all protection measures. The medical team is also providing care to all people suspected of having the disease.
Guinea

MSF reinforces teams to help control spread of Ebola epidemic

MSF continues to reinforce its teams in Guéckédou and Macenta, where the Ebola virus has spread. Project Update - 25 Mar 2014
 
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Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis, a killer disease

On World TB Day, MSF warns that TB is again a killer disease Project Update - 21 Mar 2014
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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