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MSF sets up a mobile clinic on a farm near Musina, on the South Africa / Zimbabwe border. Farms in the area employ seasonal agricultural workers, many of whom are undocumented migrants from other countries who lack access to the public helath care system in South Africa.
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Using portable tents allows MSF to conduct private consultations in a mobile clinic which changes location in the Musina area, accessing populations working in separate farming communities. MSF's mobile clinics are important adaptation because the farms are located approximately 40-60km from the town of Musina, where the closest public health clinics and hopsital are found. Agricultural workers tend to lack the income, time, and transportation to Musina to seek the healthcare that they need.
South Africa

Mobile care for mobile populations

MSF leaves Musina, South Africa, with a legacy of innovation Project Update - 29 Nov 2013
 
Setting up the inflatable hospital at Bethany Hospital.
Philippines

MSF reaching remote areas still in need of aid

MSF teams are still finding villages and towns that have not yet received any aid following typhoon Haiyan. Project Update - 26 Nov 2013
 
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Project Update

Making violence unacceptable

Project Update - 25 Nov 2013
 
Justin James Warren, the first Baby born in the maternity ward of MSF in Guiuan.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: First baby born in MSF maternity unit

At 2:50am on 20 November, a 2.2 kg baby boy was born in MSF maternity unit in Guiuan. Project Update - 21 Nov 2013
 
Mental health: a little boy very angry at the typhoon. Drawing is used as a therapy mean.
Philippines

“Depression can be as much of a disability as blindness”

Ana Maria Tijerino, MSF psychologist, is working with MSF emergency teams on Panay Island. Project Update - 21 Nov 2013
 
Bethany Hospital. The hospital faces the sea. Everything inside is destroyed. There is some medical material that could still be usable.
Philippines

MSF team sets up inflatable hospital

A team from MSF has set up an inflatable hospital in the compound of Bethany hospital, on the damaged seafront of Tacloban, the Philippines city hardest hit by Typhoon Haiyan. Project Update - 21 Nov 2013
 
MSF mobile clinic around Roxas - kid & nurses
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: “We are building up a picture of the human suffering that has accompanied this disaster”

MSF’s Dr Natasha Reyes describes the physical and mental injuries prompting people to seek medical care. Project Update - 19 Nov 2013
 
MSF’s team based in Palo provided 150 general healthcare consultations in Tanauan, a town of 55,000 people which was devastated by the typhoon and where 5,800 families are still living in difficult condition in the open.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: Aid urgently needed in rural areas

Ten days after Typhoon Haiyan struck the region, ports and airports are still congested with cargos of relief aid. Meanwhile communities in many remote areas continue to fend for themselves. Project Update - 19 Nov 2013
 
Tacloban airport Thursday, Nov 14.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: Eyewitness account of an MSF staff in Tacloban

Yann Libessart, a member of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) emergency team in Philippines describes the scenes he sees upon arrival in typhoon affected Tacloban city. With drugs and a fully-equipped inflatable hospital expected to arrive shortly, MSF doctors are getting ready to start providing healthcare. Project Update - 15 Nov 2013
 
The town of Guiuan, in the east of Samar island, an area hit first and hard by the typhoon. The damage there is extensive and the needs huge. Almost all the buildings in the town were destroyed. The local medical facilities are also severely damaged and not functional. MSF's emergency team has started its support to a health centre and seeing the first patients. Most patients came for wounds that have become infected. They are launching what will be an integrated provision of mobile clinics, reaching out to the more isolated parts of the coast and islands, and outpatient service in the town of Guiuan itself. That clinic will have the ability to keep more seriously ill patients overnight. MSF will also be providing water and sanitation services as soon as possible, while assisting with shelter. Other members of the team will also assess smaller nearby islands by helicopter.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: MSF starts treating patients

MSF team set up medical services and treated patients. Twenty five minor surgeries performed. Project Update - 15 Nov 2013
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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