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A view of the Durrani Camp, mountains in the backdrop and a cemetery in the foreground.
Pakistan

Crossing mountains to reach a hospital

Harsh winter conditions mean that many vulnerable people cannot access the healthcare they need Project Update - 11 Feb 2014
 
Pediatric rounds at MSF's inflatable hospital in Tacloban. MSF doctor, Ylva Paulsson, checks a young girl during pediatric rounds at the inpatient department of MSF's inflatable hospital in Tacloban. The hospital, which is run on the site of the city's BethanyHospital, which was badly damaged by the typhoon, is still busy three months after the typhoon. More than 100 babies have been born at the hospital since it opened, and each week, more than 2000 people come to the outpatients department for treatment.
Philippines

Specialised mental health treatment to target survivors of Haiyan

Specialised mental health treatment will target survivors of typhoon Haiyan, Philippines Voices from the Field - 7 Feb 2014
 
In Bouza district, Tahoua region, MSF is working to improve healthcare for children under five and pregnant women, focusing on early treatment and prevention, particularly in malnutrition and malaria; two of the main causes of child mortality in Niger.
Niger

“We are already getting ready for the next peak”

MSF project reduces child mortality in Bouza, Niger Voices from the Field - 22 Jan 2014
 
Janel Corate.
Philippines

Premature baby goes home on Christmas Day

Voices from the Field - 30 Dec 2013
 
Rommy, Male, First Baby born tonight at 3AM in MSF Tacloban Hospital
Philippines

Specialised care for mothers and babies in devastated Tacloban

Voices from the Field - 19 Dec 2013
 
Setting up the inflatable hospital at Bethany Hospital.
Philippines

I will call her Hope

A mother tells how her daughter died during typhoon Haiyan - but how her new-born baby girl has given her hope Project Update - 11 Dec 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
 
Akira Takahsi, MSF midwife in the Mother and Child Health Centre (MCH),.<br/>Despite the tense security situation in Hangu, MSF has been working inside the Hangu Tehsil Headquarter (THQ) Hospital since May 2010.  *** Local Caption *** In 2011, MSF provided medical care to 20,440 patients in Hangu : 18,914 patients in the emergency room, 979 patients were provided with emergency surgeries in the operating theatre of the hospital. Throughout 2011, MSF medical teams also referred 460 cases to Peshawar for specialised surgical and medical care. During the rainy season, MSF treated 1,526 patients with acute watery diarrhoea from July to October. MSF has also established a mass casualty preparedness plan in the hospital, to be able to quickly respond and provide emergency life saving medical care to the victims of bomb blasts, clashes and other trauma cases. On the 22 of December of 2011, following a bomb blast near a private clinic in Hangu city, MSF received four injured patients, and immediately provided them with emergency surgery. Two of them were referred to Peshawar for further specialised surgery and medical treatment, but unfortunately one of them died later. The two others injured remain hospitalised in Hangu THQ hospital. In the Mother and Child Health Centre (MCH), MSF has had one expatriate midwife assisting in handling complicated delivery cases and providing training since May 2011, while the daily services inside the MCH are run by Ministry of Health staff. So far, MSF has assisted 134 complicated delivery cases with free of charge treatment. To ensure the safety of patients and medical staff, MSF implements a strict ?no-weapons? policy inside the hospital.
In 2012, MSF will continue its free, emergency, medical care in order to help meet the consistent medical needs in the area. In December 2011, MSF has about 130 international and Pakistani staff working in Hangu, including 61 staff in the emergency room and operating theatre, and one expatriate midwife supporting the MOH staff of the MCH.
Since 1986, MSF has been working in Pakistan with Pakistani communities and Afghan refugees who have been affected by armed conflict, natural disasters or a lack of access to medical. MSF teams ar
Pakistan

The challenge of giving birth and staying alive

MSF Peshawar's Women's hospital helps to ensure safe and secure childbirth Voices from the Field - 20 Nov 2013
 
Newborn Syrian baby Zain Al-Abideen receives care from an MSF nurse in the neonatal unit at the mother and child hospital in Irbid.
Jordan

MSF opens mother and child hospital in Irbid to support Syrian refugees

The new MSF mother and child hospital in Irbid, Jordan has officially opened Press Release - 17 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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