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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Nawaf, a 45-year-old patient:“I was blown up by a landmine while herding sheep and I lost both my legs. Two weeks later, my brother was also wounded in the same way. After four months of treatment, I tried on my prosthetics two days ago, I feel so happy. It’s a feeling that you can’t explain. I didn’t know that it would be possible. I can’t wait to go back to Syria to show my family that I can walk again.”
Syria

From bad to worse

"Syria remains the most serious humanitarian crisis in the world" - Aitor Zabalgogeazkoa, Head of Mission of the MSF team in Aleppo in 2014
Op-Ed - 7 Jan 2015
 
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Yemen

MSF provides medical care to IDPs and injured people lacking access in Al-Bayda governorate

The newly formed Yemen Emergency Pool has provided medical consultations and non-food items to IDPs. Project Update - 18 Dec 2014
 
Gul Bibi, 65,( was displaced from her village in Upper Kurram Agency and has been living in Sadda as an IDP for three years) with her grandson.
Pakistan

“No Place to Call Home” for Internally Displaced People

The internally displaced persons in the Federally Administrated Tribal Areas have escaped the violence but are confronted with greater challenges. In the Media - 16 Dec 2014
 
Portrait of Mishenko Aleksander Grigorievich, 57 years old, in Svitlodarsk Civil Hospital in Donetsk region. Aleksander is from Debaltsevo, a city of 25,000 people in Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine. The edge of the city hugs the frontline in the ongoing conflict between Ukrainian and rebel forces. Despite a ceasefire agreement signed on 5 September, people living on the outskirts of the city continue to experience shelling on an almost daily basis. Alexander was wounded on 13 October and is being treated in Svitlodarsk hospital. MSF has been supporting the hospital with urgently needed medical supplies for treating wounded patients. Aleksander is receiving counselling from an MSF psychologist to help him deal with the traumatic experience.
Ukraine

Testimonies from patients and medical staff in the Donetsk region

Aleksander is from Debaltseve, a city of 25,000 people in Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine. The edge of the city hugs the frontline in the ongoing conflict between Ukrainian and rebel forces. Voices from the Field - 2 Dec 2014
 
The destroyed psychiatric hospital in Semenovka, on the outskirts of Slavyansk, Donetsk region. The hospital was evacuated as heavy fighting drew closer. After one side took the building as a base, it was completely destroyed in heavy clashes. Shrapnel marks can be seen all over the outside, while the inside was obliterated. Months later, the hospital remains unusable.
Ukraine

“People are extremely anxious; they just don’t know what the next months hold.”

With winter settling in in eastern Ukraine, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is continuing its support to hospitals on both sides of the frontline, and expanding its psychological assistance to help people living in some of the hardest hit areas. Despite the signing of a ceasefire agreement on 5 September, fighting has continued in several cities and towns, with particularly heavy clashes taking place over the past two weeks. Crisis Update - 1 Dec 2014
 
Paoua hospital.
Cathy Beuve, MSF nurse. *** Local Caption *** In CAR, despite an overall increase in aid in recent years, access to health care remains a major problem, even in areas that are not directly affected by the conflict. A majority of Central Africans continue to live in extremely precarious conditions. Several mortality surveys conducted by MSF in particular regions of the country highlight crude mortality rates and specific extremely high - sometimes three to five times higher than the emergency threshold.<br>

These mortality rates are partly attributable to a structural deficit of the health system that does not allow the public to have access to basic health care for diseases such as malaria, respiratory infections and diarrheal diseases.<br>

In Paoua, MSF teams are working in collaboration with the Ministry of Health in all hospital reference departments (pediatrics, surgery, maternity, emergency, hospitalization and HIV & TB treatment). In 2011, MSF issued more than 72,000 consultations in Paoua hospital and peripheral health centers, and more than 6600 patients have been hospitalized. The teams have conducted over 8000 ANC consultations and 1432 deliveries. MSF also supports patients with advanced AIDS and cases of co-infection HIV / TB. In 2011, 247 patients received antiretroviral therapy.<br>
HIV/AIDS

‘Double victims’ – in conflict zones, people with HIV are twice as vulnerable

The past decade has seen major improvements in people’s ability to access lifesaving HIV treatments – but if you live in Central African Republic (CAR), South Sudan or parts of Yemen, you could be forgiven for thinking nothing has changed. The fact is that in most unstable areas, HIV services remain largely non-existent. Voices from the Field - 1 Dec 2014
 
MSF started activities in Mpoko in January 2014 to respond to the medical needs of the displaced people in the camp.
Central African Republic

Violent attacks against MSF threaten the supply of humanitarian assistance

Difficulties in supplying MSF projects and the danger our teams are exposed to could force us to cut back assistance upon which hundreds of thousands depend. Press Release - 11 Nov 2014
 
Le 26 avril 2014, 16 civils - dont 3 personnels MSF - ont été assassinés par des hommes armés dans l'enceinte de l'hôpital de Boguila au Nord-Ouest de la RCA. 
En signe de protestation et de solidarité avec la population centrafricaine , victime de violences récurrentes, entre le 5 et le 9 mai 2014, toutes les sections MSF ont suspendu leurs activités sur toute la RCA, ainsi que pour les populations centrafricaines réfugiées au Tchad, au Cameroun et en RDC. Seules les urgences vitales ont été prises en charge au cours de cette semaine. Photo prise devant le dispensaire MSF - vide - du camp de déplacés de M'Poko, situé près de l'aéroport de Bangui.<br/>


On the 26th of April of 2014, 16 civilians - including three MSF staff - have been killed by armed men in the Boguila hospital compound, northwest CAR. 
As a sign of protest and solidarity with the CAR population - victim of constant violence - between the 5th and the 9th of May of 2014, all MSF sections have suspended their activities throughout CAR, as well as the ones dedicated to the Central Africans refugees in Chad, Cameroon and DRC. Only vital emergencies were taken in charge during this period of time. Photo of the - empty - MSF clinic located in M'poko's IDP camp, near Bangui's airport.
Central African Republic

Population and MSF staff still under threat six months after deadly attacks

"Local people live in constant fear that they will be attacked. They try to rebuild their houses and work in the fields but, as soon as there is any kind of stability, they get attacked again." Voices from the Field - 27 Oct 2014
 
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Central African Republic

Looking back on 10 days of violence in Bangui

MSF’s head of mission in Bangui recounts the challenges faced during that period. Voices from the Field - 23 Oct 2014
 
MSF facility in Batangafo (CAR)
Central African Republic

MSF denounces violence against teams

MSF has been forced to stop its activity in the city of Batangafo, Northern CAR Project Update - 9 Sep 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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