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MSF teams run mobile clinics to provide medical care for IDPs. They provide primary healthcare consultations, chronic disease treatment as well as reproductive healthcare consultations. On average, the team is performing 60 consultations each day.
Iraq

“Today the greatest medical needs remain in areas that are extremely difficult and dangerous to reach”

MSF is providing healthcare for those trapped in Iraq Project Update - 21 Jul 2014
 
Kelly Dilworth, MSF anesthetist, in the intensive care unit of the burnt service of Shifa hospital where two brothers, 8 and 4 years old, are hospitalized after being severely burned when a missile fell on their house.
Palestine

Israel Must Stop Bombing Trapped Civilians

The majority of the dead and wounded in Gaza are civilians and medical workers are also coming under fire Press Release - 21 Jul 2014
 
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Afghanistan

MSF cares for dozens of wounded following heavy fighting in central and northerm Helmand province

MSF cares for dozens of wounded following heavy fighting in Helmand province Project Update - 18 Jul 2014
 
Rafah, Gaza Strip, Jan 16 2009
More than 1000 civilians, mainly coming from houses near de Philadelphia line (border with Egypt) that is being extensively boombed by the Israeli air force, took refuge in the UNRWA operated preparatory school number one. On the 20th day of the Israeli operation in Gaza, one and a half million people are still deprived of electricity and basic supplies, as well as being unable to flee from the densely populated combat zone.
Palestine

An MSF team entered Gaza on Thursday to scale up MSF emergency response as an Israeli ground offensive is launched

An MSF team entered Gaza on Thursday to scale up MSF emergency response as an Israeli ground offensive is launched Voices from the Field - 18 Jul 2014
 
Gaza Février 2014

Conséquence du blocus israélien instauré en 2007, les gazaouis font face à une pénurie d'électricité. Générateurs électriques et bouteilles de gaz de mauvaise qualité sont sources d'accidents graves et fréquents. Les équipes MSF mènent un programme de chirurgie réparatrice dans les hôpitaux Al-Shifa et Nasser pour prendre en charge les grands brûlés, essentiellement des femmes et des enfants. Les patients bénéficient également d’un suivi postopératoire (physiothérapie, pansements) dans la clinique MSF, située dans la ville de Gaza.<br/>
 

Gaza, February 2014 

As a result of the Israeli blockade established in 2007, Gazan people are facing electricity shortages. Poor quality electric generators and gas bottles cause serious and frequent accidents. MSF teams carry out a program of reconstructive surgery in Al Shifa and Nasser hospitals to support burn victims, mainly women and children. Patients also benefit from postoperative care (physiotherapy, dressings) in the MSF clinic, located in the city of Gaza.
Palestine

A population under siege

Bombing intensity makes population and MSF teams on the field moves extremely dangerous Voices from the Field - 14 Jul 2014
 
MSF staff with patients at MSF health post in Mpoko IDP camp at Bangui International Airport
Central African Republic

Interview with MSF's head of mission, Stefano Argenziano

Central African Republic: Interview with MSF's head of mission, Stefano Argenziano Voices from the Field - 4 Jul 2014
 
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South Sudan

Medical Care Under Fire in South Sudan

Video: Medical Care Under Fire in South Sudan Project Update - 4 Jul 2014
 
A burned and destroyed minor surgical ward at the MSF hospital in Leer, South Sudan, is viewed February 23, 2014.  The hospital was thoroughly looted, burned, ransacked, and effectively destroyed, along with most of Leer, sometime between the final days of January and early February, 2014, leaving hundreds of thousands of people cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care. The hospital, opened by MSF 25 years ago, was the only secondary health care facility in Unity State.
South Sudan

South Sudan conflict: violence against healthcare

Violence in hospitals and the destruction of medical facilities deny medical services to many of South Sudan's most vulnerable people. MSF releases a report, "South Sudan Conflict: Violence Against Healthcare", looking at attacks on healthcare in the first six months since civil war broke out in December 2013. Report - 1 Jul 2014
 
Health promotion posters flank the entrance to the incinerated remains of the emergency room at the MSF hospital in Leer, South Sudan, February 23, 2014.  The hospital was thoroughly looted, burned, ransacked, and effectively destroyed, along with most of Leer, sometime between the final days of January and early February, 2014, leaving hundreds of thousands of people cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care. The hospital, opened by MSF 25 years ago, was the only secondary health care facility in Unity State.
South Sudan

“When I walk past the burned parts of the hospital, I try not to look”

MSF project coordinator Sarah Maynard describes the devastation she witnessed at MSF’s hospital in Leer Voices from the Field - 1 Jul 2014
 
The South Sudanese key strategic town of Malakal came under attack on February 18. The clashes between government and opposition forces forced thousands of people to flee to other locations or to the UN compound in the town. The Malakal Teaching hospital was attacked by armed men. Upon their return to the hospital, MSF teams found eleven bodies. Some patients had been shot in their beds.
South Sudan

Pervasive violence against healthcare

Violence and destruction of medical facilities are denying medical services to the most vulnerable people Press Release - 1 Jul 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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