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7695 Results
 
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Tuberculosis

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: no tools to properly treat people

The very costly and complex treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is only accessible to a very small minority of the millions of people with the disease worldwide. What is worse, those who have started taking the medicine are subjected to devastating side effects, and barely half of them end up recovering. Project Update - 15 Nov 2005
 
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Pakistan

'We will continue to struggle with enormous challenges'

Providing aid under these circumstances means that you have people queuing up in front of the MSF warehouse because they see that you are loading tents on a truck. You would tell them: "Sorry, these tents are meant for a particular village where people have lost everything." But the desperate people will reply: "Why don't you give me a tent." And there will be no doubt that they also deserve one.
An interview with MSF emergency coordinator Vincent Hoedt
Project Update - 4 Nov 2005
 
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Ethiopia

Kala azar complicates HIV/AIDS treatment in Humera

The MSF project in Humera is the only programme in Ethiopia, and one of very few in the world, which is treating people co-infected with kala azar and HIV. As such, it is breaking new ground in terms of developing the best medical approach for tackling the problem. Project Update - 28 Oct 2005
 
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HIV/AIDS

MSF hands over Ukraine HIV/Aids programme

After a presence of six years in the Ukraine, the international medical aid organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is now handing over its HIV/Aids programme to the Ukraine Ministry of Health and national NGOs as LifePlus, Alternativa, UNITAS and Time to Live. Press Release - 27 Oct 2005
 
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Uganda

Security concerns in northern Uganda

MSF in Uganda has reduced the movement of international and national staff due to a series of security incidents in the north of the country. Contrary to some media reports, in the 20 camps offering basic health care services to the displaced, all clinics are functioning as usual. Project Update - 27 Oct 2005
 
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Ukraine

After six years, MSF hands over its HIV/Aids programme

Diagnosed with HIV that mostly leads to AIDS: for many still a dead sentence. Unacceptable! Especially since treatment is possible, enabling the patient to continue a valuable life in dignity. This is the reason why MSF started working in Ukraine. Project Update - 26 Oct 2005
 
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Guatemala

Work to treat polluted waters after Hurricane Stan

As the flood waters subside, polluted wells, stagnant waters and basic health issues surface. Some areas are endemic to malaria and dengue fever and preventative measures are being put into place. Project Update - 25 Oct 2005
 
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Access to medicines

MSF urges WTO to re-think access to life-saving drugs now

MSF is urging Pascal Lamy, Director-General of the WTO, to investigate if the measures in place now actually work to increase access to essential drugs, in a world where new medicines become patentable everywhere. Project Update - 24 Oct 2005
 
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India

MSF team of three intervenes after ethnic clashes in Assam

This weekend, MSF sent a team of three people to Assam, a state in the far eastern part of India where a violent ethnic conflict is going on between the Karbi and Dimasi peoples. Project Update - 23 Oct 2005
 
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Mental health

Mental health support to Asian quake survivors: 'People haven't fully grasped the full impact of it.'

Less than a week after the Asian earthquake on October 8, MSF offered psychosocial care to traumatized survivors in northern Pakistan, the area worst hit by the disaster. In several tented camps in Muzaffarabad and neighboring Charakpura people have started to share their experiences with two MSF mental health experts.
Marise Denault, a social worker and mental health specialist, explains the situation.
Project Update - 21 Oct 2005
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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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