Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
7998 Results
 
Juliette walking on the streets of Ambodrian i’Sahafary a village only accessible by boat where MSF set-up a moblie clinic.

Juliette, 23, is pregnant and the mother of two children aged 5 and 2. 
She is a rice, coffee and pepper farmer. 

Juliette lives in the "fokontany" (neighbourhood) of Ambodiriana, an hour's walk from the Ambodirian'i Sahafary health centre, where she came for a medical consultation.

Her house and those of her neighbours were ravaged by the cyclone Batsirai. His rice, coffee and pepper crops were also destroyed. Normally, the rice was to be harvested in April. 

She says:
"During the cyclone, we took refuge in a smaller house because the larger ones were blown away. The wind blew violently, and we were not able to anticipate the consequences by reinforcing the houses, nor by storing food.


Without money, we can't do anything. If health care wasn't free, we wouldn't go to the doctor. You do the doctor yourself."
Madagascar

Communities devastated by cyclones in Madagascar

Communities in Madagascar are recovering from cyclones in February of this year. These cyclones are the latest in a series of climate shocks which have impacted Madagascar. Project Update - 5 May 2022
 
Dilaram, 33, a former TB-PRACTECAL clinical trial patient in Nukus, got cured from TB in 2018. On the clinical trial regimen her treatment lasted only 6 months (a quite short period of time compared to the standard 20-24 months DR TB regimens). After her recovery Dilaram was able to return to her work as a nurse at the Emergency Hospital in Operation Ward, and in 2020 gave birth to a son. Now she has 3 children, her two elder daughters were born before she got sick. (TB-PRACTECAL clinical trial, Nukus, Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan)
Tuberculosis

WHO approves MSF MDR-TB trial regimen, but prices must come down

WHO has announced it will update treatment guidelines for multidrug-resistant TB, following strong results of MSF's TB PRACTECAL trial. But the price of the new regimens must come down. Press Release - 4 May 2022
 
Alongside the Ministry of Health (MoH ), MSF has been able to improve patients' experiences of care for drug resistant tuberculosis. Declared cured a patient is leaving to go home. Follow-up testing to confirm no relapse
Somalia

Healing from drug-resistant tuberculosis in Somaliland

Patients share their experiences of treatment and healing from drug-resistant tuberculosis in Somaliland, where MSF supports two drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment facilities. Photo Story - 29 Apr 2022
 
Two street vendors pass a mural in Bois-Verna, a residential area of Port-au-Prince.
Haiti

Three questions about the recent violent clashes in Port-au-Prince

Mumuza Muhindo, MSF head of mission in Haiti, answers three questions about the recent violent clashes taking place in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Interview - 29 Apr 2022
 
In 2021, Israel demolished 199 Palestinian homes in the West Bank, according to the Israeli human rights NGO B'Tselem. Nejmeh Nawajaa was the owner of one of these demolished houses. She received mental health support from MSF. "I feel miserable but strong," she says. "I will still be here even if I have only an umbrella to cover myself."
Palestine

Photo story: Palestinians living under occupation

Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip have lived under occupation for decades. The stress often takes a toll, including on people's mental health. Photo Story - 29 Apr 2022
 
El Geneina Teaching Hospital back entrance. No weapons allowed. El Geneina city
Sudan

Violent attacks leave tens of thousands without access to healthcare in West Darfur

Fresh violence in parts of West Darfur, Sudan, has forced people to flee for their lives. Project Update - 29 Apr 2022
 
Entering Enyenge village from the shore- MSF team of an Emergency Coordinator, DMC Supervisor, Communication Manager and Community Health volunteers, on the shore walk across the sand to reach Enyenge village where they are carrying out Day 2 of the cholera vaccination campaign.
Attacks on medical care

Four months on, an ongoing nightmare for MSF colleagues detained in South-West Cameroon

Four MSF staff members have been arrested and detained in South-West Cameroon. MSF suspended activities in South-West Cameroon in March because of the detention of our colleagues and has been engaging with the Cameroonian authorities for their release. Project Update - 28 Apr 2022
 
A patient receives care in the COVID-19 ward of Raqqa National Hospital, in northeast Syria.

MSF has now moved it's COVID-19 response from Raqqa National Hospital to Raqqa Covid-19 centre.
Access to medicines

“Broken” humanitarian COVID-19 vaccine system delays vaccinations

An opaque and unwieldy humanitarian COVID-19 vaccination system left people in northern Syria with delayed access to COVID-19 vaccines which MSF says must be urgently fixed. Press Release - 27 Apr 2022
 
Members of the MSF logistics team distribute blankets and jerry cans in Nyin Deng Ayuel displacement camp in Twic County. After fleeing violence in Agok, thousands of people have been left without basic essentials to survive.
South Sudan

Displaced people in Twic County need more assistance amid “terrible conditions”

Displaced people in Twic County, in Warrap State, South Sudan need more support from the humanitarian community as the rainy season approaches. Press Release - 26 Apr 2022
 
The catastrophic flash flooding that ensued on 11 April in the eThekwini region in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal Province has left 40,000 people homeless and many are sheltering in community-based schools, churches and halls without food, cookware, mattresses, blankets, clothes and basic hygiene products. MSF has provided kits comprising these non-food items to more than 500 individuals, and to free shelter residents from dependence on food packs MSF has equipped three community shelters with kitchenware including stoves, fridges and freezers.
South Africa

Thousands homeless and at risk of disease after devastating floods

Around 40,000 people have been left homeless after floods in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa ripped apart homes, leaving many people vulnerable to water-borne diseases. Project Update - 22 Apr 2022
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.

Learn more