Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
8008 Results
 
MSF’s third medical train referral in Ukraine: arrival in Lviv.

06 and 07 April – 40 patients evacuated by train from #Kramatorsk. One transferred in #Kyiv and 39 transferred in #Lviv

This follows after another evacuation the previous day of 17 patients from Kramatorsk to Dnipro.

We heard the horrific news on the morning of 08 April that Kramatorsk station had been hit by one or more strikes.

“I am horrified by reports of bombing or missile strike today on Kramatorsk station. We were there yesterday, and we saw hundreds of people crowding the station, trying to leave. The hospitals had been urgently calling us to evacuate their patients by train. Most came from #Sievierodonestk and other towns in #Luhansk region. We were just in time with this train. Big questions whether we will be able to go back to evacuate more people.”
War in Ukraine

Finding our most useful role in our response in and around Ukraine

MSF teams in Ukraine are responding to the needs of people caught up in the war in areas where we're able to be of most use. Project Update - 11 Apr 2022
 
On 2 April MSF sent a small team to Mocímboa de Praia, a coastal town in the northern Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado. During a one-day visit the team carried out consultations with 39 patients, mostly male adults and some teenagers and children as well. They didn’t find any critical medical issues and only had to refer one patient who was suffering from cardiac problems to the Mueda rural hospital.
Mozambique

Adapting healthcare in Mocímboa da Praia as people flee or return home

MSF teams have returned to Mocímboa da Praia, a town in conflict-ravaged Cabo Delgado province, northern Mozambique, to provide medical care for the first time in two years. Interview - 8 Apr 2022
 
Rahma, Midwife supervisor, is holding a newborn named Rivan. “All the feedback I have received (about the facility) has been positive”, she says. “People say that our services are useful. One day, a patient left us a note to thank us, for the services but also for our attention and the human approach we’re taking (in providing our services).”
Iraq

Delivering babies in a city with few maternity services

Five years after the battle for Mosul, the healthcare system in the Iraqi city remains fragile. Pregnant women and their babies are among the most vulnerable needing access to quality healthcare. Project Update - 6 Apr 2022
 
Rotation 9 - 113 people beeing rescued by the MSF team from a rubber boat that was taking on water
Mediterranean migration

Over 100 deaths at sea in one week as European States look away

While EU states continue to look away from tragedies taking place in the Central Mediterranean, 100 people have drowned and at least 130 others have been forcibly returned to Libya. Press Release - 6 Apr 2022
 
One of MSF's staff members stands outside the abandoned house where MSF operates a mobile clinic in the village of Vodiane.

Vodiane, once an upscale community, has been largely destroyed and abandoned since the conflict began. The village is situated very close to the front line, near the destroyed Donetsk airport, and access is restricted. The population is estimated to be just one-fifth of its prevoius size, and mostly the elderly remain.
War in Ukraine

Area around hospitals, houses, bombed in Mykolaiv

An MSF team visiting hospitals in Mykolaiv, southeastern Ukraine, has witnessed a residential area with many hospitals bombed by Russian forces. Press Release - 5 Apr 2022
 
Mamfe District Hospital, South-West Cameroon, where MSF medical staff provide surgical, maternity, emergency and paediatric care for free and refer patients via ambulance.
Cameroon

MSF suspends medical activities in South-West Cameroon over ongoing staff detention

Three months since four MSF staff members were unjustly arrested in Cameroon, we have made the decision to suspend medical activities in the country's South-West region. Press Release - 5 Apr 2022
 
Asistente de farmacia en la sede de Médicos Sin Fronteras en Barbacoas, Nariño.
Quality Assurance

Garantia de qualidade relacionada com a aquisição de produtos médicos

Garantia de qualidade relacionada com a aquisição de produtos médicos msf.org - 4 Apr 2022
 
The arrival in Lviv of MSF’s first medical referral train on Friday 01 April 2022.
MSF did its first medical train referral on a 2-carriage train converted specifically. This is a precursor of a bigger and more highly medicalised train that is in the process of being converted. The first transfer of patients took place between Thursday 31 March and Friday 01 April 2022. There were nine patients, and nine MSF medical staff. The patients were all wounded in, or while trying to leave, the besieged city of Mariupol. We made the selection of patients with the management team of a hospital in the town of Zaporizhzhia, where the patients were first treated after leaving Mariupol. We transferred them to referral hospitals in Lviv. The idea is to take patients needing higher levels of care, but stable enough to endure a long train journey (up to 24 hours). We want to enable them to have the best possible care, away from the active areas of warfare in Ukraine, and we want to relieve some of the pressure on the hospitals that are closer to frontlines of the war.
War in Ukraine

“You have a medical train? I have patients for you.”

How the patients were selected for MSF’s first medical train referral in Ukraine. Voices from the Field - 3 Apr 2022
 
Commune of Ranobe, Amboasary District.

People in the south-east of Madagascar are facing the most acute nutritional and food crisis the region has seen in recent years. MSF began setting up mobile clinics in Amboasary district in late March to screen and treat acute malnutrition in remote villages like those of Ranobe commune, providing ready-to-use therapeutic food and medical care.
Climate emergency

MSF’s 2020 Environmental Pact

Report - 29 Mar 2022
 
MSF has settled a solar panel system at the General Hospital of Kigulube in Sud Kivu to give autonomy to the health structure for the next 20 years.
Climate emergency

MSF commits to reduce carbon emissions to help safeguard the most vulnerable

In a step towards combatting the climate emergency, we have pledged to reduce our emissions by at least 50 per cent compared to 2019 levels by 2030. Statement - 29 Mar 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