Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
4633 Results
 
MSF’s Aden hospital: consists of ER (4 patients’ capacity), 3 OT (one is dedicated to internal fixation), ICU (10 beds), 6 IPD (58 beds), 2 isolation wards (total of 15 beds), OPD, physiotherapy, health education and support services: general/bacteriological lab, X-Ray, sterilization, ambulances, pharmacy, laundry and management offices.
In 2017, MSF Aden hospital provided 4502 ER Consultations, received 1798 IPD Admissions 448 ICU Admissions, performed 4193 Surgical Procedures and16 Internal Fixations.
Yemen

“Our concern is that fighting could turn Hodeidah into a besieged city”

On Wednesday 13 June, forces loyal to President Hadi, supported by the Saudi and Emirati-led coalition (SELC), officially launched an offensive to take Hodeidah city from Ansar Allah forces (Al Houthis). Voices from the Field - 26 Jun 2018
 
Improvised kitchen in Bambari general hospital. In Bambari, MSF supports the paediatric and maternity wards and supports the surgery national team. In February, the UN stabilisation mission, MINUSCA, declared Bambari a “city without armed groups”, strengthening the perception of it as a safe area for those fleeing violence elsewhere in the country. Currently, 50 percent of Bambari’s residents (113.800 people in total) have been displaced from their homes in other parts of Central African Republic. Of the 55,869 displaced people, 10,300 have arrived in Bambari since mid-March. Most are living in nine camps which ring the city but several moved in the hospital compound, where they feel safer.
Central African Republic

Ongoing fears of outbursts of violence in Bambari hamper access to healthcare

Interview with former head of mission Paul Brockman about recent outbursts of violence in Bambari, CAR, and their impact on the local population. Voices from the Field - 26 Jun 2018
 
Survivor of an airstrike in al-Dashisha area, in north east Syria, receiving treatment at an MSF hospital in Hassakeh governorate. The airstrike that injured them killed 14 others.
After a period of relative calm, airstrikes on the Islamic State group in Der ez-Zor and Hassakeh governorates intensified in June 2018. As a result, and over a period of ten days in early June, 17 people arrived to the MSF hospital with injuries related to airstrikes, compared to 7 between January and June.
For those who survived the airstrikes and reached the MSF hospital, they had to travel for hours. The meandering frontlines between armed groups can turn a mere one-hour journey into a six hour trek, as people often have to take detours and travel through rural parts of the governorates to avoid checkpoints. In parallel, the few remaining and functioning health centers in the region are either private and very expensive, or they lack specialized teams.
Syria

MSF Hassakeh hospital seeing an increase in casualties of airstrikes in northeast Syria

Between 4 and 14 June, MSF-supported hospital in Hassakeh received 17 survivors of airstrikes, including 6 children and 3 women. Project Update - 21 Jun 2018
 
Migrants also use the shelters to gather information on routes to continue on their way through Mexico.
Mexico

An unsafe country for thousands of refugees fleeing violence in Central America

Migrants and refugees fleeing danger in Central America are trapped and exposed to more violence in Mexico due to ever tighter and more callous United States border control policies, said Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on World Refugee Day. Press Release - 20 Jun 2018
 
View of the hospital of Bikoro, where MSF has set up an Ebola treatment center (ETC)
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Ebola update June 2018

Since the Ebola epidemic in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) was declared on 8 May 2018, over 60 people who presented symptoms of haemorrhagic fever, including 38 confirmed Ebola cases and 28 deaths (of whom 14 were confirmed as Ebola)*, have been notified by the national health authorities in the Equateur region, in the west of the country, where the outbreak started. 24 patients (confirmed Ebola cases) have recovered from the disease and been discharged from treatment centres. Crisis Update - 19 Jun 2018
 
Two children stand next to a destroyed shelter inside a camp for internally displaced people in the town of Pulka, northeast Nigeria.
Nigeria

“There is no place to take cover or hide from the rain”

Around 5,000 internally displaced people are living in precarious conditions in 38 shared shelters in the transit camp in Pulka, northeast Nigeria. Project Update - 18 Jun 2018
 
People disembark search and rescue vessel Aquarius, operated by SOS Méditerranée in partnership with Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF), in Valencia, Spain. The disembarkation is the end of a terrible ordeal for the men, women and children who spent multiple days at sea.
Mediterranean migration

European governments must put people’s lives before politics

MSF denounces Italy’s closure of its ports to prevent 630 rescued people from disembarking and European governments’ choice of political point-scoring over saving lives at sea. Press Release - 17 Jun 2018
 
MSF flag over the top of the hospital
Yemen

MSF provides support to hospitals treating wounded from Hodeidah

On Wednesday 13 June, forces loyal to President Hadi, backed by the Saudi and Emirati-led international coalition (SELC) have launched a military offensive on Hodeidah, whose strategic port on the Red sea remains one of the few lifelines left for people living in northern Yemen. Project Update - 14 Jun 2018
 
Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is urging European Member States to facilitate the immediate disembarkation of 629 people rescued over the weekend in Mediterranean and now onboard Aquarius, a dedicated search and rescue vessel run by SOS MEDITERRANEE in partnership with MSF. Aquarius remains in international waters off Malta and Italy, the countries with the closest ports of safety but which continue to refuse permission to dock.
Mediterranean migration

MSF urges immediate disembarkation of 629 people on board Aquarius at nearest port of safety

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is urging European Member States to facilitate the immediate disembarkation of 629 people rescued over the weekend in the Mediterranean and now on board the Aquarius, a dedicated search and rescue vessel run by SOS MEDITERRANEE in partnership with MSF. Aquarius remains in international waters off Malta and Italy, the countries with the closest ports of safety but which continue to refuse permission to dock. Press Release - 12 Jun 2018
 
Surgery with Surgeon Dr Hayder Alwash 

MSF Medical staff are working in Ramtha hospital in Jordan (5 km from Syrian border) where war wounded patients from Syria are being treated. Majority of patients require emergency surgery. Due to the severity of the injuries, patients require multiple complex surgery and long rehabilitation. The surgery runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Jordan

Lack of patients forces closure of Ramtha surgical project

After more than four years of emergency lifesaving activities in which over 2,700 war-wounded Syrians underwent medical treatment, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has taken the difficult decision to close the Ramtha surgical project in northern Jordan. Project Update - 11 Jun 2018
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