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Violent clashes between gang members took place on February 23 around a Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) burn care hospital in the neighborhood of Drouillard, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, forcing the staff to transfer 21 hospital patients to MSF's trauma hospital in the city's Tabarre neighborhood. MSF staff are pictured here transporting a burns patient upon arrival at MSF's Tabarre hospital on February 24.
Haiti

Staff forced to transfer burns hospital patients following Port-au-Prince violence

Violent clashes around the MSF burns centre hospital in Drouillard, a neighbourhood of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, have forced staff to transfer patients for their safety. Project Update - 25 Feb 2021
 
View of the entrance of Bambari hospital, the Central African Republic, on December 5th, 2020.
Central African Republic

People, medical facilities hit during violence in southern CAR

Post-election violence in Central African Republic is continuing to have an impact on people, this time in the southern city of Bambari, when people and medical facilities were hit with bullets. Project Update - 22 Feb 2021
 
MSF has offered mental health consultations in the city of Hebron, in the occupied West Bank, since 1996. In Hebron, Palestinian civilians suffer frequent abuses such as the demolition of their homes, arbitrary detention, and systematic attacks by Israeli settlers with the tacit support of the Israeli army. As well as experiencing physical injury men, women, and particularly children suffer from significant long-term mental health impacts of these routine occurrences.

The effects of the occupation of Palestinian territory are far-reaching and leave very few people untouched, with children in particular vulnerable to long-term mental health issues as a result of witnessing or suffering traumatic events. Between February and July 2019, MSF reached 8145 people with mental health services, of whom more than 60% were children.
Palestine

“In Israel, you’re 60 times more likely to have a COVID vaccine than in Palestine”

Matthias Kennes, an MSF medical adviser in the West Bank, Palestine, writes of the searing inequalities he's witnessing on COVID-19 vaccination between the occupied territory and Israel. Opinion - 22 Feb 2021
 
Consultation during an MSF mobile clinic activity for displaced population in Khudaish camp, Abs district (Yemen). Most consultations are for children and pregnant women.
Yemen

Severe malnutrition on the rise among children in Abs, northern Yemen

Since January, MSF has been treating increasing numbers of severely malnourished children at Abs hospital, in northwestern Yemen; a sign of a war that has a terrible impact on lives. Opinion - 22 Feb 2021
 
Tsgay , 35 year old woman and daughter Dalina , 4 year old temoignage: 

She shared with MSF teams: “The food that we eat doesn’t contain any nutrients, but we have no option, we have to eat it in order to survive.”

“When we fled from Tigray we had some money. We used to buy sorghum from the market. Now we spent [all our money]. Now we are forced to take the wet portage and mix it with the little amount of flour we have and use it to make injera.”
Ethiopia Tigray crisis

For refugees in Hamdayet, Sudan, “everyone is hungry, and everyone is tired”

More than 61,000 people, fleeing violence in Ethiopia, have registered as refugees in Sudan. Those stuck in the border town of Hamdayet are barely having their basic needs met. Project Update - 19 Feb 2021
 
The teams also work through the night, as the centre operates 24/7.  Donka hospital. Conakry, Guinea.
Guinea

Five questions on the Ebola outbreak in Guinea

After authorities in Guinea declared a new outbreak of Ebola in mid-February, MSF's Anja Wolz outlines the current situation and response in five questions. Interview - 19 Feb 2021
 

Dr Helene Muller and registered nurse Buhle Nkomonde both worked in the MSF COVID-19 Field Hospital in Khayelitsha, in Cape Town, before coming to Mbongolwane in KwaZulu-Natal, where their COVID-19 expertise was well employed in the screening and testing tent outside the District Hospital.
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

Southern Africa needs the right COVID-19 vaccines, at the right price – right now

As Southern Africa struggles under a contagious variant of the coronavirus, MSF urges rich countries to share appropriate COVID-19 vaccines with those yet to vaccinate key workers. Press Release - 18 Feb 2021
 
MSF’s Thaketa clinic as seen from the outside.
Myanmar

MSF concerned for welfare of healthcare workers and people in Myanmar

Following the military coup in Myanmar on 1 February, MSF is concerned for the welfare of people and healthcare workers - and access to healthcare - in the country, following arrests and intimidation. Statement - 17 Feb 2021
 
A COVID-19 patient receiving oxygen therapy while admitted at the MSF run inpatient ward of the Al-Shifaa 13 COVID-19 ward in Al-Kindi Hospital, Baghdad. MSF nurses checking up on the condition of the patient and giving instructions to the caretaker about how to support the patient -her mother- and assist her.
Iraq

Severe COVID-19 patients in Iraq “were almost sure to die”

MSF teams in Iraq have been treating people with coronavirus in Baghdad, with many arriving too sick to be saved. Since opening a dedicated COVID-19 ward, things have improved, but MSF remains worried about the situation. Project Update - 16 Feb 2021
 
Abdul Sami “Roshanfar”, medical doctor and Ayatullah Khalili, nurse assistant, performing a routine check on a COVID-19 patient in MSF’s COVID-19 Treatment Centre in Gazer Ga, Herat.
Afghanistan

Keeping an eye on COVID-19 cases in Herat, Afghanistan

Among low levels of awareness of COVID-19 in Herat, Afghanistan, MSF teams are treating patients with the disease in our treatment centre, while keeping a close eye on case numbers. Project Update - 12 Feb 2021
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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