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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Dr. Carlos Camacho, an MSF medical doctor, and Apalessio Sanöma Ye’kwana, an MSF intercultural mediator, during a medical examination with a boy from the Fuduuwaaduinha community. All activities are carried out with the support of intercultural mediators—community members who speak both languages and help bridge communication between medical teams and patients.
Brazil

MSF wraps up activities in northern Brazil

Over nearly three years, our work in the Yanomami Indigenous Territory strove to respect traditional practices and improve medical care. Project Update - 11 Dec 2025
 
MSF mental health counselor and social worker supervisor on their way to assess the needs of a family that was attacked by settlers in Shi’b al-Butum, south of the West Bank, Palestine.
Palestine

Palestinians are preparing themselves for loss in the West Bank

A psychologist working in the West Bank of Palestine provides testimony on the daily fears that people live with. Voices from the Field - 10 Dec 2025
 
At the Mweso General Hospital, a mother holds her two-year-old daughter, injured by a bomb blast.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Piecing together bodies and minds amid violence in eastern DRC

Civilians are paying the heaviest price of the ongoing armed violence across eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, as they suffer from trauma wounds, mental health issues and are victims of sexual violence. Project Update - 9 Dec 2025
 
Mother and daughter in an IDP camp

Arual Manyok, 32, and her daughter Adit Ayuel, 3, who received Malaria Drug Administration( MDA), talk to MSF staff in front of their tukul.

"If we compare before and after MSF started bringing malaria drugs, there is a big difference. All the children who got the medicine have not had malaria again. Only the children who did not get the drugs are getting sick.” says Arual

South Sudan is at the middle of the malaria season. The majority of patients at Mayen Abun Hospital are positive for malaria, some of them suffering from severe cases.

As this is a recurring situation, MSF has been running a mass drug administration (MDA) rounds since 2023, providing prophylactic treatment to children under the age of 15.

This has already had a massive impact on the community: positive rates among children are much lower than in previous years (even though the country as a whole is experiencing an increased malaria peak compared to previous years due to the influx of refugees and flooding), and the rate of severe cases is also much lower.

An MSF outreach team visited one IDP camp to check some of the children who had already received 3 rounds of prophylaxis and to discuss the impact with the families.
South Sudan

Gaps in healthcare threaten lives as violence escalates in South Sudan

Amid escalating violence, disease outbreaks, healthcare shortages, and decreasing aid funding, South Sudan’s health system is stretched to breaking point. Press Release - 9 Dec 2025
 
A newly arrived family in Jerbana, just 20 km from the Sudanese border, with all their belongings on a donkey-drawn cart. This is the mode of transport used by most refugees crossing into South Sudan.
South Sudan

Left behind in crisis: Escalating violence and healthcare collapse in South Sudan

An MSF report documents the persistent and worsening barriers to healthcare in South Sudan, at a time when the humanitarian situation in the country is deteriorating. Report - 9 Dec 2025
 
Palestinians at the GHF distribution site in Netzarim putting their lives at risk to receive some food.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). All four distribution sites operated by the GHF are located in areas under full Israeli military control and “secured” by private American armed contractors.

Between 7 June and 24  July 2025, MSF health centres in close proximity received 1,380  injured people, including 28 dead bodies from the GHF sites with 174 gunshot wounded.

MSF calls for an immediate cessation of the GHF distribution mechanism and urges states and private donors to refrain from funding what is essentially a death trap.
Photo story

A Year in Pictures 2025

MSF teams around the world continued to respond to crises in 2025. Our Year in Pictures offers a glimpse into the work carried out by our teams in over 75 countries over the past 12 months. Photo Story - 5 Dec 2025
 
MFS cars next to Kajo Keji airstrip.
South Sudan

MSF healthcare facility hit during an airstrike in South Sudan

Our healthcare facility in Pieri, South Sudan, has been hit during an airstrike. We call for the immediate protection of medical facilities in South Sudan. Press Release - 4 Dec 2025
 
Tuberculosis patients find strength and care in Baldia, Pakistan.
Pakistan

Tuberculosis patients find strength and care in Baldia, Pakistan

MSF is transforming tuberculosis care in Baldia, Pakistan, by providing accessible diagnosis and treatment for families. Project Update - 4 Dec 2025
 
MSF health promoter explains to a family how to apply PPF discs
Honduras

MSF concludes Arbovirus prevention project in Tegucigalpa

The Arbovirus prevention project in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, was an innovative initiative that combined science and community participation to reduce the transmission of dengue fever. Project Update - 2 Dec 2025
 
Format: Original Scan

MSF Medical activities: Mental health intervention in one of the Aswan Mobile clinics.

Since January 2025, Médecins Sans Frontières is partnering with the Om Habibeh Foundation in the governorate of Aswan, south of Egypt, to provide free medical care via their mobile clinics to Sudanese refugees and Egyptians who need it in five different locations throughout the governorate. The services include care for general consultations, non-communicable diseases, reproductive care, as well as mental health care and health promotion activities.
Egypt

Bringing medical care to Egyptian and Sudanese people in Aswan

Since January 2025, we have been working with a local Egyptian organisation to run mobile clinics in communities in Aswan governorate. Project Update - 27 Nov 2025
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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