Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
4633 Results
 
Farmin, aged 15, has been a refugee in Bangladesh since September. Her mother Nour al-Nahar died in the camp at the age of 35, in December 2017. The mother had been suffering from severe stomach pain for nearly two months. She is survived by five sons and two daughters. Her husband — Farmin’s father — was arrested in Myanmar in September. The family have not heard from him since.
International Women's Day

Caring for displaced women

For International Women’s Day 2018, against the backdrop of record levels of displacement, MSF is highlighting how health needs are exacerbated for women and girls on the move. Press Release - 6 Mar 2018
 
msf-placeholder
Nigeria

MSF suspends medical activities in Rann

It is still unclear how many people were killed and injured but before leaving, MSF medical staff treated 9 wounded patients. Press Release - 2 Mar 2018
 
Patient Geeta reacts as she’s informed that she was now cured of Hepatitis C. Geeta was treated at MSF’s hepatitis project in Meerut for over 8 months. 

“The counselors here told me to keep taking the medicines and assured me that I would get well. I did the same and could notice the difference and felt that I was getting healthier. Despite many people telling me that the medicines may cause a lot of side effects and scaring me, I kept at it and am very happy that I no longer have the disease,” said Geeta, who hails from village Bhopada.
India

One year, 1,198 patients

MSF's hepatitis C clinic in Uttar Pradesh, India. Photo Story - 2 Mar 2018
 
Marutatu settlement (part of Kyangwali) currently cannot cope with the influx of refugees. New arrivals already made vulnerable by their flight and the violence experienced back in Ituri end up sleeping in the open air, exposed to the rains that have started, with inadequate access to water and food, in appalling hygiene and sanitation conditions. Health authorities recently confirmed a cholera outbreak in the region, with over 1000 severe cases, including 30 fatalities since mid-February. MSF runs 2 Cholera treatment centers, supports health centers and implement water and sanitation activities to help control the outbreak, waiting from the national authorities to get a greenlight to perform cholera vaccination.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Violence in Ituri province forces tens of thousands from their homes

“New arrivals tell us of attacks at night, and a small number have deep cuts and wounds. Many arrive traumatized and exhausted, with sick children” Project Update - 28 Feb 2018
 
Dans le patiot de la clinique MSF de Gaza City, les femmes attendent leur tour.
Palestine

Gazans’ wounds bear witness to their living conditions

“Everything you earn here, you end up losing.” Project Update - 26 Feb 2018
 
Bombed former ISIS magistrates court.
Syria

"We need your help to stop the bombing"

Medics in Syria that MSF supports tell us of what they're seeing during the conflict. Voices from the Field - 24 Feb 2018
 
msf-placeholder
Syria

Doctors and nurses collapsing as medical response in East Ghouta reaches its limits

MSF calls for an immediate ceasefire to enable the basic human act of helping the sick and wounded. Press Release - 24 Feb 2018
 
Rohingya refugees, who suffer from diphtheria, are being treated at an MSF clinic near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
Bangladesh

“We had to learn around the clock how to treat diphtheria”

“When diphtheria broke out in December in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district, the MSF team in Balukhali was completely overwhelmed." Voices from the Field - 22 Feb 2018
 
The last two functional ambulances in Al-Marj neighbourhood (in the East Ghouta besieged area near Damascus) were destroyed beyond repair in an aerial bomb attack on Monday 05 December 2016. They were parked in the hospital’s warehouse/garage, very near to the makeshift hospital’s location. Two hospital cars, used to transporting supplies and medical personnel, were also destroyed in the blast. The lack of ambulances will have an impact on the ability to quickly treat wounded when there is bombing or shelling in the area, but above all it will affect the capacity to refer the most sick patients to larger secondary referral hospitals. The makeshift hospital in Al-Marj is not equipped for complex or long-term in-patient hospital care, and this could have a big impact on the ability to refer patients for appropriate secondary care.
Syria

Extraordinary mass-casualty influxes in East Ghouta as hospitals run short of life-saving medicines

“We make a plea to those in and around East Ghouta with medical supplies to urgently grant access to those stocks to the medics in East Ghouta – lives depend on it.” Press Release - 21 Feb 2018
 
Patients wait for a consultation at MSF's primary health centre in Jamtoli.
Bangladesh

Rohingya exodus - six months into the humanitarian crisis

Nearly 700,000 Rohingya refugees have arrived in Cox's Bazar district in southeastern Bangladesh since late August 2017 after fleeing targeted violence in Rakhine state, Myanmar. Photo Story - 20 Feb 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