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An MSF medical team is working together with MoH staff in the cholera treatment center in Al-Sadaqa hospital in Aden.
Besides the medical support, MSF logistic team has repaired the center as the building had been abandoned for two years after the war. MSF proceeded to emergency rehabilitation as it required heavy cleaning work, electricity, water system repairs as well as installing air conditions. Considering the hot and humid weather during the summer, heat becomes an issue in any health structure in the coast, most especially when it comes to hospitalise severely dehydrated patients.
Yemen

“On an average day in Taiz, we hear around five explosions per minute”

Arunn Jegan is an Australian project coordinator who has worked with Médecins Sans Frontières since 2016. He was with MSF in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, and recently started his mission in Taiz, Yemen. Voices from the Field - 1 Feb 2018
 
Bria hospital, Doctor Victor Fayette (MSF) tends to Mahamat Sale's wound. He is the leader of the UPC rebel group (Union for Freedom in Central African Republic) and was shot during skirmishes in Batangafo, a district close to Bria.
Central African Republic

Renewed violence threatens people and healthcare in Bria

The cycle of attacks and violence in 2017 has left neighbourhoods in Bria, in eastern Central African Republic (CAR), entrenched or emptied by their inhabitants. Project Update - 31 Jan 2018
 
Nurse Pélé and a pharmacist in Mbalazime health centre do an inventory of the latest MSF supply delivery.
Central African Republic

“It was horrible leaving our patients behind when they needed us”

Pelé Hubert has worked in Bangassou, Central African Republic as an outreach nurse supervisor for MSF since 2015. Voices from the Field - 31 Jan 2018
 
Christelle is 24 years old. On September 8, she was getting water at the fountain next to the hospital when armed men arrived and started shooting at her and at another 13 years-old girl who was there. She fell down on the ground and they continued shooting. After they left, the girl told her that they should run to the hospital but she realized she couldn’t as she had been shot in the ankle. The bone has been hit and she needed surgery.
Central African Republic

Attacks on medical facilities leave people without options

We have treated patients who have been shot, stabbed, beaten, burned in their homes and raped. Project Update - 30 Jan 2018
 
Two Rohingya children in Hakimpara makeshift settlement, where more than 32,000 people are sheltering.
Rohingya refugee crisis

Crisis update – January 2018

Since 25 August, we have massively scaled up our operations in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. We now manage 15 health posts, three primary health centres and five inpatient facilities. The main morbidities among our patients are respiratory tract infections and diarrhoeal diseases, which are directly related to the poor shelter, water and sanitation conditions in the settlements. Crisis Update - 26 Jan 2018
 
More than 212,000 Syrians have fled their homes due to an intensification of airstikes in northwest Syria. Most have very little or nothing to sustain themselves as winter sets in. Here, a group of Syrian children huddle near a fire to find warmth.

نزح أكثر من 212 ألف شخص سوري من منازلهم بسبب تصاعد الغارات الجوية في شمال غرب سوريا. لا يملك أغلبهم سوى القليل – وبعضهم لا يمتلك شيئاً– ليعيلوا أنفسهم في الشتاء. هنا يجتمع بعض الأطفال السوريين قرب نارٍ ليجدوا بعض الدفء.
Syria

Tens of thousands struggle for survival in the winter cold

Tens of thousands of families have fled north towards the Turkish border, where they are living in overcrowded tents or makeshift shelters. Project Update - 24 Jan 2018
 
Sulaith Auzaque is the coordinator of the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) emergency team in Colombia, a small and extremely mobile team that can move around the country following urgent alerts, most of them related to population displacements caused by violent incidents, but also in response to natural disasters or epidemics. Sulaith talks about the interventions carried out by her team that impacted her the most during 2017 and analyses the situation in the country for the year that is now beginning.
Colombia

“The violence hasn't eased, it’s just changed its name”

In recent years, the most typical interventions of MSF's emergency team in Colombia have focused on violence or the displacement or confinement generated by violence. Voices from the Field - 24 Jan 2018
 
Providing care to displaced communities, Tikrit district, Iraq.
Iraq

Crisis update – December 2017

MSF has seen an increasing number of families leaving the camps and returning home but more than 2.9 million remain displaced. Crisis Update - 18 Jan 2018
 
Nine-day-old Mohammad was born at the Doctors Without Borders/ Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) maternity unit in Domiz Refugee Camp, northern Iraq. His parents left Syria when the incessant bombing became too much. 

“I have three daughters and one son,” Mohammad’s mother Seva says. “Mohammad was born here at the maternity centre, as well as one of my daughters. The maternity unit [in Domiz camp] is much better than the other places where I gave birth.”

“The staff were really good [when I gave birth to Mohammad]. I feel relaxed when I know there are people from my community providing the services. It feels better than going outside.” 

MSF launched the sexual reproductive health and maternity project in Domiz Refugee Camp in 2013. We initially provided check-ups for women before and after birth and family planning services. In 2014, the project was expanded to a full maternity unit with a 24-hour delivery room, triage and gynaecological consultations. Over the past four years, MSF medical staff have delivered more than 3,400 babies and provided more than 27,400 gynaecological consultations.

MSF completed the project in Domiz Refugee Camp in November 2017 and has handed over the maternity unit to the Dohuk Directorate of Health. We currently have projects across Iraq in the governorates of Erbil, Diyala, Ninawa, Kirkuk, Salaheddin, Anbar and Baghdad and will continue to set up new projects where the needs are greatest.
Iraq

Giving Syrian refugees a safe place to give birth

The services here are really good and they take care of us. Voices from the Field - 18 Jan 2018
 
Markings of the January 17 bomb blast on a house in Rann
Nigeria

Rann bombing - one year on

On the one year anniversary of the bombing, we remember the victims. Project Update - 17 Jan 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.

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