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“The camp setting is not a conducive environment and is very worrying. It is far too congested” continues Lojana Augustino Ngorok. “What I am worried about is the lack of hygiene and water for the population. Food is also a really big concern. Most people are short on food, some do not have any and have arrived with nothing to trade or buy food with.”
South Sudan

Intense fighting in eastern South Sudan once again forces thousands to flee

A resurgence of intense violence between communities in Greater Pibor Administrative area in eastern South Sudan has once again forced thousands of people to flee into the bush, leaving people - and especially children - without access to medical care. Statement - 24 Jun 2020
 
Dr. Maria Guevara conducts an Infection Prevention and Control training on how to stop the spread of COVID-19 for both the medical and non-medical staff at the Samaritan Community Center in Detroit, Michigan.
United States of America

MSF helping to curb COVID-19 in nursing homes in US

After having worked in nursing homes across Europe to help reduce the spread of COVID-19 amongst the elderly and staff, MSF is now working in nursing homes in Michigan, the United States. Project Update - 23 Jun 2020
 
PPE including N-95 masks, eye/face protection, gloves and high quality body protection being stocked at the COVID treatment center in Patna, Bihar
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

MSF opens 100-bed COVID-19 treatment centre in Bihar, India

With over 380,000 people diagnosed COVID-19 in India, MSF is stepping in to help provide treatment and care to people with moderate forms of the new coronavirus, starting in Bihar state. Press Release - 19 Jun 2020
 
View of Nduta refugee camp.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

“No one chooses to be a refugee”

Barthelemy is a Burundian refugee and staff member with MSF in Nduta camp, northwestern Tanzania. He embarked on an extraordinary journey to reach safety and begin a new life. Voices from the Field - 19 Jun 2020
 
In partnership with the municipality of Manaus, MSF runs an isolation and observation center for indigenous Warao people with mild cases of COVID-19. As a large part of this population, who came from Venezuela to Brazil, lives in shelters in the city, Warao people are especially vulnerable to the disease due to the difficulty of maintaining adequate measures of hygiene and social distancing. 

The isolation center opened in Manaus has the capacity to support and to assist nine families simultaneously. The space was adequate with tents, hammocks, tables and chairs, as well as sanitation adjustments in order to help hygiene maintenance.
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

Brazil’s COVID-19 nightmare is far from under control

With the second-most number of both cases and deaths worldwide from the new coronavirus, it is clear that the COVID-19 situation in Brazil is catastrophic. Project Update - 17 Jun 2020
 
Abdoulaye (name changed), refugee from Gambia in the reception facility for asylum seekers in Halberstadt in Eastern Germany.

Stefanie, midwife with MSF, and Abdoulaye (not his real name), refugee from Gambia, met twice within a few months in exceptional situations: first on the SAR ship Ocean Viking on the Mediterranean, then in quarantine for coronavirus in the reception centre for asylum seekers in Halberstadt in Eastern Germany.

In order to cope with a Covid-19 outbreak in the reception centre for asylum seekers in Halberstadt, the authorities of Saxony-Anhalt agreed on a three-week assignment with MSF in April/May 2020 to support health education and psychosocial care.
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

Escaping first Libya, and then coronavirus in Germany

Stefanie, an MSF midwife and Abdoulaye from Gambia met twice within a few months: first on a search and rescue boat, and then in quarantine for coronavirus in northeastern Germany. Voices from the Field - 15 Jun 2020
 
Post-partum room. Women stay around 6 hours on average, when they are not facing complications.
Afghanistan

MSF withdraws from Dasht-e-Barchi following attack on patients and staff

Following the horrific attack on our maternity wing at Dasht-e-Barchi hospital, MSF has made the difficult decision to withdraw from the area, as the attack's death toll climbs to 16 mothers killed. Press Release - 15 Jun 2020
 
MSF team on training before opening COVID-19 centre in Tegucigalpa
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

Caring for COVID-19 patients in Tegucigalpa

As numbers of COVID-19 cases rise in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, an MSF has started caring for patients with severe symptoms of the disease. Project Update - 13 Jun 2020
 
Doctors Without Borders (MSF), in support of the Khayelitsha District Hospital, opens a COVID-19 treatment facility to meet the needs of the local community during the epidemic. Established in Khayelitsha Multi-purpose Centre, a City of Cape Town-owned community sports centre in close proximity to the hospital.Khayelitsha Field Hospital, it will help manage hospital overflow for moderate COVID-19 cases. The facility will be operational from 01 June, providing a capacity of 60 beds.

6 medical doctors and 8 nurses employed by MSF will staff the treatment facility. Officially named Khayelitsha Intermediate Care Facility, it will operate during the time of the projected peak of transmission in the Cape Metropolitan area. MSF will continue to support the Khayelitsha District Hospital until needs have subsided.
South Africa

MSF opens field hospital as South Africa braces for COVID-19

The Khayelitsha community has borne the brunt of COVID-19 infections in the country, spurring Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to develop a 60-bed overflow treatment facility in a field hospital next to the district hospital. Project Update - 12 Jun 2020
 
The river flooded all the houses and destroyed most of the inhabitants' belongings in Comunidad El Granjero 2. David Salguero washes what was left of his bed in one of the passages.
El Salvador

Tropical Storm Amanda is “the last straw” for families in El Salvador amid COVID-19

Families in El Salvador, already having had to fend off gang violence and the COVID-19 pandemic, now face more difficulties in access to medical care after Tropical Storm Amanda wreaked havoc. Project Update - 11 Jun 2020
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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