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In the West of Maiduguri, MSF is caring for measles patients in Gwange hospital where the number of children arriving with measles has doubled since January. There are so many patients that the 73-beds are now all full.
Nigeria

Medical assistance urgently needed outside northeast ‘garrison’ towns

Solutions can be found to provide medical assistance in areas of Nigeria the government doesn't control, says MSF’s head of programmes in Nigeria and Niger. Interview - 19 Dec 2019
 
An MSF team in Tame, Arauca is focusing on treating people walking from Venezuela, more than 1,000 of whom enter Colombia in the Arauca area each month, on their way to other cities in Colombia or neighboring countries.
Colombia

Venezuelans in Colombia: an unattended crisis

The humanitarian response given to Venezuelan migrants and asylum seekers in Colombia is totally insufficient. Their situation is dire. Press Release - 18 Dec 2019
 
Since the implementation of The Migration Protection Protocol in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, MSF has seen around 100 people re-entry the country daily, in a city with no capacity to receive this population. Asylum seekers are forced to sleep in tents established right next to the bridge by the border, without any access to potable water and sanitation services; which may lead to different health issues, such as digestive and skin diseases.
Mexico

Hopelessness and anxiety: the consequences of waiting for US asylum

The migration policies of Mexico and the US and endangering the lives and health of asylum seekers in Mexico's Tamaulipas state. MSF's mental health supervisor in Mexico explains why. Interview - 18 Dec 2019
 
Migrants in Assamaka.
Niger

Niger, at the crossroads of migration

People forced to leave home have one objective: to find safety. On their journeys, many transit through Agadez in central Niger, where MSF teams provide care to people who have been through often traumatising experiences. Photo Story - 17 Dec 2019
 
Bardarah Refugee Camp, Iraq. October 31, 2019.

Syrian Kurdish refugees play soccer inside the Bardarash refugee camp in Iraqi-Kurdistan. 
According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) as of November 6th more than 14,000 Syrian Kurds have fled their homes in Rojava, the Syrian-Kurdish enclave along the Turkish border in north-east Syria, and have taken refuge in camps inside Iraqi-Kurdistan. Bardarash camp houses over 12,000 Syrian-Kurdish refugees.
Photo story

A year in pictures 2019

MSF's A Year in Pictures collection for 2019 looks back on 12 months of providing medical care in extreme conditions and contexts across the globe. Photo Story - 17 Dec 2019
 
A child goes out from his family hut at the Bukombo IDP Camp in Masisi territory.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Extra humanitarian assistance urgently needed in southern North Kivu crisis

There are few organisations providing support to a humanitarian crisis that is affecting southern North Kivu province, where over 687,000 people are displaced and levels of malnutrition and sexual violence are high. Press Release - 16 Dec 2019
 
An MSF medical team performs a blood transfusion on Bawagana, a patient being treated for malaria in MSF’s clinic in Bama.
Nigeria

Malaria season ends, but healthcare challenges remain in Borno state

As the seasonal malaria peak ends in Nigeria's Borno state - where MSF staff treated thousands of children - a lack of affordable healthcare options means many people struggle to access healthcare. Project Update - 13 Dec 2019
 
Villages on the road from Mambasa to Biakato.
Democratic Republic of Congo

As security situation deteriorates, MSF withdraws staff from Biakato

After a series of attacks on Ebola responders and infrastructure, and a deteriorating security situation, MSF has taken the difficult decision to withdraw staff from Biakato, in DRC's northeastern Ituri province. Statement - 6 Dec 2019
 
Republic of Nauru Hospital and local community houses. Nauru school in the background.
Nauru

Medevac repeal entrenches dangerous precedents on denial of medical care

The decision to repeal Australia’s ‘Medevac’ legislation - put in place in response to the need to medically evacuate people from detention on Nauru - endangers patients in need and ignores the ethical framework of the entire medical profession. msf.org.au - 4 Dec 2019
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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