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A girl in front of her tent in the olive grove next to the official camp in Moria.
At the moment, 13,000 people stranded in a camp designed to host just 3,000. People in the olive grove have to share their tents with other people with whom, they don’t have any previous relationship. The level of hygiene is very low and people have to share a toilet with another 90 people and a shower with 200. When it rains the tents are getting wet and the area turns into a muddy swamp. 
MSF team in the pediatric clinic in Moria see an average of 100 children and pregnant women per day. Currently with the recent increase of arrivals our team is struggling to respond to the need that arising. Most of the children our teams see are suffering from diseases which are directly connected with the living conditions such, respiratory tract infections, skin diseases, fever and diarrhea. We also receive children with chronic and complex medical cases who need specialized attention that is not available. Yet, they have to spend months living in unhygienic and unsafe conditions before they are moved to mainland in order to get the much-needed treatment.
Greece

European leaders: Stop punishing asylum seekers on the Greek islands

MSF International President Dr Christos Christou saw the horrific conditions asylum seekers are living in on camps on the Greek islands and has a message for European leaders - the suffering must stop now. Open Letter - 27 Nov 2019
 
Lita Gerald is a 20 year old lady that is HIV positive with history of having challenges in adhering to treatment. Lita is someone who was once on ARV treatment then she had to disengage for two months before getting reengaged again through Nsanje District Hospital’s Rapid Assessment Unit (RAU). Lita over the course of her time at the hospital she has been showing signs and conditions like fever, swelling legs and abdominal distension.
HIV/AIDS

MSF report "No time to lose" examines the fight against AIDS in 15 countries

In a new report, "No time to lose", MSF reveals how the AIDS deaths toll is stagnating due to a lack of basic testing at a community level. Report - 27 Nov 2019
 
On 21 November, 2019, MSF and SOS Méditerranée teams rescued 90 people from a rubber boat in distress, located following a search effort which lasted almost 24 hours. Survivors report having left Libya on Tuesday night: 2 days at sea before they were finally spotted 82 NM from the coast. Among those rescued were 7 very young children, as well as 17 unaccompanied children under 18 years of age.
Mediterranean migration

Survivors disembark in Italy amidst deadly week in the Mediterranean

As search and rescue survivors disembark in Italy, MSF and SOS MEDITERRANEE urge EU governments to stop hindering lifesaving search and rescue operations. Press Release - 25 Nov 2019
 
Fatouma Admaou, MSF nurse, is talking to a mother in the phase 2 tent during the evening visit.
Niger

Fifteen years treating malnutrition and malaria around the clock

In southern Niger, the combination of ‘hunger gap’ and rainy season triggers an annual spike in rates of malnutrition and malaria. Read about our work there. Project Update - 25 Nov 2019
 
In Fori, in the south of the state capital Maiduguri, MSF runs an inpatient therapeutic feeding centre (ITFC) with more than 70 beds. The centre opened in January 2017 and treats severely malnourished children with medical complications such as tuberculosis, cerebral malaria, acute watery diarrhoea and respiratory tract infections. Severely malnourished children without medical complication and children with moderate acute malnutrition are enrolled in MSF’s outpatient feeding programme, which admits 130-300 children each month. From January to June 2019, MSF provided inpatient nutritional treatment for 1,161 children, ambulatory nutritional treatment for 1,216 children, and treated 1,436 patients with malaria and 555 with measles.
Nigeria

Is counter-terrorism killing humanitarian action in Nigeria?

In Nigeria, the essence of humanitarian action is threatened if entire communities are considered "the enemy", says MSF's director of operations. Op-Ed - 22 Nov 2019
 
A female nurse weights a boy in the paediatric outpatient ward at Mudug Regional Hospital in Galkayo city, in the Mudug region of Somalia.
Somalia

From malnutrition to tuberculosis: responding to needs in North Galkayo

MSF activities have expanded in Somalia's Puntland state, to meet the needs of locals, internally displaced people and patients from as far as Ethiopia. Project Update - 21 Nov 2019
 
Abedi Hakizimana, a Burundian health worker, disinfects an ambulance which has recently transported a cholera patient outside the MSF-supported new cholera treatment centre in Bujumbura.
Burundi

Cholera epidemic: "Thankfully, my family all came back cured"

The rapid response to the large-scale cholera epidemic that hit Burundi in June prevented many deaths. Here's how MSF joined the fight against the disease. Project Update - 19 Nov 2019
 
An MSF staff distributes aid among people displaced by the floods in Beledweyne district, central Somalia.
Somalia

Floods leave thousands of people vulnerable and in need

Back from Somalia, MSF humanitarian affairs advisor Mohamed Kalil recounts his experience in a district where flooding has displaced 270,000 people. Project Update - 19 Nov 2019
 
Nyakun Kuok and her family standing outside her house in Dagahaley camp
Kenya

Shut out and forgotten, refugees in Dadaab appeal for dignity

Kenya's Dadaab refugee camps have existed for decades and many people have spent their lives there. But long-term encampment has devastating consequences. Project Update - 18 Nov 2019
 
Yemen, Aden, 16 December 2018 – Entrance of OT and ICU of MSF trauma hospital in Aden. The hospital opened in 2012.
Antibiotic resistance

Why bacteria love war-wounds

Bacterial infections can be deadly, and antibiotics remain the best tool to treat them. But they are losing their effectiveness due to antibiotic resistance. We see this throughout our projects in the Middle East, where war-wounds are particularly susceptible. Project Update - 18 Nov 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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