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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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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
 
Daily life in one of the squats near Velika Kladusa where migrans and asylum seekers stay. Migrants and asylum seekers are concentrated around Bihac and Velika Kladusa in Bosnia attempting to cross the border to Croatia. People there have to face extremely harsh living conditions and violence allegedly caused by border authorities.
MSF in collaboration with the local medical authorities provide medical and mental health services to the people living in Vucjak camp. Our medical team sees in this clinic around 30 patients per day. MSF runs another small clinic in Velika Kladusa for people who stay in squats. The main morbidities our teams are treating are wounds, skin infections, upper and lower respiratory tract infections, hypothermia and frostbites. All symptoms are results of violence and bad living conditions.
Bosnia-Herzegovina

Beaten, cold, sick and stranded: migrants and asylum seekers in Bosnia

As temperatures drop, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers in Bosnia are living in tents with no access to the most basic services. Project Update - 15 Nov 2019
 
12-years old Houssam is suffering from diabetes type I.
As part of the healthy lifestyle that the medical team recommends, Houssam was advised to exercise whenever he has Hyperglycaemia. Houssam’s favourite sports is football, he plays it with his brother in the surroundings of his tent in Aarsal.
Lebanon

Empowering children living with type 1 diabetes

In Lebanon, MSF diabetes programmes focus on the use of technologies to improve young patients' adherence to treatment and their quality of life. Project Update - 13 Nov 2019
 
In February we began treating patients with dengue fever symptoms in the paediatric dengue unit at the HNMCR. Between February and April the number of cases kept growing, which is why MSF decided to increase its support for the HNMCR by implementing a filter for febrile patients in the paediatric emergency room. In Choloma, we also started activities in four primary health centres from the Minister of Health, where we hired one doctor and nurse for each centre, to take care of patients that didn’t require hospitalization.
Due to the decrease in the number of cases in HNMCR and primary health centres, MSF decided to gradually reduce our activities, eventually ending the intervention in the middle of October.

MSF also evaluated the efficiency of the insecticide used for the fumigations of the mosquitos that spread dengue fever. This study found that there was a 60 per cent resistance among mosquitos to the chemicals used in the fumigation activities.
Honduras

More than 5,000 patients treated during MSF response to dengue fever emergency

From February to October 2019, MSF treated more than 5,000 people during the dengue fever emergency in Honduras. Several factors made the epidemic unusual. Interview - 8 Nov 2019
 
Panoramic view of Alwand Camps (Alwand 1 in the frond and Alwand 2 behind it near the river) with the river in the background.
Iraq

For displaced people in Iraq, going home seems impossible

Some 827 displaced families have lived in Alwand Camps 1 and 2 in Diyala governorate for years. They rely on ever-decreasing humanitarian aid to survive. Project Update - 7 Nov 2019
 
Inside the compound of Mokha hospital.
Yemen

MSF hospital partially destroyed in Mocha attack

An aerial attack on nearby buildings, including a military warehouse, have partially burnt and destroyed an MSF hospital in Mocha, southwestern Yemen, leaving the hospital inoperative and people without medical care. Project Update - 7 Nov 2019
 
Rania Samour is a counsellor that works for Médecins sans Frontières in Gaza, Palestine. She is part of a team that offers psychosocial support to our patients and their families as they undergo treatment. “Most of our patients here have trauma,” she says, “so I am trying to help them to avoid that trauma becoming a long-term problem.” Here she discusses the day’s appointments with her colleague.
Palestine

A day with an MSF counsellor in Gaza

This photo story follows an MSF psychosocial counsellor supporting burn and trauma patients at a clinic in Gaza. Many were shot during protests. Photo Story - 7 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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