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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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 MSF's Access Campaign and MSF-USA held a demonstration across form the J&J shareholders' meeting on April 25, 2019, in New Brunswick, New Jersey. The message was for J7J to bring down the price of newer TB drug bedaquiline to $1 per day.
Access to medicines

MSF demands Johnson & Johnson reduce price of lifesaving TB drug

Despite benefiting from contributions, including tax payer funds, to develop tuberculosis drug bedaquiline, Johnson and Johnson are making huge profits - while people die. We demand that J&J halve the price of bedaquiline. Press Release - 10 Oct 2019
 
The laboratory at the Malabako General Hospital, where MSF helped refurbish the infrastructure. The hospital is suffering from a severe staff shortage
Democratic Republic of Congo

Ebola response overshadows already fragile health system

The Ebola response in the Democratic Republic of Congo is draining medical staff and resources from the regular - and already fragile - health system. Project Update - 9 Oct 2019
 
A Yezidi woman aged 60 poses in her house in Sinuni on September 2nd, 2019. 
« We are from Khanasor village but we’ve been living in Sinuni since March 2019, when we came back from the IDP camps. After the 2014 genocide, I started to have mental health problems. I feel nervous, scared, uncomfortable and angry. I have a constant headache. I have pain in my eyes because I cry a lot. I am always thinking about the memories from the genocide, those who died, those who emigrated. Some of my sons live abroad now, and it’s difficult to be apart ». 
(Merged image: top view of the burned ground in a ghost town north of Mount Sinjar, on which dead flowers have fallen)
©Emilienne Malfatto
Mental health

The Yazidi - a community without hope

The genocide of the Yazidi people - a religious minority based in northern Iraq, near the border with Syria - by Islamic State group in 2014 traumatised the remaining community. Today MSF teams are providing medical care, but especially mental healthcare, to help people heal. msf.exposure.co - 9 Oct 2019
 
John * and Jean * hold each other’s arms in the CHK. Jean was diagnosed with HIV in 2010. He was hospitalized in June 2019 for the first time. A few weeks after his release, he had to return urgently for a new hospitalization.
HIV/AIDS

Burden sharing or burden shifting? How the HIV/TB response is being derailed

The report <i>Burden sharing or burden shifting? How the HIV/TB response is being derailed</i> examines the HIV and TB response in nine countries where MSF runs programmes. With a focus on the financial resources available, this report highlights the current risks and gaps in HIV and TB service delivery in these countries. Report - 7 Oct 2019
 
Tin Lay, 42, from Myanmar is in the preparation stage for TB treatment at MSF's Insein clinic, Yangon, Myanmar, Feb. 22, 2018.
HIV/AIDS

Urgent boost and reality check needed for HIV and TB funding

An MSF report looking at the funding shortfall for HIV and TB and resulting affects on patients in nine countries highlights the dangers for a potential reversal in the HIV and TB response if donor countries don't increase funding. Press Release - 6 Oct 2019
 
A Yezidi man aged 24 poses in his tent on Mount Sinjar on September 3rd, 2019. 
« We are from the South of the mountain, close to Sinjar City. After the genocide, we stayed for one year in an IDP camp in Kurdistan, then we came here, to the mountain. I live in this tent with my family, my parents, my wife, my brother, my nephews… It is very, very difficult to live here. The living conditions are very hard. It’s either too hot or too cold. The latrines are shared and disgusting. There is no work here. I work with an armed group and make 300 USD a month. 
I am never happy. I am always upset. I cannot hang out with my friends because I can’t pretend to be happy. Depression is very hard. I feel like I am melting - and indeed I have lost a lot of weight. I affects my whole body. I also forget a lot of things. 
I keep thinking about things I saw, or heard, about the genocide. Children who died. Children who were killed by ISIS and then ISIS cooked them and gave the ‘meat’ to their mothers. 
I tried to kill myself three times: by drowning, with a gun, and with a knife. Each time, I was stopped. Since then, my family is worried about me, and I feel guilty because of that. It just makes things worse. 
I don’t want to take medication because it has too much side effects. I would like a magic pill to make all of what happened disappear, and make things good again. 
In those living conditions, it’s not easy to get better. Every single night I cry myself to sleep. Nothing makes me happy in life. There is no happiness in this life. If I am alive or dead, it’s the same thing. »
©Emilienne Malfatto
Iraq

MSF warns of mental health crisis among Yazidis in Iraq

A mental health crisis, including multiple suicides, is occurring in Iraq among the Yazidi community in Sinjar. IS atrocities took place here in 2014. Press Release - 4 Oct 2019
 
Inside one of the school warehouse facilities occupied by IDPs in the TVT site, Gedeb. Sites like this one are not fit for human habitation and are extremely overcrowded, with dramatically poor water and hygiene conditions.
Ethiopia

Displacement and humanitarian response in Ethiopia: challenges and dilemmas in complex crises

"Displacement and humanitarian response in Ethiopia: challenges and dilemmas in complex crises" is an MSF report examining two 2018 conflict-driven crises. Report - 3 Oct 2019
 
Two-and-half year old Justin (name changed) receives his shot the investigational Ebola vaccine rVSV-ZEBOV at a vaccination point set up in the community of Kimbangu in the city of Beni.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Vaccinating against Ebola in a challenging context

In Beni, DRC, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has recently started supporting Ebola vaccination activities, a promising tool in the fight against the disease. Yet reaching the right people in time is a complex endeavour. Project Update - 3 Oct 2019
 
Lebogang Seketema, MSF Driver - from Klerksdorp

I don’t see myself as just a driver; I’m helping protect people’s lives.
Often the clients we collect are women who have been raped by men. I’m not a social worker or counselor but on the way to the clinic, they’ll start telling you all these things that happened to her. 
With our psychological first aid training, we can change their journey to the care center. 
I recently picked up an old lady who had been gang raped. Her granddaughter accompanied her. The grandmother was mostly mute, but the granddaughter was in shock and crying hysterically. I was able to talk to her and calm her down, and this was better for both of them, especially the grandmother.
This case made me emotional because it took me back to when my sister was molested as a child. Raping an old lady, a young child: what has happened to our nation? 
From working in this project and becoming a father, I’m much more conscious of sexual violence, and what’s happening in our communities every day. My daughter lives with her grandmother, and I call her every day, even if it’s just to ask what she ate.
South Africa

Drivers for victims: changing lives in Rustenburg

Lebogang, a driver for a Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) project that treats victims of sexual and gender-based violence in South Africa, shares his story. Project Update - 2 Oct 2019
 
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Syria

Women treated for gunshot wounds amidst violence and unrest in Al-Hol camp

MSF teams have treated women for gunshot wounds after shooting broke out in Al-Hol camp, northeastern Syria. Press Release - 30 Sep 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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