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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Tuberculosis

TB Online: Activists call on Johnson & Johnson to drop the price of bedaquiline

http://tbonline.info/posts/2018/7/13/activists-call-johnson-johnson-drop-price-bedaquil/ - 13 Jul 2018
 
A health promotion MSF worker at the referral hospital in Ansongo, where MSF has been running projects since 2012.
Mali

“Insecurity has pushed people to their limits”

Jamal Mrrouch has just returned from Mali, where he spent more than one year coordinating MSF’s work in the northern regions of Gao and Kidal, and in the central region of Mopti. Interview - 13 Jul 2018
 
MSF and SOS Mediterannee Search and Rescue personnel from the vessel, Aquarius, intervene to rescue refugees and migrants from an over-crowded wooden boat, 28 December 2016, in the Mediterranean sea off the northern coast of Libya.
Mediterranean migration

Drowning skyrockets as European governments block humanitarian assistance on Central Mediterranean

In the last four weeks, the number of deaths in the Central Mediterranean has skyrocketed, with over 600 people drowned or are presumed drowned, including babies and toddlers. Press Release - 12 Jul 2018
 
Mosul’s old town experienced intense shelling, aerial bombing and attacks with improvised explosive devices (IED) during the conflict to retake the city from the Islamic State group in 2016/17. Much of the old city is still inaccessible due to the destruction and presence of IEDs, unexploded ordinance (UXO) and booby traps. 

Between 5,000 and 7,000 people have returned to their homes in Mosul’s old city, despite the danger of explosive remnants of war. They face extremely difficult conditions, often living without water and electricity and in partially damaged houses.
Iraq

After the battle: The unfolding of a disaster

A year has passed since the battle for Mosul officially ended, yet its consequences can be still witnessed inside and around the city. The battle might be over, but our work here is not, even a year later. Follow our timeline of events, from the military offensive launched in October 2016 to Mosul today. Photo Story - 11 Jul 2018
 
Mbandaka hospital in Equateur province, DRC. 

MSF staff Teams treating patients in the isolation areas in  Mbandaka hospital.

MSF teams are currently in the Mbandaka and Bikoro areas and are putting in place two Ebola Treatment Centres of 20 beds each
 

 More information in update from Field Communication Manager DRC.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

“Congolese health workers have shown an amazing commitment to fighting Ebola”

Miriam Alía explains how MSF took part in the ring vaccination against the disease and tells of her personal experience working with Congolese health workers. Voices from the Field - 11 Jul 2018
 
The 31th of march we receive the order to not rescue people on a rubber boat. The boat was closed from us and we had the obligation to wait for the LCG.
Mediterranean migration

Humanitarian reasons versus political interests

Opinion column by Rony Brauman, published in Le Figaro on 11 July 2018. msf-crash.org - 11 Jul 2018
 
A mother holds her baby –affected by malaria - while an MSF medical team member attends to them. Between May and September, malaria is one of the main morbidities for refugees and the host community in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia.
Ethiopia

Fighting stigma and providing mental health to Eritrean refugees

Every month, around 5,000 Eritreans flee their country. Half of them arrive in refugee camps in the Tigray and Afar regions of Ethiopia. Since 2015, MSF has provided health services in the area, with a focus on mental health and psychiatric care, to the population of Hitsats and Shimelba refugee camps, as well as to the host community. Voices from the Field - 10 Jul 2018
 
The 31th of march we receive the order to not rescue people on a rubber boat. The boat was closed from us and we had the obligation to wait for the LCG.
Mediterranean migration

NGOs are not in collusion with smugglers

Opinion column published on 29 June 2018 on Libération's website. msf-crash.org - 10 Jul 2018
 
Nashwan, 42, is prepared for surgery at the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) post-operative care facility in east Mosul. Nashwan is one of the many war-wounded patients still trying to recover a year after the conflict in Mosul officially ended. 

“On 11 March 2017, our neighbourhood was retaken [from the Islamic State group],” Nashwan recalls. “Two days later, we went out to buy food and we were happy. But fighting was continuing in the neighbourhoods around ours. There was a tall building nearby and there was a sniper on top. He started hunting us down. My neighbour was shot in the head and killed. My brother was shot in the leg. The sniper shot me in the back and in the leg.”

Nashwan went to several hospitals outside Mosul for treatment. He then returned to his home in west Mosul where the conflict was still raging. 

“I waited in my home for several months for the bombs to stop,” he says. “When I was at home during these seven months the pain started to grow in my leg and hip, and eventually it became unbearable. So in October 2017 I went to the general hospital in west Mosul. They did x-rays and tests and they said I needed a huge operation and they didn't have the capacity to do the operation.” 

Nashwan’s neighbours helped him pay for a private doctor to do the operation, but it was unsuccessful and Nashwan was soon in agonising pain again. He was forced to go back to the general hospital, which then referred him to MSF’s surgery and post-operative care facility in east Mosul.

“Life has been really hard. My injury has had a negative impact on my life - my family, the way I interact with my kids. I can’t play with them. I can't work and we haven’t had an income. I've been really depressed and I cannot talk to people. Even to go to the bathroom I need someone to come with me. And I need the crutches to go everywhere. It's been really hard for me. But thankfully the hardest part has passed now that I am here.” 

The MSF facility provides free surgeries, post-operative care, rehabilitation and mental healthcare, especially for war-wounded patients. MSF works closely with local health authorities to refer the most urgent patients for care.  

The facility is run by a team of 30 highly qualified international and Iraqi medical experts and has a 33-bed capacity.
Iraq

A year on from battle, Mosul’s healthcare system is still in ruins

National authorities and the international community need to urgently rebuild public health infrastructure, provide patients with access to affordable medication and ensure medial facilities are supplied with the necessary equipment. Press Release - 9 Jul 2018
 
Zainab* stepped on an improvised explosive device when she was running through the streets of Mosul trying to flee fighting between the Islamic State (IS) group and the Iraqi forces. Hours later Zainab woke up in a hospital south of Mosul. She had badly broken her leg and had lost a lot of blood. 

Over the past year she has suffered immensely as she has tried to access healthcare in Mosul to fix her broken leg. But in city still recovering from the conflict, public health facilities for Mosul’s war-wounded are scarce. Zainab is now receiving treatment in the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) surgery and post-operative care unit in east Mosul.

“Our family became separated when we were fleeing our home in 11 April 2017. 
I don't know what happened, I must have stepped on something and I lost consciousness. I woke up in a hospital in Hamman al-Alil (30km south of Mosul). The doctors had to give me blood transfusions. About 19 bags of blood in total. Some of my daughters also got injured with shrapnel,” Zainab says. 

“I've had about 15 operations on my leg so far. When I did the operation with the private doctor I said it was the last operation, I thought it would be finished. But the operation failed and it started to get infected. Then I came here (MSF’s post-operative care facility) and I've had two operations, and I still have three more operations until it's fixed.

“The healthcare situation in Mosul is so bad because all the hospitals are destroyed. Since my injury we haven't visited any public hospitals, only private hospitals.  

“My injury has changed my whole life and it has made me exhausted and my family exhausted. Each time I have an operation I hope it is the last.” 

The MSF facility provides free surgeries, post-operative care, rehabilitation and mental healthcare, especially for war-wounded patients. MSF works closely with local health authorities to refer the most urgent patients for care.  

The facility is run by a team of 30 highly qualified international and Iraqi medical experts and has a 33-bed capacity. 

*Name changed to protect her identify.
Iraq

The agony of Mosul’s war wounded: “I've had about 15 operations on my leg so far.”

Zainab* stepped on an improvised explosive device (IED) in April 2017 as she was running through the streets of Mosul trying to flee fighting between the so-called Islamic State (IS) group and the Iraqi forces. Voices from the Field - 9 Jul 2018
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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