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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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On 28 November 2023, MSF's International president, Dr Christos Christou visited Jenin refugee camp and MSF-supported Khalil Suleiman Hospital.
About us

The MSF Charter

Médecins Sans Frontières is a private international association. The association is made up mainly of doctors and health sector workers and is also open to all other professions which might help in achieving its aims.
 
Young boys wait to be vaccinated against meningitis, at a site set up in their village by MSF and the MoH. More than 33,620 people aged between two and 29 years were vaccinated during this campaign.
Niger

“We should take every opportunity to vaccinate against deadly diseases”

Interview with Miriam Alía, MSF vaccination and outbreak response advisor, on the outbreaks of meningitis C and measles that have affected Niger in 2018. Interview - 5 Jul 2018
 
Staff getting dressed in full PPE in the ETC (Ebola Treatment Centre) in Bikoro.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

MSF hands over Ebola response activities in DRC

Project Update - 3 Jul 2018
 
MSF activities in El Salvador
El Salvador

MSF facilitates access to healthcare in communities of San Salvador and Soyapango

MSF has launched health initiatives in San Salvador and Soyapango, focusing on socially vulnerable people whose access to health services has been affected by insecurity. Project Update - 3 Jul 2018
 
Mothers and children leaving a health after the weekly checkups and follow up in Chakradharpur, Jharkhand.
Website

India Activity Report 2017

Get an overview of MSF's work in India during 2017 in our India Activity Report. activityreport2017.msfindia.in
 
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About MSF

MSF – Behavioural Commitments

MSF.org - 30 Jun 2018
 
Aquarius leaves Valencia harbour. The search and rescue vessel leaves Valencia  after an unacceptable 8 days odyssey and 3 days in Spain. Aquarius will be heading back to the international waters off the coast of Libya to keep on saving lives. After disembarking 106 people rescued in Valencia last Sunday, Aquarius has been doing resupplying works.
Mediterranean migration

European government policies condemn people to be locked up in Libya or drown at sea

European governments must come to their senses and end policies which trap extremely vulnerable people in Libya or leave them to die at sea. Press Release - 29 Jun 2018
 
Patient counselling is one of the important parts of the Test and Treat Programme.
South Sudan

HIV Test and Treat pilot project in Yambio comes to a close

The Médecins Sans Frontières, Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization's Test and Treat HIV study project in Yambio county finished in June 2018. The objective of the study was to assess feasibility and acceptability of the “treat all strategy” coupled with a community-based, patient-centred approach, based on HIV testing and same day antiretroviral treatment. Press Release - 27 Jun 2018
 
The following is a list of shots from MSF’s (Spain) trial program to help diagnose and supply essential antiretroviral drugs to isolated rural communities in Yambio, Western Equatoria, in  South Sudan called “test and treat”. 

Outreach teams leave their base in Yambio daily trying to access these remote areas. Not only is the terrain a difficult to manage, South Sudan's Civil war has at times made operations difficult to manage. However the teams have proven that a community based approach to diagnosis and treatment is feasible.
South Sudan

Yambio: HIV community-based Test and Treat pilot project

The report, "Yambio: HIV community-based Test and Treat pilot project", highlights the methodology used, the key learnings and the outcomes of a Test and Treat pilot project in Yambio, South Sudan. Report - 27 Jun 2018
 
Abdul Rahman* was a Law student before the war started in Syria. He fled his home country after being detained and tortured first by the regime, and later by Isis.

Before the war in Syria, I studied at Aleppo University, faculty of Law, I graduated from the faculty of law in 2009 and practiced law for 2 years. After the war began, I get married and had two children. My life was normal, like everybody else living with their family. Then, a sequence of events began, destroying

people’s lives. We have started witnessing loss. I have lost my wife and children, I was injured in the same circumstance. I was detained twice.

The first detention period was the most difficult. We were around 60 people in a 2x2 metre room.They would hang us with one arm and one leg, and prop us up with another object. Then they would put chlorine on our legs and pierce them with needles.

After I was released, I built new dreams of reaching Greece and therefore reaching safety. I travelled in the hope of receiving a treatment; I travelled to gain back even a small part of what I lost. But when I arrived I felt as if I had drowned. I am in a European country, I thought, which means I should have rights, we were told that Europe is the land of rights. But I haven’t seen any of that. Whether my mental health is bad or not, or that I use medicine and painkillers, they don’t even care because as I have realised, we’re only papers here, when my papers are ready, I can move, but until then, they don’t care at all.

I am still alive because of MSF, despite all my great despair. They treat me with kindness regardless of the fact that I am a patient. I am being treated as a special case here, as someone who lost the most valuable thing in life, the family. They have provided me with moral motivation, and they have helped me withstand the situation till this day. They made me feel human again, I felt that I am someone who has rights. But my dreams are all gone; they disappeared after I reached Europe.

*Name has been changed*
Mental health

Visible and invisible wounds – MSF treats survivors of torture

Interview with Gianfranco De Maio, MSF medical referent for victims of torture programmes Voices from the Field - 26 Jun 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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