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With the aim of improving medical care to help reduce the mortality rate among children under five years old, MSF launched a paediatric project in the region of Bafata in central Guinea- Bissau in November 2014. MSF is working in the paediatric department of the Bafata regional hospital, the referral centre for the entire region, where more than 180,000 people live, and in several health centres in the area.
Guinea-Bissau

Medical knowledge that outlasts MSF project

Erling Larsson, a Swedish doctor who has recently returned from Guinea-Bissau, describes the main outcomes of MSF's work in the region. Voices from the Field - 18 Jun 2018
 
Spokesperson MSF Doctor David Beversluis speaks French and English.

Aquarius is currently in the process of transferring 400 persons to two Italian Navy ships, at the request of the Italian MRCC. Aquarius was instructed by Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre in Rome to sail to Valencia to disembark the remaining 229 people.
 
While this appears to be a quick fix to the current political standoff, this should not set a precedent for future disembarkations. Rescued people should be disembarked in the nearest safe port available.
Mediterranean migration

Over 600 rescued people adrift in Europe’s political limbo

Testimony from Dr David Beversluis, an MSF doctor on board the Aquarius in June 2018. Voices from the Field - 17 Jun 2018
 
People disembark search and rescue vessel Aquarius, operated by SOS Méditerranée in partnership with Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF), in Valencia, Spain. The disembarkation is the end of a terrible ordeal for the men, women and children who spent multiple days at sea.
Mediterranean migration

European governments must put people’s lives before politics

MSF denounces Italy’s closure of its ports to prevent 630 rescued people from disembarking and European governments’ choice of political point-scoring over saving lives at sea. Press Release - 17 Jun 2018
 
MSF flag over the top of the hospital
Yemen

MSF provides support to hospitals treating wounded from Hodeidah

On Wednesday 13 June, forces loyal to President Hadi, backed by the Saudi and Emirati-led international coalition (SELC) have launched a military offensive on Hodeidah, whose strategic port on the Red sea remains one of the few lifelines left for people living in northern Yemen. Project Update - 14 Jun 2018
 
Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is urging European Member States to facilitate the immediate disembarkation of 629 people rescued over the weekend in Mediterranean and now onboard Aquarius, a dedicated search and rescue vessel run by SOS MEDITERRANEE in partnership with MSF. Aquarius remains in international waters off Malta and Italy, the countries with the closest ports of safety but which continue to refuse permission to dock.
Mediterranean migration

MSF urges immediate disembarkation of 629 people on board Aquarius at nearest port of safety

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is urging European Member States to facilitate the immediate disembarkation of 629 people rescued over the weekend in the Mediterranean and now on board the Aquarius, a dedicated search and rescue vessel run by SOS MEDITERRANEE in partnership with MSF. Aquarius remains in international waters off Malta and Italy, the countries with the closest ports of safety but which continue to refuse permission to dock. Press Release - 12 Jun 2018
 
Surgery with Surgeon Dr Hayder Alwash 

MSF Medical staff are working in Ramtha hospital in Jordan (5 km from Syrian border) where war wounded patients from Syria are being treated. Majority of patients require emergency surgery. Due to the severity of the injuries, patients require multiple complex surgery and long rehabilitation. The surgery runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Jordan

Lack of patients forces closure of Ramtha surgical project

After more than four years of emergency lifesaving activities in which over 2,700 war-wounded Syrians underwent medical treatment, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has taken the difficult decision to close the Ramtha surgical project in northern Jordan. Project Update - 11 Jun 2018
 
Dr. Haydar Alwash conducts a skin graft surgery on a patient. MSF's Emergency Trauma Surgical Project  in Ramtha Governmental Hospital opened in September 2013. It has treated hundreds of war wounded coming from Syria.
Jordan

Voices of Ramtha

MSF staff reflect on four years of saving lives and limbs in Ramtha, northern Jordan, and describe the impact this emergency surgical project had on the lives of both its patients and staff. Voices from the Field - 11 Jun 2018
 
Ahmed, a Syrian boy looks out from the window of a tent in a camp for displaced people in Idlib, Syria.
Syria

In dust and despair, displaced Syrians wait

More than half of Idlib’s population of roughly two million people are displaced. The arrival of 80,000 more people in the last two months from east Ghouta, rural Damascus and north Homs is further stretching the ability of local residents and humanitarian organisations to address their needs. Project Update - 8 Jun 2018
 
An MSF staff walks with a crowd of young villagers towards a village where a suspect case of Ebola has been notified. Near Iboko, Equateur province, DRC.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Fighting Ebola on the ground, a race against time

Paul Jawor, an MSF water and sanitation expert, has just returned from Equateur province in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Paul was working in and around the remote village of Iboko, where cases of Ebola have been confirmed. He explains the challenges MSF teams are facing on the frontline of the ongoing outbreak.
Project Update - 7 Jun 2018
 
MSF lab technicians analyze blood samples at Salama Hospital to rapidly diagnose conditions and guide life-saving care.
How we work

The MSF ethics review board

MSF pays particular attention to the ethical issues arising from the research in which we engage, manifested by the creation of an independent ethics review board (ERB) in 2002 that evaluates all research proposals involving MSF.
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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