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A patient injured by gunshot during the March of Return is being operated by MSF teams in PFBH
Palestine

“In half of the injured we received… the bone has literally been turned into dust.”

Thierry Saucier is an orthopedic surgeon for MSF in Gaza. He explains the complexity of caring for the hundreds of people injured during the March of Return protests in recent weeks. Very serious injuries pose significant challenges for the surgeons, and will require months or even years of care. Voices from the Field - 10 May 2018
 
Feda' Abu Rashed

Worked with MSF: 3 years 
Worked as nurse: 11 years 



	What is the most satisfying aspect of your job?
“The most satisfying aspect of my work is the joy that comes from delivering good news to patients or their families. The joy that overfills you when you hand over a newborn baby to their family and they hold them for the first time. When you hear words of gratitude for a job well-done. It is a job that is rewarding in every way.”


	What motivates you to come to work every day, and to Irbid NCDs project?
“I get my motivation from learning new things at work, and from seeing the result of my effort translate into a healthy record for my patient. I am also motivated by helping refugees and seeing the smile on their faces when they are happy about their medical examination results. I am motivated to come to work to give some of this motivation to people who are suffering in silence. I am blessed and thankful to be a nurse and a member of the MSF team.”  

	Do you act as a nurse in your home just like in work?
“It is amazing how people act when they know you have a medical background. My family thinks of me as the doctor of the family, they come to me for advices all the time. I even receive phone calls from people asking me medical questions “my son has this condition, what can I do?” “What is this medication for?” “Can I use this medication instead of that one?” “Can you give me this injection” “the doctor told me to use this medicine, do you think this is a good one?”

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Alaa al-Share’

Worked with MSF: since 2014
Worked as nurse: 13 years 

	Why did you choose nursing?
Nursing is not just a day-to-day job. Being a nurse means being a teacher, an advocate, a care-giver, critical thinker and innovator. It means treating patients and colleagues with dignity.


	What does it mean to be a nurse?
“Being a nurse means sleepless nights, vital signs, and long hours by the bed side. It means working hard to provide high quality care to all patients and treating them with dignity. Nurses are the heart and soul of the healthcare system.” 


	What motivates you to come to work every day, and to Irbid NCDs project?
“What motivates me to come to work every day is the ability to help people, and contribute to any improvement in their health condition. Working with MSF in the non-communicable diseases project gave me the chance to help refugees, learn about their suffering and see their smiles when their examination results are satisfactory. It is a reason enough to wake up every morning to hurry to work. Every single detail about a patient story can make a difference in a nurse’s life.”


	Do you act as a nurse in your home just like in work?
I am also a nurse at home. I always try to promote a healthy lifestyle for my family. I cannot disconnect from this reality, I act as a nurse wherever I am, and I am proud to be one.”
International Nurses' Day

Nurses without limits

On International Nurses Day, MSF celebrates the work, dedication and passion of its 8,843 nurses saving lives around the world. Project Update - 9 May 2018
 
Group photo ICCM team: (front) Christophe, Awa, Rigini, (Back) Chol, Kat, Charles, Martine

Work with us

We rely on a strong network of professionals to deliver lifesaving medical aid. Discover what it means to work for MSF, including our social mission, Association and behavioural commitments.
 
Nurse Regina Abuk Thor examines two days old Amel Akoi Garang. The mother Catherina Peter Eduat holdes the baby in her arms.
MSF runs the maternity unit in Aweil State Hospital in Northern Bahr el Ghazal, South Sudan.

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Your donations pay for millions of consultations, surgeries, treatments and vaccinations every year. Learn more about your donations at work and have your questions answered in our FAQ section.
 
Hussein, a 30-year-old cafeteria worker, suffered shrapnel wounds to his head, hand and back. 
“I came to collect my transportation allowance from work. On my way, the airstrike hit and I got injured. I do not know what happened to the rest of my colleagues,” he said.
Yemen

MSF-supported hospitals treat mass casualties caused by airstrikes in Sana'a

A series of airstrikes on Monday morning by the Saudi and Emirati-led coalition struck near a busy street in the heart of Sana'a, Yemen. The airstrikes targeted the Yemeni presidential office, which is located near a hotel, pharmacies, a bank and shops, and resulted in a mass casualty influx of at least 72 injured and 6 dead at two hospitals supported by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). Press Release - 8 May 2018
 
Monica, infected with both HIV and multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis, or MDR-TB, is taking her drugs. She receives treatment through Blue House, a clinic on the edge of Mathare, one of the Kenyan capital Nairobi’s more violent slums, where MSF treats people with TB and HIV.
MSF began treating MDR-TB in Kenya in May of 2006 and remains the only provider of MDR treatment in the country today.
Access to medicines

Access Campaign Year in Review 2017

Seven ways the MSF Access Campaign increased access to lifesaving treatment in 2017. msfaccess.org - 7 May 2018
 
A nurse vaccinates a young Syrian girl against measles and pneumonia in Al-Atareb, Syria. MSF conducted a vaccination campaign targeting tens of thousands of children in partnership with the Syrian Immunization Group and Health Directorate of Aleppo, Syria. -Al-Atareb-14-4-2018 Roaa Hasan.
Syria

Thousands of displaced kids in Aleppo catch up on vaccinations

Since 2016, the countryside west of Aleppo, in northern Syria, has been one of the main destinations for internally displaced people (IDPs) evacuated from besieged areas, including East Aleppo City, Homs, South Hama and, recently, East Ghouta.
Project Update - 7 May 2018
 
View across the rooftops in the city of Zwara, Libya.
The health situation has deteriorated sharply in Libya since 2011. Before, the health care system was efficient. Yet today, hospitals are closed or at reduced because they are damaged and have few resources. MSF is now one of the very few international organizations present. But it was not easy to set up such operations. Libyans discovered humanitarian aid in 2011 and there is a great mistrust of NGOs. The coexistence of three governments also complicates matters for transport medicines, medical supplies and sending teams on the ground. We try to meet the needs of health facilities in the east and the west. 

MSF works in the Jedi Ibrahim clinic in Zwara as well as in the center of Abu Kammah. MSF also conducts drug donations to the marine hospital Zwara.
Libya

Time running out for 800 migrants and refugees in Zuwara detention centre

MSF is highly concerned about the fate of around 800 migrants and refugees held in a dangerously overcrowded detention centre in the port city of Zuwara, Libya around 100 kilometres west of Tripoli. Some of the men, women and children inside have been detained in inhumane conditions for more than five months without adequate food or water. Statement - 4 May 2018
 
Fajimatou is 33 years old and has four children. She had been suffering from an obstetric fistula for three years ever since her last child was born. Thanks to the listening space set up in her village, she finally had the confidence to speak openly about her pain and MSF was able to help her get the necessary surgery.
Niger

In Diffa, listening spaces have been set up for and by women from the community

Three years ago, Fajimatou gave birth to her fourth child. Since then, she had been suffering from incontinence and regular urinary infections. Too embarrassed to raise this problem with the staff at the health post, she had kept it to herself. When she heard about the listening space for women set up by MSF in her village, it was a real relief. msf.lu - 4 May 2018
 
A mother with her baby waiting to see the doctor at the MSF mobile clinic opposite the Moria camp in Lesvos.
Greece

Overcrowded, dangerous and insufficient access to healthcare in Moria

As the Greek Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, visits Lesvos, Greece for a regional conference, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns that the situation on Lesbos is, once again, reaching breaking point. Statement - 4 May 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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