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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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During the distribution, there was bombing nearby. MSF teams say children have become accustomed to the violence.
 ¨The strangest thing is that people are adapting to the violence. We saw children looking up at the sky, watching the airplanes as they bombed Dara´a City. It is really strange,¨ an MSF pharmacist said.
Syria

A family returns to a village battered by war

Mohammed Ali Aboud speaks about his family's plight and the daily difficulties they endure. Voices from the Field - 11 Apr 2017
 
The village of Al Nuaymah was once home to 10,000 people. During the past six years of war, many families left, but without resources or safer options to live, they returned to the village.
 
Virtually the entire town relies on some degree of humanitarian aid for survival. Many structures house more than one family, often with young children. Some have relied on aid for more than five years.
Syria

Instability in the south

MSF recently responded to this crisis with an emergency distribution of 893 kits of essential relief items, distributed to families in two areas. Project Update - 11 Apr 2017
 
MSF provides assistance to the victims of landslides in Mocoa region, Colombia.
Colombia

MSF provides medical and psychosocial assistance to people affected by the landslide in Mocoa

MSF teams are providing psychosocial support and medical care to victims of last weekend’s landslide in Mocoa, Colombia. Project Update - 10 Apr 2017
 
Children are vaccinated during the first day of a  Measles vaccination programme in Conakry, the capital of Guinea.
Guinea

Battling a large-scale measles epidemic

Less than a year after the Ebola epidemic officially ended, the Guinean health system continues to struggle. Press Release - 7 Apr 2017
 
MSF staff dressing in PPE to enter the high risk zone at MSF ETC in Donka, Conakry.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

The Politics of Fear

Written by both Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and non-MSF authors, The Politics of Fear collects critical and comprehensive impressions of the West African Ebola epidemic's rapid appearance, uncontrollable spread and the challenges faced by the global health community in its response. amazon.co.uk - 6 Apr 2017
 
Portrait of Candelaria Lanusse
Yemen

"The war is taking a very high toll on the civilian population"

"The civilian population is paying a very high price. The war is also having other effects: fear, scarcity of food, rising fuel prices... " Voices from the Field - 5 Apr 2017
 
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Syria

Khan Sheikhoun victims have symptoms consistent with exposure to chemical substances

The MSF team provided drugs and antidotes to treat patients, and protective clothing for medical staff in the hospital’s emergency room. Statement - 5 Apr 2017
 
MSF teams in and around Mosul have received more than 1,800 patients in need of urgent or lifesaving care in the last two months. 1,500 of them needed treatment for conflict related trauma. As the scale of the non-trauma needs also became apparent, MSF opened maternity services in eastern Mosul at the beginning of February, and since then the teams have assisted 100 births and performed 80 C-sections.
Iraq

The patients we receive are the “lucky ones”

"Every day, we see the worst of the worst injuries inflicted by this war" Voices from the Field - 4 Apr 2017
 
Patients in the waiting room at Meshta Nour Hospital, Kobane, 23 january 2017.
Syria

Describing the toll of war on health in absentia

"In war-torn Syria, patients are besieged and in inaccessible areas. True numbers are unknown but those we do see paint a picture so bleak that the size and scale of an emergency health response seem unimaginable." Journal article - 3 Apr 2017
 
Blood types are identified in the maternity's laboratory.
Iraq

Stabilising emergencies in a pocket of safety

MSF has expanded its activities in the Tal Afar district, northwest of Mosul, where the population has little access to healthcare Project Update - 3 Apr 2017
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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