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Palliative care

Palliative Care in Humanitarian Medicine

UREPH is pleased to announce the publication of the article “Palliative Care in Humanitarian Medicine” by James Smith and Tammam Aloudat in the journal Palliative Medicine. Journal article - 25 Jan 2017
 
Emergency Gap
Access to Healthcare

Insecurity - always an insurmountable obstacle?

This paper attempts to offer a reflection on the subject of risk acceptance, and some of the underlying factors that – apart from the actual security threat – influence security decision-making in the humanitarian sector. Report - 25 Jan 2017
 
Centraal Afrikaanse Republiek, CAR, Bangui, Februari 2014. 

Many people displaced by the conflict have found refuge in Mboko airport, Bangui, CAR.

Foto: Sven Torfinn
Central African Republic

Five reasons to care about the closure of Mpoko camp

Mpoko has now closed. What became a symbol of the huge needs of the Central African people has disappeared, but the country's problems persist. Project Update - 24 Jan 2017
 
Manono General Hospital.
Democratic Republic of Congo

More than 200 people treated for injuries at Manono hospital, Tanganyika

"In December, the hospital's surgical department was overwhelmed. There were people everywhere, lying on the floor waiting to be treated," says Gaudia Sironi, MSF Field Coordinator. Voices from the Field - 23 Jan 2017
 
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) Log Manager Abdoulaye Chaibou helps Bollosse village inhabitants during the distribution of aid packages by MSF to the most remote areas of Jérémie and Cayes. Haiti, Friday 6 January 2017.
Haiti

Massive distribution of building materials, three months after Matthew

"In remote areas of the mountains, people were forced to hastily rebuild by salvaging materials that had been blown around by the wind, often broken and full of holes. The poor construction quality of the buildings does not provide adequate shelter," says Lily Caldwell, MSF's emergency team coordinator. Project Update - 23 Jan 2017
 
Mohammed, Medco is evacuating wounded people after the bombing of one IDP camp in Rann.

“There are no health facilities in Rann. Nothing. The first health facilities are 2 hours away from Rann. Most of the victims that we saw where children”.
Mohammed Musoke, medical coordinator for OCP based in Maiduguri.
Nigeria

"Most of the dead and injured were women and children"

My colleague and I personally evacuated a number of severely injured patients, taking them to various hospitals in Maiduguri. Voices from the Field - 20 Jan 2017
 
Rann IDP camp after the bombing.
Nigeria

Death toll rising in Rann attack

“The people of Borno should be entitled to guarantees of protection and assistance. All parties to the conflict must ensure the safety of civilians, and we urge the Government of Nigeria to ensure the protection of its people,” says Bruno Jochum, MSF General Director. Statement - 19 Jan 2017
 
Daily dose of TB antibiotics and side effect drugs of the patient with MDR-TB. Every day this patient takes at the same time ten 2nd-line TB drugs, including PAS, notorious for severe side effects such as nausea, vomiting, dizziness. On the top of that she receives a painful injection of another TB antibiotic. The pills on the left side are to help her cope with the many side effects of the TB drugs, such as stomach pain, burning feeling in the chest and other.
Access to medicines

Pioneering clinical trial for drug-resistant tuberculosis starts

A pioneering clinical trial aiming to find a radically improved course of treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) began on 17 January 2017, when the first patient took the first pill in Uzbekistan. Press Release - 19 Jan 2017
 
A bombing by the Nigerian Army has occurred in an internally displaced person camps in Rann, Nigeria. MSF teams have seen 120 wounded and at least 50 dead following the bombing. Teams are trying to provide emergency first aid in its facility and are stabilizing patients to evacuate wounded. We are asking the authorities to put all measures in place in order to facilitate the emergency evacuation of wounded (by air and land). Our medical and surgical teams in Cameroon and Chad are ready to treat wounded patients.
Nigeria

“I can’t find the words to describe what I saw in Rann”

What the survivors of the bombing have lived through is so hard, so violent. Rann was their safe haven. The army that was meant to protect them bombed them instead. We have to remain at their side. Voices from the Field - 19 Jan 2017
 
msf-placeholder
Global

MSF briefings and interventions at WHO Executive Board 140th session

MSF representatives are attending the 140th session of the WHO executive board meetings and will be attending and speaking on a number of topics. Event - 18 Jan 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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