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She’s standing there with her bare feet in the mud. She’s gently carrying her last granddaughter in her arms. The little one suffers from a severe disability. Nantiek is tired but she speaks with confidence and strong words. She’s been through so much difficulty since her, and her family fled from their village next to Leer, around 120 km away.
South Sudan

Grandma Nantiek in Bentiu Protection of Civilians camp

“Our house was looted, our cattle were looted, we had to flee, and we couldn’t stay. We left everything behind,” says Nantiek, repeating the story of hundreds of families. Voices from the Field - 19 Sep 2016
 
Somali refugees in Dadaab refugee camp carry their sick and malnourished children to a new feeding center run by MSF at the outskirts of the sprawling refugee camp.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Reality Check: UN High-Level Meeting on Refugees and Migrants

MSF urges world leaders not to turn a blind eye on the suffering faced by millions of refugees and migrants around the globe. Report - 19 Sep 2016
 
TB-cabinets are  important for an effective walk-in treatment. Here ambulatory treatment, psychosocial counselling for patients and their families, and social packages (nutritional support, hygiene kits and transport money) are provided to help patients adhere to treatment.
Mamasaly Mamatbakiev with his x-ray picture.
Access to Healthcare

Global commitments to stop killer diseases put to the test – lives are hanging in the balance

Falling short of the Global Fund’s modest pledging target would not only seriously undermine progress, but also be costly, both financially and in human lives. Project Update - 16 Sep 2016
 
The MSF mobile clinic parked in one of the IDP camps of Habbaniyah Tourist City in the Amariyat al-Fallujah area around 30 kilometers away from Fallujah. At some point in the not so distant past, Habbaniyah, which nestles the big Lake Habbaniyah, was tipped to become a top tourist attraction outside Baghdad. Nowadays, the city’s 300 plus-room hotel has been used by IDP families fleeing the violence in Fallujah and Ramadi; Lake Habbaniyah that serves as the main water reservoir is also the place where all the sewage is dumped. In July 2016, MSF’s mobile clinic has conducted a total of 1921 consultations in IDP camps the Amriyat al-Fallujah area.  Morbidities include:  upper respiratory tract infections, urinary tract infections and gastric disorders.
Iraq

MSF operations in Iraq

MSF continues to expand its operations in deeply affected areas of Iraq, such as Anbar province, in order to provide essential medical care to the most vulnerable. Photo Story - 16 Sep 2016
 
Lifa, an MSF gyneco-obstetrician is having an ultrasound with a Libyan patient as part of the antenatal care provided in the hospital.
Libya

Strengthening quality of care in a health system destabilized by years of conflict

By Dr. Tane Luna, an obstetrician-gynaecologist and medical advisor on women’s health Project Update - 16 Sep 2016
 
Zara Abba, 32, from the capital of Chad, N’djamena, has been in the MSF intensive care unit in Bokoro town for four days. She is there with her granddaughter, Katalma Moussa who is two years old. 
Zara Abba was visiting Bokoro to pay her respects to a family member who'd died when her granddaughter fell ill. “She hadn’t put much weight on for a while and then she started to get diarrhoea and her health got even worse. She hasn’t had any energy to be able to play with other children.”
“This is my daughter’s first child. She’s still in N’djamena but I’ve been speaking to her every day. She calls to ask about the health of her daughter. I say her daughter is getting better. MSF have gone above and beyond to help your daughter. They’ve worked really hard.”
Zara Abba also has a two year old daughter of her own. “I would travel all the way to France for my children’s health.” She says. “I have given birth to 15 children. Seven of them have died and eight are still living. Two of them were twins and they died on the same day they were born. The others, I don’t know why, it was God’s choice.”
Chad

Patient stories, malnutrition in Bokoro region

Severe malnutrition is very common among babies and young children in Chad and often relatives may not be aware of the severity of their child’s illness because it’s what they’re used to seeing. In addition, there are few health services in Chad and they often don’t have the necessary medicine, so relatives don’t always seek help. Voices from the Field - 15 Sep 2016
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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