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The town of Guiuan, in the east of Samar island, an area hit first and hard by the typhoon. The damage there is extensive and the needs huge. Almost all the buildings in the town were destroyed. The local medical facilities are also severely damaged and not functional. MSF's emergency team has started its support to a health centre and seeing the first patients. Most patients came for wounds that have become infected. They are launching what will be an integrated provision of mobile clinics, reaching out to the more isolated parts of the coast and islands, and outpatient service in the town of Guiuan itself. That clinic will have the ability to keep more seriously ill patients overnight. MSF will also be providing water and sanitation services as soon as possible, while assisting with shelter. Other members of the team will also assess smaller nearby islands by helicopter.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: MSF starts treating patients

MSF team set up medical services and treated patients. Twenty five minor surgeries performed. Project Update - 15 Nov 2013
 
Medical doctor Johan Von Schreeb and nurse Lisa Rydell, both from Sweden, consulting a patient at the clinic of Guiuan, in the east of Samar island, an area hit first and hard by the typhoon. The damage there is extensive and the needs huge. Almost all the buildings in the town were destroyed. The local medical facilities are also severely damaged and not functional. MSF's emergency team has started its support to a health centre and seeing the first patients. Most patients came for wounds that have become infected.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: Interview with Dr Johan von Schreeb, MSF surgeon in Guiuan

MSF teams set up medical services and treated patients. Twenty five minor surgeries performed. Voices from the Field - 15 Nov 2013
 
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Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: Video interview with Dr Natasha Reyes

Video interview with Dr Natasha Reyes, MSF emergency coordinator, on MSF response to Typhoon Haiyan. Project Update - 15 Nov 2013
 
Guiuan is municipality of 45,000 people. 87 people dead but the devastation is massive. 99% of Guiuan is flattened. Trees, houses, infrastructures, livelihood means such as rice fields, fishing boats were destroyed. Marie Jeanne Bertol, an orthopaedic surgeon, one of the three MSF staff who assessed the situation and needs in Guiuan, said “from the medical stand point, it doesn’t mean that if you have small number of lives lost the damage is less. As a doctor I don’t want the number of deaths to increase by neglecting the needs of the injured people, open wounds slowly becoming infected, upper respiratory tract infection cases especially in children. Right now there are no reported cases of diarrhea so the earlier we could get our team in the community, the higher chance we prevent more lives being wasted.”
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: MSF reaches centre of storm path

Teams reach northern Cebu island, eastern Samar island, Panay Island, and western Leyte province Project Update - 13 Nov 2013
 
Survivors gathered at the airport, hoping for an evacuation. — at tacloban City, Leyte.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: MSF medical activities start taking shape

137 staff now in Philippines, 232 tonnes of supplies arrived Project Update - 13 Nov 2013
 
Medical and logistical supplies are being loaded at Ostend airport, from where two cargo planes will take off tomorrow morning to support the relief effort in the Philippines. MSF is sending 329 tonnes of medical and relief items which will arrive in Cebu within the next few days in four cargo planes, which are leaving today and tomorrow – 2 from Dubai and 2 from Ostende. The humanitarian cargo includes medical kits for treating wounded, material for medical consultations, tetanus vaccines, water and sanitation equipment, and relief items such as tents and hygiene kits. An additional cargo is being prepared due to leave later this week from Bordeaux with an inflatable hospital and medical material.
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: MSF working to reach worst affected areas

“People have lost everything” Project Update - 12 Nov 2013
 
Natasha Reyes Filipino MedCo Emergency Coordinator speaks English and Filipino
Philippines

Typhoon Haiyan: Interview with MSF emergency coordinator

"This sort of disaster is unprecedented in the Philippines" Voices from the Field - 11 Nov 2013
 
Medical and logistical supplies are being loaded at MSF Supply's warehouse in Brussels, Belgium. The trucks will travel tonight to Ostende airport, from where two cargo planes will take off tomorrow morning to support the relief effort in the Philippines. MSF is sending 329 tonnes of medical and relief items which will arrive in Cebu within the next few days in four cargo planes, which are leaving today and tomorrow – 2 from Dubai and 2 from Ostende. The humanitarian cargo includes medical kits for treating wounded, material for medical consultations, tetanus vaccines, water and sanitation equipment, and relief items such as tents and hygiene kits. An additional cargo is being prepared due to leave later this week from Bordeaux with an inflatable hospital and medical material.
Philippines

MSF sends two cargo planes of medical and relief items while first teams arrive in Cebu

Update on Typhoon Haiyan response. Project Update - 10 Nov 2013
 
Nurse Abdi Somad Ahmed Moktar (38) places an IV with a malnourished child.
Somalia

A timeline of MSF in Somalia

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) first worked in Somalia in 1979 and was present in the country with few interruptions between 1991 and 2013. Project Update - 4 Nov 2013
 
Bedaquiline pills are counted in a Kara-Suu district FGP (Family Group Practitioner) clinic. Kara-Suu district.
Tuberculosis

First new TB drug in 50 years risks being squandered without better research and pricing strategies

First new TB drug in 50 years risks being squandered without better research and pricing strategies. Press Release - 30 Oct 2013
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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