Skip to main content
4489 Results
 
msf-placeholder
Access to medicines

Five years after DOHA, drug prices are on the rise

Countries must make more use of TRIPS flexibilities Press Release - 14 Nov 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Sudan

A crisis of human suffering

The situation has certainly changed since I was in Darfur over two years ago... Today MSF has had to reduce its activities due to intensified fighting and mounting insecurity throughout Darfur.
An interview with MSF International Council President, Dr. Rowan Gillies.
Project Update - 14 Nov 2006
 
msf-placeholder
South Sudan

MSF provides assistance to 50,000 newly displaced in south Darfur

When MSF's mobile teams were able to move around, they found civilians shot and beaten, villages largely burned to the ground, water points damaged beyond repair, food stocks destroyed, and despair over suddenly shattered lives and communities. Project Update - 12 Nov 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF providing care to cholera outbreak victims in two health centres in Katanga province

"The fast response of teams in situ has been crucial for the quite low mortality rate in the outbreak (in our health structures)," said Dr. Silvia Morote. Project Update - 9 Nov 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Guatemala

Global Fund and Guatemalan government urged to commit resources to ensure broader HIV/AIDS treatment and lower drug prices

The Global Fund should encourage Guatemala and other middle-income countries to take advantage of World Trade Organization mechanisms, as defined in the 2001 Doha Declaration, to purchase the most effective medicines at the best prices. Press Release - 3 Nov 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Tuberculosis

The XDR-TB emergency will require new strategies and new tools: business as usual would be fatal

"XDR-TB has the potential to be devastating in places where HIV/AIDS is widespread. But trying to treat XDR-TB with the tools we have today would be like trying to put out a forest fire with a garden hose."
New MSF analysis shows greater investment required to make TB history
Press Release - 30 Oct 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Sri Lanka

MSF withdraws from Jaffna Peninsula

All medical activities of MSF are suspended. Project Update - 19 Oct 2006
 
msf-placeholder
South Africa

Lusikisiki celebrates 2,200 people on ARV treatment at hand-over ceremony

HIV/AIDS partnership celebration in the Eastern Cape, South Africa: "Implementing comprehensive HIV services in Lusikisiki has needed many 'out-of-the-box' solutions to overcome the challenges we faced," said Dr Hermann Reuter, MSF project co-ordinator. "The only way to make this programme sustainable and replicable is to ensure that those solutions are urgently translated into policy changes at National and Provincial levels." Press Release - 12 Oct 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Russia

Helping to reconstruct those damaged by war in Chechnya

MSF works with prominent Chechen surgeons, like Professor Yandarov (left), and Dr Khunarikov (right), a vascular specialist, coordinates the program. Both men worked in Chechnya during some of the heaviest phases of the war, living in basements and operating on patients in makeshift field-hospitals and administrative buildings. Project Update - 11 Oct 2006
 
msf-placeholder
Democratic Republic of Congo

Dirty hands disease: MSF emergency team fights typhoid fever epidemic in Kikwit

Since August 20, more than 650 cases of typhoid fever have been reported in Kikwit, Bandundu Province, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). A team from Médecins Sans Frontières' Pool d'Urgence Congo (PUC) is providing support to Kikwit's main hospital to ensure treatment of patients free of charge. Community workers are raising awareness among the population about basic hygiene practices, in order to halt this serious epidemic of the so-called "dirty hands disease." Project Update - 11 Oct 2006
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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.

Learn more