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South Sudan

Medical Care Under Fire in South Sudan

Video: Medical Care Under Fire in South Sudan Project Update - 4 Jul 2014
 
El Sereif camp, near the South Darfur State capital Nyala, saw an influx of newly displaced people in March and April, fleeing conflict and the total destruction of their villages in areas to the southwest of Nyala. The MSF medical team that had been working in the camp since August 2013 was already responding to the health consequences of poor living conditions. While some of the new arrivals have now left the camp, the 4,500 that have stayed are in particularly terrible conditions, sheltering on a patch of desert with almost none of the basics essentials to sustain life. Before the new influx, camp residents were surviving on less than five litres of water per person per day when the recognized minimum for emergencies is 15 litres – and the new arrivals have access to even less water, not enough to adequately sustain human life.
Sudan

Extremely poor living conditions in Darfur camp

Refugees have barely even essential items to survive Press Release - 2 Jul 2014
 
The Suchiate river, on the border between Mexico and Guatemala. The Central American migrants cross this pass ('El Paso del Coyote') on small boats. It's the beginning of their journey through Mexico.
Mexico

58 per cent of migrants treated by MSF suffered violence

58 per cent of Central American migrants treated by MSF suffered violence Press Release - 2 Jul 2014
 
Phumeza Tisile, 23 years, takes her last tablets for XDR-TB at Lizo Nobanda TB Care Centre, Khayelitsha, South Africa on August 16, 2013. During her two year treatment for XDR-TB, Phumeza took over 20,000 pills and had over 200 injections.
Tuberculosis

Linezolid Fact Sheet

A fact sheet on Linezolid. Report - 1 Jul 2014
 
A burned and destroyed minor surgical ward at the MSF hospital in Leer, South Sudan, is viewed February 23, 2014.  The hospital was thoroughly looted, burned, ransacked, and effectively destroyed, along with most of Leer, sometime between the final days of January and early February, 2014, leaving hundreds of thousands of people cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care. The hospital, opened by MSF 25 years ago, was the only secondary health care facility in Unity State.
South Sudan

South Sudan conflict: violence against healthcare

Violence in hospitals and the destruction of medical facilities deny medical services to many of South Sudan's most vulnerable people. MSF releases a report, "South Sudan Conflict: Violence Against Healthcare", looking at attacks on healthcare in the first six months since civil war broke out in December 2013. Report - 1 Jul 2014
 
The biologists analyse the blood using 4 different techniques (1 microscope, 2 TDR and 1 dry blood test) for operational research on mother-to-child transmission of malaria. Kirundo hospital, Burundi
HIV/AIDS

Outcomes of antiretroviral therapy over a 10-year period of expansion: a multicohort analysis of African and Asian HIV programmes

Outcomes of antiretroviral therapy over a 10-year period of expansion. Journal article - 1 Jul 2014
 
A Hiv positive patient is given a month worth of medication at the Thyolo District hospital for routine antiretroviral consultation on November 26, 2014. Massively hit by the Hiv virus, the Thyolo district was introduced to ARV in 2003 with more than 57.000 patients, 38.000 of them are still alive and on monitored therapy. ARV consists of the combination of at least three antiretroviral (ARV) drugs to maximally suppress the HIV virus and stop the progression of HIV disease.
It's now thirty years since the discover of the virus who caused the death of millions of people worldwide. According to Dr Eric Goemaere, MSF’s HIV referent, "The progresses made in the fight against HIV in just thirty years are remarkable: putting 13.6 million people on lifelong treatment, most of them in resource-poor countries, and keeping them on treatment for life on treatment is an overwhelming task, at a scale never achieved by public  services before." AFP PHOTO/MARCO LONGARI
About MSF

Over a decade of operational research in MSF: From luxury to necessity?

First published in the International Activity Report 2014 Report - 1 Jul 2014
 
Siyabulela Qwaka is the fourth patient cured of drug resistant TB in MSF’s project in Khayelitsha, South Africa. His story is an inspiration for patients currently fighting the new form of tuberculosis against which existing drugs are of limited effectiveness.
Tuberculosis

More MSF patients with DR-TB gain access to dramatically cheaper version of life-saving drug

South African authorities allow importation of successful drug to combat TB Press Release - 1 Jul 2014
 
Helena gets a chance to talk to her son Moses who is an Ebola confirmed patient. A MSF health promoter supports this difficult moment for the young mother as she is too overwhelmed with what to say. The health promoter advises her to say positive things such as „I am waiting here outside for you“ or „I am thinking of you non Stop“
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Surviving Ebola

First published in the International Activity Report 2014 Report - 1 Jul 2014
 
Health promotion posters flank the entrance to the incinerated remains of the emergency room at the MSF hospital in Leer, South Sudan, February 23, 2014.  The hospital was thoroughly looted, burned, ransacked, and effectively destroyed, along with most of Leer, sometime between the final days of January and early February, 2014, leaving hundreds of thousands of people cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care. The hospital, opened by MSF 25 years ago, was the only secondary health care facility in Unity State.
South Sudan

“When I walk past the burned parts of the hospital, I try not to look”

MSF project coordinator Sarah Maynard describes the devastation she witnessed at MSF’s hospital in Leer Voices from the Field - 1 Jul 2014
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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