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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Malaria

Testing for Malaria in Bangui, CAR

Slideshow on the Mamadou M'Baïki health center in CAR Photo Story - 30 Jun 2014
 
Women and children from Central Darfur (Sudan) at the MSF Health Centre in Um Doukhoum (Chad).  The organization provides free medical activities focusing on malnutrition screening and treatment for local population and for people coming from the other side of the border in Sudan, including wounded patients victims of the ongoing violence.
Chad

MSF treats wounded patients after a new wave of violence in Darfur

When violence erupts in the Darfur area, people flee across the border into Chad in search of safety. Project Update - 27 Jun 2014
 
In Hebron and East Jerusalem, MSF is running a medical and psychosocial programme for people suffering from trauma because of the conflict. MSF teams focus on people with psychological distress (acute stress, anxiety disorders, post traumatic syndromes, depression) caused by violent incidents involving Israeli settlers and Israeli Army, but also due to the intra-Palestinian conflict. In Hebron, MSF staff carried out 1726 individual mental health consultations and 945 medical consultations in 2011.
In the beginning of 2011, MSF conducted a needs assessment in East Jerusalem and decided to start providing in this part of the city mental health care to the population who suffers trauma or psychological distress due to the consequences of violence caused by the conflict and who has no access to mental health services. MSF therapies started in July in the Shufat refugee camp and Silwan area and since then MSF staff carried out 223 individual mental health consultations.
Palestine

MSF assists those affected by the current military operation in the Westpalest Bank

Palestine: MSF assists those affected by the current military operation in the West Bank Project Update - 26 Jun 2014
 
MSF nurse, Nashashon Erupe, treats Sajen Mading, a severely dehydrated 7 month old baby girl. 

The baby arrived in Nadapal, on the Kenyan border with South Sudan, with her mother, her father, and her six siblings. The family, originally from Bor, walked for 11 days to reach Nadapal. 

Sajen’s mother also received treatment from MSF’s medical team.
HIV/AIDS

Visceral Leishmaniasis and HIV Coinfection in East Africa

Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL) is an important protozoan opportunistic disease in HIV patients in endemic areas. Journal article - 26 Jun 2014
 
Sign in front MSF Base in Pinga, Democratic Republic of Congo where MSF has been working since February 2013. In Pinga, a small town in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, MSF provides medical care to people affected by conflict while trying to reach those cut off from assistance by insecurity.
 
At present, (August 2013) all medical activities in Pinga and its immediate surroundings have been suspended after increasing insecurity and threats to humanitarian workers.
Attacks on medical care

Attacks on medical missions: overview of a polymorphous reality: the case of Médecins Sans Frontières

Attacks on medical missions: overview of a polymorphous reality: the case of Médecins Sans Frontières Journal article - 25 Jun 2014
 
paracheck being done in the Nyumanzi Transit camp.  *** Local Caption *** Around 52,000 South Sudanese refugees have settled in Adjumani district, in northern Uganda. And refugees are still arriving. Upon their arrival, they stay in a transit centre before being transferred to a permanent settlement. MSF is providing health care in the transit centre and three permanent camps. In Dzaipi, MSF is running an OPD, an IPD and a therapeutic nutritional centre.
Malaria

Population pharmacokinetics of quinine in pregnant women with uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Uganda

The aim of this study was to investigate the pharmacokinetic properties of oral quinine in pregnant women with uncomplicated malaria in Uganda using a population approach. Journal article - 25 Jun 2014
 
Reynaldo Jr. Soria, MSF anaesthetist from the Philippines, is about to give spinal anaesthesia to a patient. 

More than one month after the typhoon Haiyan hit in the Philippines, the humanitarian needs seen by MSF teams vary from place to place, and there are still some areas that are under-served by aid. In some areas we are seeing people’s medical needs declining, but in other areas there is still a need for our support. Taking into account the progressive deployment of aid to rural areas and the number of organisations providing primary healthcare, MSF is adapting its activities in the Philippines.

MSF will gradually decrease its activities in areas of Ormoc and Burauen on Leyte island, and in northern Iloilo province on Panay island, starting from the end of December. MSF will however continue working in Tacloban, on Leyte island, and in Guiuan, on Samar island, providing surgery, inpatient care, psychological care and other support until the health system is functioning again at adequate levels.
Global

MSF and the aid system: Choosing not to choose

This paper explores MSF's relationship with the aid system. Journal article - 25 Jun 2014
 
In a crowded reception room, patients wait for care at Nap Kenbe – Creole for ‘staying well’ – surgical centre in Tabarre, eastern Port-au-Prince. Teams provide emergency trauma, orthopaedic and abdominal surgery for victims of gun crime and domestic violence as well as people injured in road accidents.
Surgery & trauma care

Saving life and limb: limb salvage using external fixation, a multi-centre review of orthopaedic surgical activities in Médecins Sans Frontières

A report on orthopaedic management of open fractures in less developed countries. Journal article - 25 Jun 2014
 
African Union Soldiers from MISCA guarding Muslim IDP camp in Carnot Catholic Church
Central African Republic

Humanitarian impasse in a Muslim enclave

More than 90% of the western CAR's Muslim inhabitants have fled violence in the past few months Project Update - 24 Jun 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.

Learn more