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This patient needs to come to the clinic every day for an injection. Swaziland, MSF clinic in Makanyane. October 2013.
Tuberculosis

The old devil in new clothes

An op-ed written by Jennifer Hughes, MSF TB doctor in South Africa Voices from the Field - 19 Mar 2014
 
In East Jerusalem, many cases taken on by the MSF mental health teams are related to minors: arrested in school, in home detention or traumatised by the army's night incursions.
Palestine

One year in Hebron and East Jerusalem

AN MSF field coordinator describes the difficulties of working in Palestine Voices from the Field - 19 Mar 2014
 
One of the most flooded areas in Tomping camp.

MSF is providing medical care in two camps in Juba, South Sudan, where 40,000 people are seeking refuge from widespread fighting that erupted in mid-December. Over 27,000 people are living in deplorable conditions in Tomping camp. The first rains of the season have left a significant part of the camp flooded and further degraded the poor sanitation conditions.
South Sudan

First rains exacerbate deplorable living conditions in Tomping camp, Juba

Heavy rainfall has exacerbated the deplorable living conditions in Tomping camp Project Update - 19 Mar 2014
 
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Tuberculosis

Test Me Treat Me' TB manifesto

Promotional clip of the 'Test Me Treat Me' TB manifesto. Project Update - 17 Mar 2014
 
Dumsani Dlamini, 28, his girlfriend just left him, he has 3-year-old daughter who lives with her mother. Use to work as a packer at one of the factories before he got ill. ‘I used to party and drink a lot, that’s why my girlfriend left me. Now I begin to understand that it was all my fault. I like to have a new girlfriend. Maybe I’ll meet someone at the support group meeting in the clinic [MSF]. Dumsami receives daily injections in the buttocks, they are painful and part of his lengthy MDR-TB treatment, that he has been ondergoing since 3 months. He is also HIV-positive. Swaziland, Matsapha industrial area. October 2013.
Tuberculosis

The new face of an old disease: Urgent action needed to tackle global Drug-Resistant TB threat

New MSF briefing paper outlines why deadly strains of DR-TB is one of the biggest global health threats we face today. Press Release - 17 Mar 2014
 
Bitoye . Located at the crossroads of Central African and Cameroonian borders, Bitoye has seen its population double with the influx of refugees from the North West of CAR by vehicle or on foot. MSF has installed a health center and carried out a vaccination campaign against measles , polio and meningitis refugee and local populations of less than 29 years.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

"What's happening right now is unacceptable"

Conditions for CAR refugees in Chad are "unacceptable" Project Update - 17 Mar 2014
 
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Tuberculosis

Multidrug-resistant TB patient stories

MDR-TB patients tell their stories in a series of videos. Project Update - 17 Mar 2014
 
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Tuberculosis

A breath of hope for Drug-Resistant TB

In Armenia, MSF started a programme using Bedaquiline to treat DR-TB patients. Project Update - 17 Mar 2014
 
In Chujllas, patient Hilario was chosen to help the MSF staff monitor the situation in the community. Those who find vinchucas at their homes, inform him so that he can report it to the authorities.
Mexico

Agreement between MSF and state government will help prevent Chagas disease

An agreement between MSF and state government in Mexico will prevent Chagas disease Press Release - 14 Mar 2014
 
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Cameroon

35,000 flee fighting in Central African Republic

35,000 civilians have fled the violence in Central African Republic for Cameroon Project Update - 14 Mar 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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