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Since December 5, a wave of violence has swept through Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has treated 280 wounded in the Community Hospital. Most have injuries by gunshots or weapons like machetes and knives. More than 60 surgical operations were performed. More than 100 people are still hospitalized.
Central African Republic

The aid world has failed the people of the Central African Republic

For months CAR has experienced increasing levels of violence. The UN-led humanitarian response to the suffering is too little, too late
Statement - 12 Dec 2013
 
Since December 5, a wave of violence has swept through Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has treated 280 wounded in the Community Hospital. Most have injuries by gunshots or weapons like machetes and knives. More than 60 surgical operations were performed. More than 100 people are still hospitalized
Central African Republic

Open letter to the UN humanitarian system

Open Letter - 12 Dec 2013
 
A consultation in the out-patient department, in a disused school, in one of MSF's medical projects in Syria.
Syria

"Hospitals don't even have the most basic of medicines"

Just back from his mission, an MSF doctor describes the appalling conditions in the hospitals of eastern Aleppo Voices from the Field - 11 Dec 2013
 
Setting up the inflatable hospital at Bethany Hospital.
Philippines

I will call her Hope

A mother tells how her daughter died during typhoon Haiyan - but how her new-born baby girl has given her hope Project Update - 11 Dec 2013
 
MSF doctors check the pulse of a patient after anaesthetising him, before operating on him. MSF's Emergency Trauma Surgical Project  in Ramtha Governmental Hospital opened in September 2013. It has treated hundreds of war wounded coming from Syria.
Syria

MSF treats hundreds of victims of civil war in emergency programme in Jordan

Emergency surgical programme in Al Ramtha Hospital in Jordan treats hundreds of war wounded patients from Syria Project Update - 10 Dec 2013
 
Dr Wardak Abdul Qayoum assists the expat microbiologist in supervising the team and carrying out isolation, identification and sensitivity testing of the 3000 bacterial strains expected. He observes a culture plate to find out the interesting strain.

MSF has launched for the first time an Antibiotic Resistance Study in Lashkar Gah, Helmand, Afghanistan. A laboratory has been set up in the Boost Hospital where MSF works to carry out the study. The study started in January 2013.
Global

Data Sharing in a Humanitarian Organisation: The Experience of Médecins Sans Frontières

MSF decided to adopt a data sharing policy for routinely collected clinical and research data. Journal article - 10 Dec 2013
 
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Project Update

MSF calls for scale-up of ‘viral load’ monitoring to improve HIV treatment outcomes in developing countries

Global Fund and US-gov’t PEPFAR programme must use purchasing power to get better prices for viral load tests
Press Release - 10 Dec 2013
 
Philippines 5 December 2013. A mobile clinic visited Libertad village today. The MSF team, consisting of a medical doctor, nurses, a psychologist and a logistician, travelled by boat to the remote coastal village, which cannot be reached by road.

After the typhoon hit the Philippines on 8 November, MSF reacted with a massive emergency response. More than 200 humantarian workers were send to the affected areas. Teams have set up inflatable and tented hospitals, are working in health centers and reach out to more remote communities with mobile clinics. Apart from that, the teams distribute shelter, hygiene sets and other non food items.
Philippines

“Roofless, homeless, but not hopeless”

Interview with MSF emergency coordinator Ibrahim Younis on what he sees as insufficient aid to remove areas in Philippines after the typhoon struck. Project Update - 10 Dec 2013
 
Philippines 4 December 2013. Bernardina Barraza with two of her three children, Marie Jersel and four year old Jerson. A mobile clinic visited her village Macanip in Jaro (northern Leyte province) today. In total, 116 patients were treated, mainly for respiratory tract infections, diarrhea, skin infections and chronic diseases.

After the typhoon hit the Philippines on 8 November, MSF reacted with a massive emergency response. More than 200 humantarian workers were send to the affected areas. Teams have set up inflatable and tented hospitals, are working in health centers and reach out to more remote communities with mobile clinics. Apart from that, the teams distribute shelter, hygiene sets and other non food items.
Philippines

“At night he can't sleep”

MSF teams run mobile clinics to provide healthcare for the 2,500 villagers in the village of Macanip, in the north of Leyte island. Voices from the Field - 10 Dec 2013
 
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Palestine

Physiotherapists aid patients recovery

Project Update - 10 Dec 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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