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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF starts emergency rabies intervention

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has started a rabies intervention in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) after an alarming number of people were bitten by rabid dogs. Project Update - 23 Aug 2013
 
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Egypt

Supporting hospitals and anticipating needs

Since the escalation of political violence in Egypt in late June, MSF’s team in Cairo has been in close and regular contact with the main public and private healthcare facilities throughout Cairo and other affected areas of the country. Project Update - 22 Aug 2013
 
Co-infection of HIV and TB is an enormous problem in Myanmar.  A young man co-infected with HIV and TB and his wife meet with an MSF counsellor.
Myanmar

Seeking new ways to tackle urgent health threat of drug-resistant TB

Country’s first international symposium to tackle DR-TB crisis begins 22 August Project Update - 20 Aug 2013
 
A woman gathers rain water as it falls from the roof of a shop in the Gumuruk market, Jonglei state, South Sudan. There is no water point in Gumuruk, people have no other choice but collecting rain water or fetching water from the nearby river.
South Sudan

Fear and rainy season keep people from seeking care in Pibor

Fear and floods are keeping people from seeking assistance in Pibor county, in South Sudan’s Jonglei state. Around 90,000 people are still missing, hiding in fear in the bush. Some 28,000 people are accounted for, but few of these people are receiving the assistance they need. Project Update - 20 Aug 2013
 
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Somalia

Why MSF decided to leave Somalia

International President Dr Unni Karunakara explains the difficult decision to close MSF's medial programmes in Somalia Opinion - 20 Aug 2013
 
Bouza and Madaoua have received initial doses of the medicine.
Niger

More than 180,000 children benefit from new anti-malaria treatment

MSF teams have just completed an initial round of seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC), a new preventive method recommended by the WHO since last year. Project Update - 19 Aug 2013
 
Dr Marcus Bergman has been working in the Democratic Republic of Congo for Médecins Sans Frontières since February 2013. Based in Pinga, a small town in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, he has been providing 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.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Panic in Pinga

A powerful voice from the field by Dr Marcus Bergman, who has been working in Pinga since February. Voices from the Field - 19 Aug 2013
 
Chatuley Hospital
Haiti

"Call for backup – all hands on deck!"

MSF project coordinator Ahmed Fadel describes the fast reactions, the teamwork and the emotional extremes involved in responding to an emergency at Chatuley hospital in Léogâne, Haiti. Voices from the Field - 19 Aug 2013
 
Patient on stretcher being carried to ward.
Many international staff were based here in previous years. But due to the insecurity, the hospital is now completely run by Somali staff paied and employed by MSF. It is MSF general policy to have all its structures ‘weapon free’. At the entrance of the Guri-el Hospital, all persons entering the hospital compound are checked with a metal detector. As a result of the ‘weapon free’ policy, the MSF structures are recognized as neutral places where patients feel safe in a country where weapons abound. Nearly all children arrive at the hospital with severe or moderate malnutrition. The paediatric wards are completely full. 
On top of the malnutrition, many have measles. Infectious diseases like watery and bloody diarrhea have recently become more common. The other main issues in children are lower respiratory tract infections, gastroenteritis and malaria. Because of the collapse of the healthcare system, a large proportion of the
population has not been vaccinated against measles and other diseases. The combination of acute malnutrition and measles can be deadly for children in Somalia.
Several camps for displaced people are located around the town of Guri-el. People have been fleeing violence (and more recently the iolence (and more recently the drought). They have abandoned everything and live in very basic makeshift shelters. An MSF teamcarries out medical and nutritional consultations several times a week in the camps.
Somalia’s humanitarian crisis continues to be one of the worst in the world. This year, Somalis have faced the system. Throughout 2011 Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) ran medical projects in up to 22 different locations in south-central Somalia, the epicenter of the crisis, as well as large-scale programs in the Somali refugee camps in Ethiopia and Kenya. In the period from May to December 2011, MSF treated over 95,000 patients for malnutrition, and treated over 6,000 patients for measles and vaccinated almost 235,000 children against the disease. Within its various health care structures MSF assisted in over 5,500 deliveries and provided over 450,000 consultations. However, despite intense negotiations with armed groups, access to the most affected regions inside south-central Somalia has remained difficult. MSF first worked in Somalia in 1979 and has been present in the country with few interruptions since 1991, when a civil war erupted following the downfall of the country's dictator, Siad Barre. MSF has worked in several locations: Baidoa, Dinsor, Huddur, Jamaame, Jowhar, Kismayo, Marere, and the capital, Mogadishu, in the south; Galcayo and Guri El in the north-central area; and Belet Weyne in central Somalia. Teams have addressed a host of different crises in their many projects, focusing in particular on nutrition, emergency care for people wounded in conflict, mother and child healthcare, and treatment of infectious diseases, including cholera, measles, kala azar, and tuberculosis (TB). MSF is the only international organization providing medical and nutritional care in Guri-el town in Galgaduud region of South Central Somalia..Previously, more than 15 international staff were based here but they had to be withdrawn due to security threats. Somalis employed and trained by MSF now run the hospital, regional MSF staff from Somali origin ran the emergency projects. Access to health care is a major issue in Somalia. In a circle of 150km around Guri-el, there are no medical doctors except for those at the MSF supported hospital.
Somalia

MSF forced to close all medical programmes in Somalia

MSF today announced the closure of all its programmes in Somalia after working continuously in Somalia since 1991. Press Release - 14 Aug 2013
 
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Somalia

MSF forced to withdraw from Somalia - indepth interview

An indepth interview on MSF's decision to withdraw completely from Somalia. An MSF General Director, Arjan Hehenkamp, speaks to Somali journalist Hamza Mohamed. Project Update - 14 Aug 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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