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Pakistan

A rich and fascinating experience

Brian Moller is Australian. A nurse by training, he currently serves as MSF's project coordinator in Hangu, Pakistan. Brian talks about his mission and his experience. Voices from the Field - 20 May 2011
 
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Colombia

Treating vulnerable populations in Buenaventura

The port city of Buenaventura is the primary place of refuge for populations displaced by the armed conflict on the Pacific coast. Precarious living conditions and the privatization of the health care system have created significant obstacles to obtaining access to medical care. In June, 2008, MSF opened a primary health care center, which conducted more than 22,500 patient visits in 2010. Project Update - 20 May 2011
 
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Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Europe must accept the boat people fleeing Libya

An open letter by MSF addressed to the leaders of the states of the European Union involved in the war in Libya is being published today in 11 newspapers across Europe. In the letter, the organisation criticises contradictory European policies, which claim to be conducting a war to protect civilians, whilst closing its borders to the victims of that same war, on the pretext of preventing a massive influx of illegal immigrants. Press Release - 19 May 2011
 
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Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Open letter concerning civilians fleeing Libya for Europe

Member States of the European Union, and especially those directly involved in the conflict, must now turn words into actions regarding the protection of civilians in Libya. Their non-refoulement, decent reception conditions for all and access to asylum procedures for those who request it must be guaranteed. The European Union and all its Member States are responsible for the fate of these victims of war and for ensuring that their rights are respected. Project Update - 19 May 2011
 
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Libya

MSF expands operations in response to growing needs in Libya

The general situation in Libya remains extremely tense and uncertain, and the situation in a number of locations is particularly volatile, creating ever-greater health care needs. Project Update - 18 May 2011
 
Bakhita Mongu (22), a midwife with MSF since 2 years, brought her 7 months old son, Bless to the hospital with suspects of Malaria. Over this 2 years period, she was able to deliver more than 100 babies. MSF Hospital, Aweil, South Sudan, Africa.
Website

Media Database

Browse through our online collection of photos, videos and other audiovisual resources from around the world. Find new material as well as an archive of historical and institutional interest. media.msf.org
 
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Bahrain

From hospital to prison - medical aid in Bahrain

On the continuing and unacceptable assault on the provision of impartial medical aid in Bahrain, where wounded patients remain too terrified to seek healthcare, and raids on health facilities plus arrests of medical staff continue. Project Update - 13 May 2011
 
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Yemen

MSF ambulance hit by stray bullet

“The bullet entered through the back window,” said Dr. Vipul Chowdhary, MSF’s representative in Yemen. “Luckily, no patients were inside the vehicle at the time and the driver and nurse who were inside were not harmed. MSF reminds all parties of the absolute need to respect humanitarian medical work and staff in Sana’a and the rest of the country.” Project Update - 12 May 2011
 
Blue House clinic in Mathare, one of the Kenyan capital Nairobi’s more violent slums, where MSF treats people with TB and HIV.
Diagnosing TB is extremely difficult and requires patients to produce sputum samples from within their lungs.  To be sure it is a case of MDR-TB, samples must be sent away to labs where the bacilli are grown for up to two months.  The wait to be sure about whether a person is infected with ‘regular’ or with MDR-TB can be too long for some, especially those who also have HIV.  For children, producing a sputum sample is even more difficult, and requires the expertise of specialists. MSF began treating MDR-TB in Kenya in May of 2006 and remains the only provider of MDR treatment in the country today.
HIV/AIDS

Getting Ahead of the Wave: Lessons for the Next Decade of the AIDS Response

A report released today by the international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) revealed that several countries hardest hit by the AIDS epidemic are improving HIV treatment to reduce deaths and illness – but a lack of support from donors prevents many from making vital changes. Report - 11 May 2011
 
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Natural hazards

MSF continues psychological care for earthquake and tsunami survivors

“Most people lost everything in the disaster, including family, colleagues and friends, and the future is difficult to imagine,” said Ha Young Lee – a Korean psychologist that has worked with MSF in the aftermath of the Asian tsunami in Banda Aceh in 2005, as well as with North Korean refugees in Seoul. Project Update - 11 May 2011
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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