Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
7999 Results
 
A young boy suffering from Kala Azar is getting an injection from one of the nurses. MSF supports the teaching hospital in Malakal, South Sudan.
South Sudan

Southern Sudan in grips of worst kala azar outbreak in eight years.

Epidemic compounds existing medical humanitarian crisis Press Release - 16 Dec 2010
 
msf-placeholder
Global

Underfunded Global Fund punishes ambition by rejecting AIDS proposals

The World Health Organization and other experts have recognized that early initiation of treatment is key to turning back the AIDS pandemic. However, countries’ proposals to initiate early treatment, implement WHO guidelines and aggressively reduce transmission both between mother and child, and between adults, have been denied. Press Release - 15 Dec 2010
 
Tychero border police station, Evros, Greece - December 2010
 MSF¿s emergency coordinator visits one of the cells in the border police station of Tychero in the region of Evros. MSF has started an emergency intervention in Evros for the provision of medical and humanitarian assistance to migrants and asylum seekers detained in appalling living and hygiene conditions in detention facilities.
Greece

Critical situation for migrants and asylum seekers in detention facilities in Evros region, Greece

During an assessment carried out in November in two detention centers (Venna, Fylakio) and three border police stations (Soufli, Tychero and Feres), MSF documented the harsh and inhumane conditions in which detained migrants are being kept. Most of the detention facilities are very overcrowded, operating at two or three times their capacity. Due to the lack of space, men, women, young children and unaccompanied minors are being kept together in the same cells. Press Release - 13 Dec 2010
 
A Somali baby is being weighed in the MSF health care clinic in Dagahaley Refugee Camp, Dadaab. The health clinic operates for 25 000 people or anyone who cannot reach the hospital.
Dominic Nahr / Oeil Public
Somalia

In a Somaliland camp, a triple blessing amidst ongoing hardship

“I thought my time had come too,” she recalls. “I said goodbye to everyone who visited me and asked them for forgiveness. I never thought that I would survive.”
MSF’s outreach team found Fardows while surveying the Shadaha camp for people in need of emergency medical attention. They took her to hospital, where she learned she was pregnant with triplets.
Voices from the Field - 13 Dec 2010
 
msf-placeholder
India

At EU-India Summit, European negotiators urged not to block access to affordable medicines

Germany, UK and France pushing to undermine India’s pro public-health law Press Release - 10 Dec 2010
 
Two weeks after the opening of the CTC in Cap Haitien Gymnasium, the sensitization team has moved from 6 members to more than 40 community health workers. They sensitize the population inside the CTC as well as in the streets of Cap Haitien.
Haiti

In Haiti's rural north, cholera rate shows the "tip of the iceberg" as outbreak spreads

“In areas newly affected by the disease, the population of areas is really scared,” said Alan Lefebvre, MSF emergency coordinator. “The population fears that a cholera treatment centre will bring the disease to the community. The challenge is to inform, to raise awareness, and to demonstrate that we are there to treat the sick and that this is working.” Project Update - 9 Dec 2010
 
Dans le district de Chiradzulu - ou MSF mene un programme VIH/sida depuis 2001 - le test de dépistage DBS (Dry Blood Spot) a ete mis en place au cours de la derniere semaine de juillet 2009, dans 3 centres de sante du district et en collaboration avec le MOH. Ce test rapide ne necessite pas de chaine du froid : quelques gouttes de sang sont prelevees sur un buvard et envoyees dans un laboratoire ; la, le buvard est dissout et le sang teste en seulement une quinzaine d¿heures. Il permet un depistage precoce des nourrissons nes de meres seropositives des l'age de 6 semaines.
HIV/AIDS

Denied funding puts HIV patients in low-income countries at risk of death

Several low-income countries, highly affected by HIV, risk being entirely or partly disqualified from the current funding round by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, warns the international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins sans Frontières (MSF). Project Update - 8 Dec 2010
 
msf-placeholder
Chad

The challenge of logistics in Chad

Charlotte Stemmer worked in the Chad emergency nutrition projects from September to November, 2010
Voices from the Field - 7 Dec 2010
 
Niger, April 2010<br/>
These photos were taken on the opening day of a meningitis vaccination campaign that ran for approximately two weeks. MSF assisted the government with the logistical organisation of the campaign, which succeeded in vaccinating 300,000 children and young adults between the ages of 2 and 30 in Zinder, Maradi and Madaoua. The campaign was executed in response to an epidemic of W135 meningococcal meningitis- the vaccine protects against the A, C and W135 strains of the disease for 3 years.
Burkina Faso

MSF to support roll-out of promising new vaccine for meningitis

“Thanks to an innovative way of doing research and development where the need for an affordable product was factored in from the very start, this vaccine costs only 40 US cents per dose” said Dr Tido von Schoen-Angerer, Director of MSF's Access Campaign. “But despite its low price, no donor has yet come forward to offer financial support to implement the vaccine beyond the first three countries. Press Release - 6 Dec 2010
 
msf-placeholder
Global

Interview: Dr. Cathy Hewison discusses 'revolutionary' Meningitis vaccine

Médecins Sans Frontières teams are involved in rolling out a mass vaccination campaign against meningitis in Mali and Niger in Africa’s notorious meningitis belt.
Every year, MSF launches mass campaigns but this one is very different; the new vaccine is being employed as a preventive measure and not, as in the past, in response to an actual outbreak of the disease. This brings with it new challenges but many are hoping the new vaccine could help wipe out the devastating meningitis epidemics in the region. MSF is working closely to support the governments’ work in rolling this vaccine out which, in this initial phase, is also being launched in Burkina Faso.
Voices from the Field - 6 Dec 2010
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