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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Zambia

Cholera in Zambia: 'People do not want to talk about it. It's a dirty disease'

Christina Anderson is a 32 years old nurse from Sweden. On her second mission with MSF, this is the first time she is facing a cholera outbreak. She arrived in Zambia in the middle of January and, since then, has been supervising MSF activity in George Cholera Treatment Center (CTC), in the northern part of Lusaka, the capital city of Zambia, where the cholera outbreak has spread since last September. Project Update - 15 Feb 2006
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Rutshuru, DRC: Attacks on civilians causes thousands to flee

So far MSF staff have been unable to access this remaining population around Kibirizi, they are most likely to be in desperate need of help. Those who have managed to reach Kanyabayonga have spent one or two days walking, fleeing with only the belongings they could carry. Project Update - 13 Feb 2006
 
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Zambia

Cases still rising in cholera outbreak in Lusaka

At the beginning of February, more than 600 new cases were reporting every week. It is estimated that the outbreak has not yet reached its peak. The rainy season - when outbreaks usually occur - started in November and it will last until April. Project Update - 10 Feb 2006
 
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Two MSF staff detained in Colombia

Press Release - 9 Feb 2006
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Violence in Katanga, Introduction

Neither the Government nor the international community have shown an adequate commitment to fulfill their responsibilities to protect and assist these civilians in need. Having long been the informal suppliers of foodstuffs for both FARDC troops and Mai-Mai militia, civilian populations are increasingly abused, attacked and manipulated.
Download the MSF briefing paper on Katanga
Project Update - 9 Feb 2006
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

The search for safe refuge and the lack of attention to IDPs in need

The displaced have found refuge in areas ill-equipped to receive them with little prepared for their arrival. Having arrived with nothing, they have largely been dependent upon the goodwill of host communities - for food, clothes, shoes, shelter...
Download the MSF briefing paper on Katanga
Project Update - 9 Feb 2006
 
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Access to medicines

Gilead's tenofovir 'access program' for developing countries: A case of false promises?

Tenofovir is now an important option for antiretroviral treatment for both AIDS patients starting therapy for the first time, and those that require access to newer drugs a few years down the line, particularly because it has fewer side effects than older antiretrovirals. As Gilead is the sole producer of tenofovir (no generic versions have been internationally validated), MSF and others are dependent on the willingness of the company to make this urgently needed drug widely available. Press Release - 7 Feb 2006
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Forced displacement and cholera in Katanga

Tens of thousands of people have sought refuge on the banks of Lake Upemba, fleeing attacks on their villages and military operations in central Katanga. Meanwhile, on January 6, an outbreak of cholera 50kms north of Lake Upemba, led to 340 people being admitted for treatment in 10 days; MSF teams bring relief to the displaced around Upemba, and rapidly deploy teams to treat cholera patients and set up two cholera treatment centres in Kikondja and Mangi. Project Update - 6 Feb 2006
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF's emergency team fights a measles epidemic in the Bas-Congo Province

After two weeks, 104,549 children had been vaccinated against measles in 18 sites around Matadi. Our teams also vaccinated 26,147 children in Kimpese, in five vaccination posts. Project Update - 3 Feb 2006
 
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Haiti

A precarious calm in Port-au-Prince

"We have seen two major peaks in the violence over the past year," said the MSF Head of Mission. "We hope this precarious calm lasts, because the civilian toll so far has been enormous." Project Update - 3 Feb 2006
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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