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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Dr. Théo (phile) has done countless interventions with the emergency pool of MSF Congo in the most remote areas of the country. He’s a man of experience, he has seen all kind of epidemics: measles, cholera, yellow fever, … but this time it’s his first Ebola intervention. “It’s interesting that after all this years of experience I’m all of a sudden a bit of a rookie again. But I’m learning so much here.”
DRC Ebola outbreaks

DRC's thirteenth Ebola outbreak

On 8 October 2021, DRC declared an outbreak of Ebola in North Kivu province, which was the country’s thirteenth in just over 40 years, and the fifth in the last two years. Crisis Update - 20 Dec 2021
 
Someone shows a bullet that landed on France's property in Damala, a neighbourhood parallel to the road where the fighting happened on 13 January 2021.

France Beldo, 31, was wounded during this clash between rebel groups and the national forces supported by their international allies on the outskirts of Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic.

Another bullet is still lodged in her shoulder. France says: "We cannot stay in such violence all the time, with the sounds of guns. Fear is winning people over. We cannot go out, if we do, we are always fearful."
Central African Republic

A visual journey through a year of renewed violence in an old conflict

We take a visual journey through a photo essay detailing the struggles of people in CAR and how our teams support those with myriad needs through medical care. Project Update - 17 Dec 2021
 
“We have been here for a month now and one of our biggest challenges is finding shelter and food while waiting for our papers. We miss Venezuela, but there are no opportunities there for us nor for our children. We are friends and used to work as laundry assistants at a hotel, but after a while our salaries weren’t enough for us to eat,” say Vanesa and Daiviane.

They hope to find work and a house to live in and to provide a better life for their children.
Brazil

Venezuelan migrants left without healthcare, shelter and services

As hundreds of Venezuelan migrants arrive daily in Roraima state, Brazil, they find themselves in precarious conditions, often sleeping rough without access to basic services. Project Update - 14 Dec 2021
 
In the ER section of a makeshift hospital in Syria that MSF has converted from a farm.
Syria

Casualties arrive en masse at MSF hospital following an airstrike in Idlib

Following an airstrike in Idlib governorate, northwest Syria, a number of people, including young children, have been severely injured. MSF medical teams are responding. Press Release - 13 Dec 2021
 
Abdul Harma, head nurse at the Hospital specialising in COVID-19 in Hassakeh, in northeast Syria, provides care to Mr. Ali, who lives two hours away from Hassakeh by road.
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

Responding to COVID-19: Global Accountability Report 5 - May to September 2021

Read the fifth in a series of accountability and operational activities outline on MSF's response to the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. Report - 8 Dec 2021
 
Sulaith Auzaque, fieldco in Catatumbo, and a migrant reaching the border with Colombia.
Colombia

Humanitarian needs persist on Colombia and Venezuela border

After three years of providing care, Médecins Sans Frontières is handing our projects over and calling for a stronger aid response for thousands of families on the border. Press Release - 7 Dec 2021
 
MSF teams have treated 163 patients with shrapnel, blast and other conflict-related injures at its trauma hospital in Mocha, Yemen between November 8th and November 28th as conflict heavily intensified, raising urgent concerns for the health and safety of the population as well as the capacity of the health system to cope with influxes of conflict-related injuries.  

Since the middle of November, MSF began to receive large influxes of war wounded patients. On November 12-13, teams received 34 wounded in two days and surgical teams worked around the clock to perform 20 surgeries in a single day. The following week, a second mass influx of 45 patients arrived to the hospital, including seven in critical condition. Of the 163 patients received by MSF since November 8th, 96 have arrived in with serious or critical condition.
Yemen

Hundreds of people with shrapnel injures treated at trauma hospital in Mocha

MSF teams have treated 163 patients with shrapnel, blast and other conflict-related injures at our Mocha trauma hospital in Yemen over a period of just 20 days.

Project Update - 6 Dec 2021
 
Kenya. Dadaab. Dagahaley. 20 June 2021.  The landscape of Dagahaley Camp is a community camp that has existed since 1990 in Kenya's territory.
Kenya

Urgent solutions needed for refugees as camps set to close

With the planned closure of Kenya’s refugee camps, a precarious future awaits hundreds of thousands of Somalis. Press Release - 6 Dec 2021
 
An aerial view of Dagahaley camp
Kenya

In search of dignity: Refugees in Kenya face a reckoning

A new Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) report outlines the potential dangers facing refugees in Kenya who will find themselves abandoned after camps close next year. Report - 6 Dec 2021
 
The sandy paths of the Ambovombe road.
Climate emergency

A failure of ambition on climate action will amplify humanitarian needs

Humanitarian organisations are struggling to keep up with the demands of increasingly frequent, erratic, and overlapping crises at current levels of warming. bmj.com - 3 Dec 2021
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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