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Boost hospital is the only referral hospital in the province and is a lifeline for those living in Helmand.  MSF supports the emergency room, surgical unit, inpatient department, maternity department, neonatology unit, laboratory and radiology department, as well as the 82-bed paediatric department. The hospital serves a population of around 1.3 million people and in 2020 provided over 110,000 consultations, assisted over 17,000 births and performed over 4,900 surgical interventions.
Afghanistan

As violence soars across Afghanistan access to healthcare is dangerously limited

MSF insists that all working medical facilities must be respected as fighting surges in Afghanistan and hundreds of thousands of people have fled their homes, while many others have been killed or wounded. Project Update - 10 Aug 2021
 
Commune of Ranobe, Amboasary District.

People in the south-east of Madagascar are facing the most acute nutritional and food crisis the region has seen in recent years. MSF began setting up mobile clinics in Amboasary district in late March to screen and treat acute malnutrition in remote villages like those of Ranobe commune, providing ready-to-use therapeutic food and medical care.
Cameroon

Doctors Without Borders forced to withdraw medical teams from North-West Cameroon

After eight months of our activities being suspended by the Cameroonian authorities, we have been forced to withdraw teams from the North-West region while violence continues to divide the country. Press Release - 3 Aug 2021
 
MSF Emergency room supervisor Masood Khan treats a patient for a gunshot wound at the Boost hospital. Helmand province, Afghanistan
Afghanistan

Intense fighting causes severe trauma casualties in Lashkar Gah, Afghanistan

Despite an increase in violence, MSF-supported Boost hospital remains operational in Lashkar Gah, Afghanistan, as trauma needs have significantly increased over the past week. Project Update - 2 Aug 2021
 
MSF’s al-Wahda post-operative hospital in East Mosul
Iraq

Dire needs for healthcare remain years after Battle of Mosul

Years after the battle against the Islamic State group ended in Mosul, Iraq, the city’s health system has not yet recovered - in response MSF has been providing comprehensive post-operative care to patients from the city and surrounding areas.  Project Update - 29 Jul 2021
 
MSF Pharmacy Technician Toueng Sreymon distributes Hepatitis C meds at the MSF Hepatitis C clinic at Preah Kossamak Hospital in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 18, April 2017.
Hepatitis C

Public health partnership launched to tackle silent epidemic of hepatitis C

MSF is launching a public health programme with partners to tackle the silent epidemic of Hepatitis C in low- and middle-income countries.

Press Release - 27 Jul 2021
 
In KwaZulu Natal, an MSF team offered medical assistance and donated a tent, blankets and other essentials to a community after a fires destroyed their homes in Briardene, Durban.
South Africa

Supporting vulnerable communities in the aftermath of violence

After a week of unrest in South Africa, people are still feeling the effects of violence with many vulnerable communities reporting difficulties in accessing food and healthcare. Project Update - 23 Jul 2021
 
Description:Displaced people in the camps within the UN compound in Malakal, South Sudan.
South Sudan

South Sudan at 10: an MSF record of the consequences of violence

A new Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) report, South Sudan at 10: an MSF record of the consequences of violence, offers a consolidated account of our experience in South Sudan since 9 July 2011. Report - 16 Jul 2021
 
Tens of thousands of people from all over the nearby region prepare to receive their first distribution in many months in Thonyor, South Sudan. Many residents from Leer fled to Thonyor feeling saver there.
South Sudan

South Sudan: 10 years of independence, violence, disease and dire needs

After 10 years of independence, South Sudan – the youngest country in the world – has experienced civil war, bloodshed and disease, and remains in dire need of humanitarian support.

Project Update - 16 Jul 2021
 
Outpatient department of MSF’s Tabarre trauma hospital. Patients that are once discharged from hospitalization still come to the hospital for follow-up appointments, such as for wound care and for physiotherapy sessions. The outpatient department receives approximately 80 patients per day with a majority arriving on Mondays and Fridays since there no appointments taken in on weekends. 
“Orthopedic patients have a long rehabilitation process. Unfortunately due to the security situation in the city and the country we have patients who don’t come to their follow-up appointments for up to two months. Some people come from the countryside which makes it challenging for them to reach Tabarre. But if they come late the risk for their wounds to be infected is huge. This is also true for many of our colleagues that need to cross dangerous neighborhoods in order to come to work.”
                                                     — Roussena Rouzard, outpatient department head nurse, MSF
Haiti

Four questions on the tumultuous situation in Haiti

Ongoing armed clashes and displacement across Port-au-Prince, have led Haiti to a profound crisis for many months, limiting the population's access to healthcare as staff and patients have no assurance of reaching health facilities safely. Interview - 14 Jul 2021
 
As winter approaches in northwest Syria, the already harsh living conditions of more than two million displaced people are becoming even more difficult to deal with. People living in camps across the region face the prospect of leaking tents, mud-filled streets and freezing temperatures. Whenever it rains, the roads in the camp become rivers of mud, making it difficult for people to leave their tents, either on foot or by motorbike, to buy groceries, get to work or see a doctor. 
Teams from Médecins Sans Frontières have started distributing ‘winter kits’ of warm clothes, tarpaulins, mattresses and blankets to around 14,500 families living in more than 70 camps for displaced people across northwest Syria, to help improve their living conditions over the coming winter. These distributions are accompanied by health promotion awareness sessions on winter diseases and ways to prevent being sick in settings such as this.
Syria

Millions of Syrians will lose access to vital aid if northwest border closes

The potential closure of the northwest Syrian border, Bab Al-Hawa, could be extremely harmful to the millions of people reliant on aid there. Project Update - 8 Jul 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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