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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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In the beginning of September, MSF teams offered medical consultations through their mobile clinic at Impire Village to respond to a diarrhea outbreak. As Impire is 9km south of the Health Center in Nanlia, northern Mozambique, where MSF has set up a Diarrhea Treatment Center, the IDPs and host communities were only reachable through the mobile clinic. MSF managed to reduce the number of diarrhea cases and provide health services to both IDPs and the host community.
Mozambique

Urgent assistance needed for hundreds of thousands of people displaced by violence in Mozambique

With fighting continuing in northeastern Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province, MSF is providing medical care to displaced people - but is hampered in scaling up assistance due to administrative barriers. Press Release - 3 Nov 2020
 
A nurse from the Lotumbe General Reference Hospital has put his personal protective equipment and is about to visit a suspected Ebola case who has just been admitted to the Ebola Treatment Centre (ETC). The ETC was set up by MSF following the appearance of a few confirmed Ebola cases at the beginning of the epidemic in this area. Lotumbe.

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Un infirmier de l'Hôpital Général de Référence de Lotumbe a enfilé son équipement de protection individuel et s’apprête à rendre visite à un cas suspect Ebola qui vient d’être admis au Centre de Traitement Ebola (CTE). Ce CTE a été mis sur pied par MSF, suite à l'apparition de quelques cas confirmés Ebola au début de l'épidémie. Lotumbe.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

DRC's eleventh Ebola outbreak

On 18 November 2020, DRC declared over an outbreak of Ebola in Équateur province, which had been the country’s eleventh in 40 years, and the third in the last two years. Crisis Update - 3 Nov 2020
 
Majd Osama, 23 years old from Syria, married and has a daughter. Majd is receiving medical care in COVID-19 treatment centre in Zaatari camp for Syrian refugees. “One day I woke up feeling feverish and I was referred to MSF COVID-19 hospital, I have been in the MSF hospital for two days, I don’t cough and I do not have a runny nose and the fever is gone. God will help me, I’m not worried.”
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

MSF responds as COVID-19 arrives in Jordan’s largest refugee camp

Given the often rapid spread of diseases inside refugee camps, MSF is providing medical care for coronavirus COVID-19 to refugees in Zaatari camp, Jordan. Project Update - 28 Oct 2020
 
MSF in Nariño
Colombia

MSF responds to a resurgence of violence in Norte de Santander and Nariño

MSF is providing general and mental healthcare in Colombia’s Norte de Santander and Nariño, where violence has led to mass displacements and confinements Project Update - 28 Oct 2020
 
A consultation at MSF’s mobile clinic, in an IDP camp in Northwest Syria.
Syria

Dozens of people treated following an airstrike in Idlib

Dozens of people have been treated at a hospital co-managed by MSF, following an airstrike in a relatively stable part of Idlib governorate, northwest Syria. Project Update - 26 Oct 2020
 
Omaima is 52 years old and suffers from neurological problems, asthma, hyper-tension and mental health issues.
She says:
"We have been in this camp for one year, it is a terrible camp; full of rats, dirt, there is not enough food and all of this causes mental health problems.
The health system in the camp has deteriorated and, because I am asthmatic, I don’t want to see the doctor here because I am afraid of being put in quarantine.
I prefer to be in my tent which is full of rats and snakes, but at least I am not going to be in direct contact with other sick people from different communities in the same container.”
Greece

Negligent and dangerous COVID-19 response in Vathy camp, Samos

On Greece's Samos island, the inadequate COVID-19 response in Vathy camp is dangerous and should be immediately addressed. Project Update - 26 Oct 2020
 
Flooding in the Greater Pibor Administrative Area, South Sudan. This year’s floods are happening against the backdrop of multiple emergencies including COVID-19, increased violence and fighting, a growing economic crisis, and high levels of food insecurity. The needs for medical care are increasing with a sharp rise in malaria cases and fears of outbreaks of other diseases
South Sudan

Worsening flooding increases health risks

South Sudan's severe floods are leaving people without adequate food, water or shelter. Malaria cases are rising and other disease outbreaks are likely. Project Update - 22 Oct 2020
 
On August 24, SeaWatch4 completed its third rescue in 48 hours. Evacuated in a heavy swell, many of the some 100 survivors were hypothermic, disoriented and smelled strongly of gasoline. Emergency showers were provided for fuel exposure.
Mediterranean migration

Five things to know about the Mediterranean search and rescue crisis

Five search and rescue boats detained, including MSF's Sea-Watch 4. In five months. Here are five things to know about the current situation with search and rescue in the Mediterranean sea. Project Update - 16 Oct 2020
 
Patients and caretakers entering Boost hospital, Boost hospital, Lashkar Gah
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Afghanistan

Sharing patients’ stories “as devastating as their injuries” in Afghanistan

MSF hospital coordinator at Boost provincial hospital, Marianna Cortesi, describes the harrowing stories of two women - mothers - caught in the crossfire of the fighting in Helmand province, southern Afghanistan. Voices from the Field - 15 Oct 2020
 
MSF staff provide support and advice to medical staff working in quarantine centres set up by national authorities to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the Venezuelan border state of Táchira. Venezuelan returnees must undergo quarantine upon their arrival in the country.
Venezuela

MSF teams improve conditions for Venezuelan returnees in quarantine centres

Venezuelan migrants are returning to their home country in light of COVID-19. MSF is providing assistance to returnees to  ensure access to safe drinking water and prevent common diseases. Project Update - 13 Oct 2020
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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