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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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An MSF nurse talks to Bibi Amina whilst she waits to see a doctor at the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) hospital in Kandahar city, Kandahar Province, Afghanistan.
Afghanistan

People with tuberculosis face multiple barriers accessing treatment in Afghanistan

A lack of awareness about tuberculosis (TB) coupled with Afghanistan’s dysfunctional healthcare system leaves people cut off from the medical care they need to overcome the infectious disease. Project Update - 8 Dec 2022
 
Major floods have hit central and southern Chad since mid-August, with latest floods notably affecting different areas of the capital, N’Djamena. Houses, schools, and even markets have been completely submerged in water for weeks. People are using canoes as means of transport to be able to access certain areas severely affected by the floods.
Chad

Chad floods deepen humanitarian crisis with high risk of disease outbreaks

The latest floods in Chad have exacerbated an already dire humanitarian situation. An urgent need for funding and long-term programming is now vital in response to the crisis. Project Update - 5 Dec 2022
 
Patients from the Hetmanivka village in the Kharkiv region waiting for their primary health care and mental health consultation provided by the MSF mobile clinic team. Most patients MSF meet are women over the age of 60 presenting with chronic illness’, such as hypertension, that have gone uncontrolled for months. Three months after the Ukrainian army retook control of the rural villages and towns of the Kharkiv region, the medical and mental health care needs are still high. As the communities have been left with damaged healthcare facilities and psychological wounds caused by months of fear, isolation and violence, the MSF mobile clinic teams are providing primary and mental health care.
Ukraine

Absence of medical care for the elderly caught between the frontlines

Our mobile clinics in Ukraine's Kharkiv region have been providing general healthcare and mental health support to elderly women who have been without care since February. Project Update - 2 Dec 2022
 
Medium shot of a patient’s hands waiting outside MSF’s mobile clinic in the Closed Control Access Centre in Zervou, Samos. Since April2022, MSF has started to provide primary healthcare services (including sexual and reproductive health care) inside the closed access and control center of Zervou. An MSF health promoters team makes sure that people in the camp are aware of the kind of support MSF can provide.
Greece

Closed centres for refugees on Greek islands exacerbate psychological trauma

Psychological trauma, isolation and severely limited access to healthcare await highly traumatised people seeking safety on the Greek islands. Project Update - 30 Nov 2022
 
MSF's social worker, Sandra, is carrying out an interview with an HIV patient at Notre-Dame de Caramel Reference Health Center in Goma, North Kivu. Many people living with HIV in Goma face socio-economic difficulties that prevent them from properly following their treatment despite the free medical care provided by MSF. Stigmatisation, social exclusion and poverty are all realities that can push some patients to stop taking their treatment. These challenges can also be acute for survivors of sexual violence, street children and sex workers, who are often particularly vulnerable and marginalised in DRC.
HIV/AIDS

HIV/AIDS in DRC: Behind the progress, huge challenges remain

Twenty years after opening our first treatment centre for people living with HIV in Kinshasa, progress has been achieved, but major gaps remain, causing thousands of preventable deaths each year.  Project Update - 25 Nov 2022
 
A healthcare worker examining Mohamad Al-Merhi, a Cholera patient in the MSF-supported Cholera Treatment Unit (CTU) in Idlib governorate, northwest Syria.
Syria

Combatting cholera amidst displacement and the remnants of war

As Syrians continue to deal with displacement and the devastation of war, the rapid spread of cholera is a new and dangerous threat for the most vulnerable people. Project Update - 22 Nov 2022
 
MSF teams vaccinating against cholera in xxx
Lebanon

Access to vaccines and clean water essential as cholera spreads in Lebanon

As cholera spreads in Lebanon and 19 people have already died from the disease since 6 October, it is essential that people can access vaccines and safe drinking water to avoid preventable deaths. Press Release - 18 Nov 2022
 
Haiti Cité l'Eternel - The neighborhood of Cité l'Eternel is sadly known because of its insalubrity and high levels of violence. Port-au-Prince counts a multitude of isolated slum areas that lack of basic infrastructures and access to water and health care.
Haiti

Vaccines and urgent response needed as cholera wave rises

As cholera cases rapidly increase in Haiti, amongst a political, economic and security crisis, MSF calls on other organisations and donors for an urgent scale up in the response to the outbreak.
Press Release - 17 Nov 2022
 
Main entrance of Muciniecki immigrant detention centre.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Serious medical issues caused by unlawful detention of migrants in Latvia

MSF calls on the Latvian authorities to urgently end the unlawful detention of migrants in Latvia, many of whom are traumatised men, women and children. Press Release - 15 Nov 2022
 
A few hours following the third rescue of rotation 19, another small boat with 12 people was found in distress thanks to an alert shared by Alarm Phone. The rescue was conducted with success and the 12 people have joined the other 256 survivors on board of the Geo Barents, making a total of 268 people rescued.
Mediterranean migration

All survivors disembarked to safety after illegal delay at Catania port

It took 10 days at sea and three days of waiting at the Catania port before all 572 survivors rescued by the Geo Barents were disembarked to safety. Press Release - 11 Nov 2022
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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