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MSF provides assistance to refugees in Nakivale camp in Uganda

Uganda

Hundreds of thousands of refugees have fled to northern Uganda following violence in South Sudan. Uganda is currently the largest refugee hosting country in Africa.

We are working to provide medical care, mother and child health services, and water and sanitation activities for South Sudanese refugees who have fled to Uganda.

Although the number of new cases per year has been declining, seven per cent of the population (about 1.5 million people) is HIV positive.

We offer point-of-care viral load testing in Arua regional hospital, which facilitates rapid detection and early treatment, leading to an improved outcomes for patients.

In Kasese, we run a clinic providing basic and comprehensive healthcare to adolescents, including sexual and reproductive health services, and HIV and tuberculosis (TB) prevention, screening and treatment.

Our activities in 2023 in Uganda

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2023.

MSF in Uganda in 2023 In Uganda, Médecins Sans Frontières works to address gaps in healthcare for adolescents and respond to the health needs of the growing number of refugees arriving in the country.
Uganda IAR map 2023

Nakivale camp, in southern Uganda, received a huge influx of refugees in 2023, as over 30,000 people were displaced by a resurgence in fighting between the armed forces and the M23 armed group in the eastern part of Democratic Republic of Congo. Throughout the year, our teams ran mobile clinics, providing general healthcare to people living in extremely precarious conditions in the camp.

In Kasese district, we continued to run a dedicated clinic for adolescents aged between 10 and 19 years, inside a Ministry of Health centre. The clinic offers a broad range of medical services tailored to adolescents’ needs, including sexual and reproductive healthcare, with a specific focus on pregnant teenagers, treatment for people living with HIV and sickle cell disease, as well as social and mental health support. 

In 2023, we handed over our programme in Arua to the Ugandan health authorities and their partners in West Nile sub-region. For over 20 years, our project had been providing care for HIV and tuberculosis patients and victims of sexual violence. We also handed over our mental health and sexual violence programmes in Imvepi and Omugo refugee settlements.

 

in 2023
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