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The patients we receive are the “lucky ones”
Describing the toll of war on health in absentia
Stabilising emergencies in a pocket of safety
Explosive devices have deadly impact on people fleeing or returning home
Case Study on humanitarian response in North-east Nigeria
Medical staff and patient killed in an attack on MSF-supported hospital
An obligation to tell the world
Preventing cervical cancer
MSF joins Europe-wide action challenging patent on key hepatitis C drug
MSF warns about the use of humanitarian aid for political and military interests
Innovative vaccine could prevent thousands of child deaths from diarrhoea
Fewer than five per cent of people in need are treated with new drugs
MSF withdrawing from Ibb Al-Thawra hospital
“Yesterday, it was calm; we only received 20 war-wounded patients”
Thousands of wounded and sick coming from western Mosul
Innovative vaccine against rotavirus
“My future is unclear, and I don't know what will happen to all of us from Wau Shilluk.”
Urgent humanitarian assistance needed for thousands of people who fled fighting in Wau Shilluk
Warring groups must allow aid to population in need
One year after the EU-Turkey deal: migrants and asylum seekers are paying the price with their health
Dilemmas in access to medicines: a humanitarian perspective
No eyes on the ground
Changes in medical practice in Syria
“I feel like I have been given a second life by the doctors and nurses here.”
How we deliver medical humanitarian assistance
Everywhere we work, the circumstances are unique. Nonetheless, our programmes generally follow a common set of practices designed to make sure our resources and expertise are used to maximum effect.