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Armenia

Armenian project improves access to healthcare during first year

"We really had to start from scratch with some of our local staff. Every thing from waste disposal management to attitudes towards the patients had to be tackled. When we first arrived, waste disposal management simply consisted of throwing things out the window," he explains. Project Update - 1 Mar 2006
 
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Russia

These difficulties make my love for Chechya even stronger

"Our patients express real, heartfelt gratitude for our presence. I don't think that they fully understand what MSF is, but they often say 'thanks to you and those that sent you'. For most people it means a lot to them that we have come specifically to care for them - caring has not been something there has been much of here in recent years." Interview - 12 Jan 2006
 
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Serbia

Forgotten people of the Balkans

Six years have passed since the NATO intervention in Kosovo. Talks on the province's status have begun, but on the other side of the border, the ethnic Serbs who fled are living in appalling conditions. Project Update - 23 Dec 2005
 
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Pakistan

Safdar Chok becomes first 'health-care village' in the heart of Pakistan earthquake region

To ensure that patients treated at the district hospital and their families have proper housing before winter comes in the earthquake affected areas of Pakistan, MSF has built small camps inside the town of Mansehra, where winterized tents, health infrastructure, and medical care are provided. Safdar Chok, the first of these 'health-care villages', opened its doors during the second week of November. The second village opened on November 15. Two more are under construction. Project Update - 21 Nov 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF finds catastrophic health situation in the DRC, in spite of political transition

Excess mortality, absence of medical care, and exclusion from care for a majority of patients where it does exist: Although peace has returned to much of the DRC, the health situation of the Congolese people today remains alarming. Far from improving, it has worsened in certain regions of the country, as MSF highlights in its latest report, 'Access to healthcare, mortality and violence in the DRC'. Press Release - 15 Nov 2005
 
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Tuberculosis

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: no tools to properly treat people

The very costly and complex treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is only accessible to a very small minority of the millions of people with the disease worldwide. What is worse, those who have started taking the medicine are subjected to devastating side effects, and barely half of them end up recovering. Project Update - 15 Nov 2005
 
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HIV/AIDS

MSF hands over Ukraine HIV/Aids programme

After a presence of six years in the Ukraine, the international medical aid organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is now handing over its HIV/Aids programme to the Ukraine Ministry of Health and national NGOs as LifePlus, Alternativa, UNITAS and Time to Live. Press Release - 27 Oct 2005
 
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Ukraine

After six years, MSF hands over its HIV/Aids programme

Diagnosed with HIV that mostly leads to AIDS: for many still a dead sentence. Unacceptable! Especially since treatment is possible, enabling the patient to continue a valuable life in dignity. This is the reason why MSF started working in Ukraine. Project Update - 26 Oct 2005
 
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India

MSF response to India floods emergency

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has started an intervention in the zone of Kurla, located in Bombay, one of the areas most affected by the July 24 floods. Project Update - 8 Aug 2005
 
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Turkmenistan

MSF hopes to get a better picture of the medical situation in Magdanly

MSF hopes to get a better picture of the medical situation in Magdanly through the new facility. Project Update - 26 Jul 2005
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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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