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Pibor, South Soudan
South Sudan

Saving lives at the clinic under the tree

David Bude is an Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) clinician who was working in MSF’s health clinic in the remote village of Lekwongole, near Pibor town, in South Sudan’s violence-afflicted Jonglei State. When fighting erupted in Lekwongole in August 2012, he fled along with the rest of the population. While in hiding, deep in the bush, David used his medical skills to save lives in exceptionally difficult circumstances. Voices from the Field - 13 Dec 2012
 
Iraq

A different approach to mental health

Over the past two years, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has helped pioneer a different approach to mental health in Iraq. A team is working with the Ministry of Health to introduce counselling. Project Update - 12 Dec 2012
 
Idp’s living in precarious conditions
Syria

Sick and wounded trapped in Deir Azzour

Tens of thousands of people, many of them wounded, are trapped in the city of Deir Azzour, eastern Syria, due to intense fighting and aerial bombardments. MSF calls for the sick and wounded to be evacuated to safer locations and for international medical teams to be given official authorisation to provide impartial assistance to all those who need it. Press Release - 12 Dec 2012
 
Urban Survivors - Tegucigalpa
Social violence and exclusion

The medical consequences of violence

The impact of violence in Central America and Mexico cannot be understated. Widespread violence and its dramatic medical consequences are threatening to become a humanitarian crisis, while health systems are unable to cope. The lack of adapted policies to respond to this emergency means that many survivors of violence are left without access to healthcare, support or protection. Project Update - 11 Dec 2012
 
Mortality study, region around Boguila
Central African Republic

"As many children die here as in a war zone"

In the forests of Central African Republic, children under five are dying in numbers normally seen only in wars or natural disasters. MSF nurse Margarete Sepùlveda is doing her bit to change this.
By Nils Mork
Voices from the Field - 10 Dec 2012
 
 Visit by Dr. Unni Karunakara to Papua New Guinea
Papua New Guinea

Victims of sexual violence must not suffer in silence

Every day, a woman in Papua New Guinea suffers the consequences of being raped and beaten by a member of their own family. Voices from the Field - 7 Dec 2012
 
HAT Screening in CAR
Sleeping sickness

National control activities crippled by lack of funding

Advances in the development of new diagnostic tests and treatment bode well for the fight against sleeping sickness. Two new rapid screening tests are expected next year, and one new oral treatment is in clinical trial. However, national control activities on the ground are crippled by a lack of sustainable funding, warns MSF. Press Release - 6 Dec 2012
 
Refugee crisis South Sudan, Upper Nile State, Batil and Doro.
Vaccination

GAVI needs to offer lower vaccine prices to humanitarian actors

The GAVI Alliance should systematically extend the prices it obtains for vaccines to humanitarian actors that are often well placed to reach unvaccinated children, MSF said today at the GAVI Partners Forum meeting in Tanzania. Currently, humanitarian actors such as MSF are not able to access these prices, and are left to negotiate access to vaccines on a cumbersome case-by-case basis. Press Release - 5 Dec 2012
 
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Global health

Visions for the future of healthcare and how we're going to pay for it

Speech by Dr Unni Karunakara, Médecins Sans Frontières International President, at the Global Healthcare Summit, The Economist, London, 29 November 2012 Speech - 30 Nov 2012
 
MSF activities in Goma, Mugunga I and III camp, Virunga Hospital.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Nine-year-old Eden wounded in Goma violence

Eden, a nine-year-old boy, was seriously injured in the recent fighting between the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the M23 rebel group in Goma, eastern Congo. He is one of 60 wounded patients currently being treated by MSF teams and local health staff in Virunga hospital. Voices from the Field - 30 Nov 2012
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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