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Baby Nubia Is Released From MSF Clinic in Conakry
Haemorrhagic fevers

Nubia, the first newborn to survive Ebola

Guinea's last Ebola case, Nubia, a baby girl, left the Nongo Ebola Treatment Clinic in Conakry on Saturday 28th November 2015. Nubia is a month old baby , whose mother died after giving birth on October 27th. Guinea will become officially Ebola-free after 42 days if no new cases are reported following the recovery of baby Nubia — thought to be the first baby to survive after being born to an infected mother. Photo Story - 3 Dec 2015
 
Kyrgyzstan - Decentralized care for TB patients
Tuberculosis

New survey shows outdated policies and practices risk further spread of drug-resistant TB

Urgent phase-out needed for outdated policies of mandatory hospitalisation, re-treatment regimens that contribute to drug resistance, and sub-optimal diagnosis Report - 2 Dec 2015
 
HIV program in Ndhiwa sub-county, Homa Bay
Kenya

To curb the HIV epidemic, “clear objectives and patience are the keys”

In June 2014, MSF started a pilot project in Ndhiwa, a sub-county in western Kenya, aiming to curb the HIV epidemic there: one adult in four is HIV-positive and 2 in 100 get infected every year. William Hennequin, MSF representative in Kenya, presents some of the project’s achievements and challenges. Voices from the Field - 2 Dec 2015
 
The Stop Stocks Outs Project South Africa April 2015
HIV/AIDS

HIV: Antiretroviral drugs fail to consistently reach patients in countries most affected by HIV/AIDS

This report is a first of its kind, looking at the availability of ARVs at patient level. Whilst shortages due to international suppliers’ inability to meet demand are acknowledged, lack of drug availability in local clinics, stemming from failure to ensure “last mile” delivery is not monitored and therefore woefully ignored. Report - 30 Nov 2015
 
HIV SUPPORT GROUP COMMUNITY  MAPUTO MOZAMBIQUE
Access to medicines

Stockouts: Testimonies from patients and medical staff

Testimonies from AIDS patients. “Once I was two weeks without my ARVs. When I arrived at the health centre I was told there was no nurse there and no one found an alternative solution for me, so I went back home empty handed and desperate, " Sanculani Langui, from Marara Centro, Tete province, Mozambique. Voices from the Field - 30 Nov 2015
 
Occupied Minds_ Mustafa Suliman
Palestine

'What they see during the day, they dream at night.”

Occupied Minds looks at the mental health support offered to the Bedouin children of the Negev desert through the story of Mustafa. The boy is only 11 and he has already been detained for interrogation. He lives in a makeshift shed with 21 other people from his extended family. Voices from the Field - 27 Nov 2015
 
HIV program in Ndhiwa sub-county, Homa Bay
HIV/AIDS

Despite better access to treatment, many AIDS patients in African hospitals still die

A new MSF study shows that 50% of AIDS inpatients in Homa Bay hospital, Kenya, are failing their treatment. Press Release - 27 Nov 2015
 
msf-placeholder
South Africa

Chose life – chose treatment

The fact is that nobody should be dying of AIDS today, nobody should even be infecting others: as long as you are on dutiful, daily and lifelong treatment, you have close to zero risk of passing on the virus to your partner or unborn child.

So why is it that AIDS is still killing 140,000 South Africans every year, and infecting three times this number - the equivalent of the entire population of Khayelitsha?
Project Update - 26 Nov 2015
 
Amy Le Compte, midwife in Peshawar
Pakistan

Delivering healthcare to women and children in the communities

Amy Le Compte is a midwife from Gisborne in New Zealand. She just returned from a six- month assignment in MSF Women's Hospital in Peshawar, in the north of Pakistan where, along with daily maternity work, she supported the launch of a new community outreach program to enable access to quality maternity care for poor and marginalised populations. Voices from the Field - 25 Nov 2015
 
Meningitis Epidemic in Niger
Epidemics and pandemics

Epidemics: Neglected emergencies?

MSF draws attention to the challenges and choices that may impair effective response to emergencies, epidemics and outbreaks. Report - 25 Nov 2015
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.

Learn more