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Sudan

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The forgotten population of Jebel Si in North Darfur is left without healthcare as MSF struggles to continue its medical activities in the region. Report - 22 May 2012
 
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Sudan

100,000 people left without essential healthcare in Jebel Si, North Darfur

As a result of increasing restrictions imposed by Sudanese authorities, the medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been forced to suspend most of its medical activities in the conflict area of Jebel Si, in Sudan’s North Darfur state. MSF is the sole health provider in the region. Press Release - 22 May 2012
 
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Afghanistan

Providing surgical care

In August 2011, MSF opened a surgical hospital in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz. It is the only specialised surgical centre in northern Afghanistan. In less than a year after the hospital opened, the MSF team has treated more than 3,700 people. Project Update - 21 May 2012
 
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Yemen

MSF treats victims of violence and fighting

The increase of violence and fighting in southern Yemen has led to a high number of victims and wounded among civilians. MSF teams already received and treated 8 severely injured patients at Aden hospital, transferred from Jaar Health Post, and 43 were received at Lawdar Hospital, both supported by MSF. Press Release - 18 May 2012
 
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Vaccination

New global vaccine strategy glosses over basic immunisation gaps

A new, ten-year, multi-billion dollar action plan for global vaccination may fail to deliver if it does not directly address the weaknesses in routine immunisation programmes. Nineteen million children are being missed each year and this challenge must be explicitly addressed, the medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said today. Press Release - 15 May 2012
 
Access to medicines

The Right Shot: Extending the reach of affordable and adapted vaccines

This publication seeks to remedy some of the existing knowledge gaps by raising awareness on existing price differentials, exploring what factors drive fluctuations in vaccine prices, and discussing where development of better adapted vaccines could reduce barriers to immunisation and increase coverage levels of traditional and newer vaccines. Report - 15 May 2012
 
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Syria

Safety of wounded and medical workers must be prioritised

Wounded people and medical workers are still being targeted and threatened in Syria. MSF insists that all parties to the conflict must fully respect the physical integrity of wounded people, doctors and healthcare facilities. MSF calls for increased political and diplomatic efforts to ensure the safety of patients and medical workers, without the use of force. Press Release - 14 May 2012
 
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Nigeria

Promised funds must be released to resolve the Zamfara lead poisoning crisis

An international conference on the Zamfara lead poisoning crisis, of which Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) was the lead organiser, concluded on Thursday. The conference delegates endorsed a clear action plan calling for Nigerian government commitment to resolve the crisis. Press Release - 11 May 2012
 
Lead poisoning and gold processing in Zamfara state, Nigeria, Ap
Nigeria

Lead poisoning crisis in Zamfara state northern Nigeria paper

In March 2010, MSF was alerted to a high number of child fatalities in Zamfara state, northern Nigeria – an estimated 400 children died. Laboratory testing later confirmed high levels of lead in the blood of the surviving children. Report - 11 May 2012
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF sees 250 per cent rise in malaria cases

MSF’s health centres and hospitals have observed a marked increase in the number of patients with malaria, including severe malaria. In six provinces, the number of people treated for malaria in MSF projects has risen by 250 per cent since 2009. The rise has been particularly sharp in recent months. An alarmingly high number of patients with severe malaria require hospitalisation and urgent blood transfusions. Press Release - 25 Apr 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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