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War in Gaza:: find out how we're responding
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Japan

MSF works with psychologists in aftermath of Japanese quake

“Many people now are in a phase of acute stress disorder, which is a totally natural response to this level of trauma,” said Ritsuko Nishimae, a clinical psychologist working with the MSF team in Minami Sanriku. Project Update - 25 Mar 2011
 
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Tuberculosis

New TB test to detect more people who need DR-TB treatment

WORLD TB DAY Press Release: A promising new diagnostic test will finally help detect more people with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB), increasing the urgency to solve major problems around the pricing and supply of DR-TB medicines, according to a new report by MSF. Press Release - 24 Mar 2011
 
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Cambodia

Improving TB care in Cambodia

Cambodia has one of the highest tuberculosis burdens in the world. Project Update - 24 Mar 2011
 
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Libya

Normal health needs clearly go on despite the war in Libya

"In the few weeks that we spent in Benghazi, we managed to provide more than 30 tons of medical supplies to different hospitals including surgical kits and external fixators that are desperately needed for people with gunshot wounds." - Simon Burroughs: MSF emergency coordinator for Libya Voices from the Field - 23 Mar 2011
 
MSF treats DR-TB cases
Tuberculosis

DR-TB drugs under the microscope

Treating DR-TB is complicated from a programmatic perspective: treatment is individualised, tailored according to which drugs a patient is resistant to. It is long and taxing, requiring people to take a course of antibiotics for up to two years and endure often intolerable side effects. Report - 23 Mar 2011
 
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War and conflict

Support to health facilities in the Middle East and North Africa

Ever since civil unrest and violence erupted in countries across North Africa and the Middle East, teams from Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) have been supplying and assisting hospitals and health structures where medical staff are facing increased numbers of injured people. Teams are also assisting people who are fleeing to neighbouring countries. Project Update - 23 Mar 2011
 
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Japan

Interview with Eric Ouannes, General Director of MSF Japan

Interview with Eric Ouannes, General Director of MSF Japan, who has been working at the earthquauke zone. Project Update - 20 Mar 2011
 
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Japan

MSF continues to respond to chronic diseases for the elderly in Japan's evacuation centres

The situation in areas seen by MSF’s team in northern Miyagi prefecture is evolving quickly, as the massive national relief effort clears access to areas and large quantities of relief supplies continue to come in. Photo Story - 20 Mar 2011
 
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Côte d'Ivoire

MSF responding to latest violence in Abidjan, Ivory Coast

Increasingly intense confrontations have had serious repercussions for the population at large, much of which has been trapped in the conflict. Over the two weeks prior to March 16, the teams treated 129 patients. However, seeking treatment is not a simple matter for people who require care but are afraid to leave their homes. Travel within the city is risky because of fighting and because groups of young men have erected blockades in the streets. The instability makes it difficult to access populations, particularly in areas close to the front lines. Project Update - 19 Mar 2011
 
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Japan

MSF teams spread to new areas throughout the earthquake zone

The majority of consultations were elderly patients with chronic diseases. Many of them were running out of medications for hypertension and diabetes. Overnight, the weather in the area was poor, with snow and sub-zero temperatures. A few hyperthermia cases were seen, as well as some respiratory tract infections, possibly due to the crowded conditions in some of the evacuation centres. Project Update - 17 Mar 2011
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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