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Malawi

Health workers, government and civil society at joint MOH and MSF conference address health professional gaps in Malawi

Like many countries in Africa, South Asia and Asia-Pacific, Malawi has been facing a critical shortage of healthcare workers, with an average ratio of two doctors for every 100,000 people. This low number of physicians, as well as nurses, in the health care system means that treating Malawi’s 920,000 people living with HIV, of whom 59% are women, is a massive challenge. Project Update - 6 Dec 2010
 
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Global

Interview: Dr. Cathy Hewison discusses 'revolutionary' Meningitis vaccine

Médecins Sans Frontières teams are involved in rolling out a mass vaccination campaign against meningitis in Mali and Niger in Africa’s notorious meningitis belt.
Every year, MSF launches mass campaigns but this one is very different; the new vaccine is being employed as a preventive measure and not, as in the past, in response to an actual outbreak of the disease. This brings with it new challenges but many are hoping the new vaccine could help wipe out the devastating meningitis epidemics in the region. MSF is working closely to support the governments’ work in rolling this vaccine out which, in this initial phase, is also being launched in Burkina Faso.
Voices from the Field - 6 Dec 2010
 
Burkina Faso

MSF to support roll-out of promising new vaccine for meningitis

“Thanks to an innovative way of doing research and development where the need for an affordable product was factored in from the very start, this vaccine costs only 40 US cents per dose” said Dr Tido von Schoen-Angerer, Director of MSF's Access Campaign. “But despite its low price, no donor has yet come forward to offer financial support to implement the vaccine beyond the first three countries. Press Release - 6 Dec 2010
 
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Global

Frontlines podcast: Giving children with HIV the support they need

Frontlines podcast: Giving children with HIV the support they need Project Update - 1 Dec 2010
 
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Global

Licensing deal threatens cheap pharmaceuticals

Stella is four, and lives on HIV drugs. Next week, the EU may cut her supply. Project Update - 1 Dec 2010
 
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Global

Nathan Ford: Flying in the face of evidence

With some 10 million people still waiting for antiretroviral therapy, the moral arguments in support of HIV/AIDS funding are as relevant today as they were a decade ago. Access to medicines is once again a growing concern. Voices from the Field - 1 Dec 2010
 
HIV/AIDS

MSF in Mozambique 2001-2010: Ten years of HIV projects

This report details MSF's work and achievements in Mozambique in the field of HIV/AIDS over the last ten years, as well as pointing to the challenges that lie ahead. Report - 25 Nov 2010
 
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Pakistan

Relief for some flooded areas of Pakistan but work continues in the south

Three months after the floods that inundated Pakistan, MSF has stopped the emergency response activites in some parts of the country, such as in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and in northern Sindh provinces, where flood-affected people have started returning to their homes. Project Update - 24 Nov 2010
 
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Haiti

Port-auPrince, Haiti – November 2010

Port-auPrince, Haiti – November 2010
Patients receive treatment for cholera in Sarthe, in the west of Port-au-Prince. The number of cases MSF has seen in the capital jumped from 350 during the first week of November to 2,250 during the second week.
Voices from the Field - 22 Nov 2010
 
Mozambique

MSF points at achievements and challenges in fighting HIV in Mozambique

Although important achievements in the last decade have allowed over 200,000 people living with HIV in Mozambique to receive life-saving treatment, many challenges remain in the fight against HIV/AIDS warns the international humanitarian medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in a new report. Press Release - 21 Nov 2010
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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