Coronavirus: What is MSF doing?

The COVID-19 epidemic has already spread to more than 100 countries around the world. These include countries whose health systems are fragile and where MSF teams have a long-standing presence, as well as regions such as Europe, where the capacities are more robust but where the epidemic is particularly virulent. Travel restrictions generated by the outbreak also directly affect MSF's work around the world. What questions does MSF face in this context? An interview with Clair Mills, MSF medical director. 

How MSF is preparing for COVID-19 in South-East Asia

Tankred Stöbe, MSF emergency coordinator, visited several countries in South-East Asia to assess their preparedness for potential outbreaks of COVID-19 and the support MSF could provide at this stage. He participated in training sessions with healthcare staff in a hepatitis C clinic in Phnom Penh A similar training was held in a hospital in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, where MSF treats patients with tuberculosis. The training sessions helped to improve knowledge and reduce fear among the staff, two prerequisites for providing the best level of care to our patients.
 

MSF tackles measles outbreak in Rohingya refugee camps

‘Tired of fleeing’: Nowhere left to run for Syrians seeking refuge from Idlib violence

Photo story: Preventing cervical cancer in Malawi

Solar energy in DRC: using renewables to saves lives

Ituri, DRC: Hundreds of thousands uprooted by conflict in desperate need of assistance

Syria: Advancing frontlines, mass exodus and reduced access to hospitals in Idlib

Haiti: a day in MSF's emergency trauma hospital in Port-au-Prince

 

 

Deaths and broken lives, the aftermath of airstrikes in Gaza