The account of MSF International 🌎
We've been providing independent, impartial, and neutral humanitarian medical care since 1971.
Médecins Sans Frontières
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“When I woke up, my first thought was about the patient I had been monitoring at the time of the attack.”
Jamila*, a nurse at Jabal Amel hospital in Lebanon, was with a patient when an Israeli strike hit the hospital’s vicinity on 1 June. Read her testimony:
In an Ebola outbreak, it's critical that those responding know what they're doing to protect themselves and others.
Dr Armand Sprecher explains the training our teams go through to provide care to patients with Ebola, and how those trained then train others on the ground, sharing knowledge.
Médecins Sans Frontières
DRC: Since filming this video, the number of patients in the Ebola treatment centre in Elykia hospital in Bunia has increased significantly, reaching nearly 60 on 8 June, including 29 with a confirmed Ebola diagnosis. The centre is now caring for the largest number of Ebola patients in the country.
👋 Meet Antoinette Ndayumvire, a nurse aide who works with us in Nduta camp, Tanzania.
A refugee from Burundi herself, Antoinette tells us why she finds joy in her work, whether it be in the maternity or paediatrics ward.
We're witnessing a rise in snakebite envenoming in Hajjah governorate, Yemen.
Complications from snakebite, like death and long-term disability, are preventable, but the high cost of effective treatment makes recovery inaccessible for most families in the area.
People in South Sudan have been facing horrific levels of violence. In 2025, we treated an average of 16 people per day for violence‑related injuries.
This cannot be the new normal for South Sudan.
At Mudug Regional hospital in Somalia, we've upgraded the solar power system. In just over 3 months this has avoided 30,000+ litres of diesel. Patients are also experiencing:
☀️ A steadier power supply
☀️ Cleaner air in the hospital compound
☀️ Quieter wards due to a lack of generator noise
Our teams supporting Tiné hospital in Chad are treating people with severe injuries, including blast-related trauma and serious burns, from drone strikes across the border in Tina, Sudan.
Our ‘Zero TB’ project has concluded in Tajikistan, and we expect that the improvements in tuberculosis detection, treatment, and prevention that were introduced will continue to benefit patients and healthcare workers.
“No one cares about me. I went for days without food or water. I could not even bathe.”
People in Dahiyeh, a suburb in Beirut, Lebanon, are living on an urban frontline without reliable access to public services, due to repeated Israeli attacks on the area ⬇️
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Médecins Sans Frontières
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Médecins Sans Frontières
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Médecins Sans Frontières
Jamila*, a nurse at Jabal Amel hospital in Lebanon, shares her testimony following an Israeli strike in the vicinity of the hospital on 1 June 2026.
After four years, our ‘Zero TB’ project has concluded in Tajikistan. During the project, MSF worked with health authorities to lower the burden of tuberculosis in Kulob city.
Extensive damage from Israeli airstrikes has destroyed essential services in Dahiyeh, a suburb in Beirut, Lebanon. Destruction, military threats and evacuation orders are deeply impacting residents and preventing them from safely returning to their homes.
Since the beginning of May, MSF teams at Tiné hospital in Chad have treated 116 people who were wounded in drone strikes in Tina, a city on the Sudanese side of the Chad–Sudan border.
In Hajjah governorate, Yemen, people continue to be at risk of snakebite envenoming, a neglected tropical disease that can cause death and long-term disability.