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Doctors Without Borders

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
is an independent international medical humanitarian organization that delivers
emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural or
man-made disasters, or exclusion from health care in more than 70 countries.
Each year, MSF doctors, nurses, logisticians, water-and-sanitation experts,
administrators, and other medical and non-medical professionals depart on more
than 3,800 field assignments. They work alongside more than 22,500 locally hired
staff to provide medical care.
In emergencies and their aftermath, MSF provides
health care, rehabilitates and runs hospitals and clinics, performs surgery,
battles epidemics, carries out vaccination campaigns, operates feeding centres
for malnourished children, and offers mental health care. When needed, MSF also
constructs wells and dispenses clean drinking water, and provides shelter
materials like blankets and plastic sheeting.
Through longer-term programs, MSF treats patients
with infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, sleeping sickness, and HIV/AIDS,
and provides medical and psychological care to marginalized groups such as
street children.
MSF was founded in 1971 as a nongovernmental
organization to both provide emergency medical assistance and bear witness
publicly to the plight of the people it assists. A private nonprofit
association, MSF is an international network with sections in 19 countries.
Responding to Emergencies
MSF is often one of the first humanitarian
organizations to arrive at the scene of an emergency. Its large-scale logistical
capacity ensures that MSF emergency teams hit the ground with the specialized
medical kits and equipment they need to start saving lives immediately.
Custom-designed by MSF for specific field
situations, geographic conditions, and climates, a kit may contain a complete
operating room, for example, or all of the supplies needed to treat hundreds of
cholera patients. MSF kits and medical protocols have been replicated by relief
organizations worldwide.
MSF has proven expertise in the field of
epidemiology and is often called on to monitor, diagnose, and control outbreaks
of diseases, such as cholera, meningitis, and measles.
Independent Humanitarian Action
MSF's decision to intervene in any country or crisis
is based solely on an independent assessment of people's needs — not on
political, economic, or religious interests. MSF does not take sides or
intervene according to the demands of governments or warring parties.
MSF volunteers frequently work in the most remote or
dangerous parts of the world. When crises unfold, they make themselves and their
skills available on short notice, usually dedicating six to twelve months to
each assignment. Their expenses are covered and they receive a modest stipend.
MSF teams are composed of international volunteers
and skilled local staff. Together, they work closely with national medical
professionals and cooperate with other aid organizations.
Speaking Out to End Suffering
MSF unites direct medical care with a commitment to
speaking out against the causes of suffering and the obstacles to providing
effective assistance. MSF volunteers raise the concerns of their patients with
governments, the United Nations, other international bodies, the general public,
and the media. In a wide range of circumstances, MSF volunteers have spoken out
against violations of international humanitarian law they have witnessed — from
Chechnya to Sudan.
Based on its field experience, MSF is addressing
obstacles preventing people in the developing world from obtaining affordable,
effective treatments for diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.
Through its Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, MSF is advocating to
lower drug prices, stimulate research and development of new treatments, and
overcome trade and other barriers to accessing treatments.
In the United States and worldwide, MSF raises
public awareness of the plight of people at risk. The organization sends field
volunteers and staff to speak at international and national conferences, and
arranges informational events and travelling exhibitions. Special public
education projects have addressed the stark realities of living without access
to medicines, the devastation caused by malnutrition, and the hardships of life
in a refugee camp.
For more information:
www.doctorswithoutborders.org
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