In the Darfur region, where the violence has taken an ethnic dimension, between 70 to 80 percent of health facilities are no longer functioning due to the lack of critical supplies and medical staff. There is a widespread shortage of critical supplies such as vaccines, nutrition commodities, and HIV medications, as well as a poor disease surveillance system. At the same time, overcrowded and dire conditions in gathering sites and camps exacerbate the risk of disease outbreaks, while people with chronic conditions are struggling to access the care and medicines they need to survive.
Sudan
In April 2023, intense fighting broke out across Sudan, including Khartoum and the Darfur region. MSF teams are providing medical care for people affected by this latest surge of conflict and other crises.
MSF withdraws from Wad Madani after months of obstruction and harassment
May 9, 2024—Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been forced to suspend work and withdraw staff from Madani Teaching Hospital, which is the only functional hospital for hundreds of thousands of people in the capital of Sudan's Al Jazirah state. This extremely difficult decision comes after more than three months of relentless challenges trying to provide care at the hospital, including growing insecurity; the inability to bring new staff and medical supplies into the area due to the denial of travel permits; and repeated security incidents, such as looting and harassment, affecting MSF's ability to provide medical care.
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Our work in Sudan
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continues to respond to multiple health issues during a turbulent year in Sudan, where the health care system is on the verge of collapse amid a devastating, ongoing conflict.
What's happening in Sudan?
For a year, large parts of Sudan have been experiencing ongoing violence, including intense urban warfare, gunfire, shelling, and airstrikes. The health system, already fragile before the conflict started, is struggling to cope with existing and emerging medical needs while facing overwhelming pressure from the destruction and looting of health facilities, acute shortages of utilities and medical supplies, and under-resourced health staff who are overworked without pay. As a result, people face significant challenges accessing medical care throughout the country. By the time many are able to access care, their condition has become critical.
How we're helping in Sudan
MSF teams in Sudan provide emergency treatment, surgical care, mobile clinics for displaced people, treatment for communicable and non-communicable diseases, maternal and pediatric health care, water and sanitation services, and donations of medicines and medical supplies to health care facilities. We also provide incentive pay, training, and logistical support to Ministry of Health staff who have gone overworked and underpaid for months, and we continue some of our medical activities that were in place before the start of the war.
How we're helping
586,800
Outpatient consultations
4,260
Children admitted to inpatient feeding programs
350
Tons of medical supplies delivered
1,950
Births assisted
230
Newborns admitted to hospitals
*Data from MSF International Activity Report 2022
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News May 09, 2024
Sudan: MSF withdraws from Wad Madani after months of obstruction and h...
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