Abstract
Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has been running surgical programs since the early 1980s. This chapter provides an overview of the anesthesia component of these programs and explores some lessons learned from the experience of one of MSF’s five Operations Centers—in this case, the Belgium-based unit (MSF-Belgium). During the period from 2010 until the end of 2013, these projects provided surgical care to more than 56,000 surgical patients in 23 countries and performed over 73,000 surgical procedures. This experience has shown that surgeons and anesthetists need to discard preconceived notions of an inevitable link between the technical complexity of surgical and anesthesia techniques and the ability to reduce morbidity and mortality. On the contrary, MSF has found that keeping our interventions simple, accessible and sustainable within a given context is often the most effective way to best serve the needs of the many.