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Sudan/Chad Disaster | Collections | MSF Science Portal
Sudan/Chad Disaster

Sudan/Chad Disaster

Collection Content

Journal Article
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Commentary

Implementation of community-based management of severe acute malnutrition in conflict affected regions: a case of South Kordofan, Sudan

Sserwanja Q, Adam OO, Mohamed EH, Adam MB, Mutisya LM
2023-03-29 • Archives of Public Health
2023-03-29 • Archives of Public Health
Malnutrition is the major cause of mortality and morbidity globally with undernutrition contributing about 45% of all deaths of under five children. Besides the direct effects of protrac...
Conference Material
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Abstract

Incidence of malaria, with or without seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) in Moïssala, Chad 2014-2021

Hilario JS, Calmejane A
2022-06-01 • Epicentre Scientific Day Paris 2022
2022-06-01 • Epicentre Scientific Day Paris 2022
CONTEXT
SMC has been implemented in Moïssala District southern Chad since 2013 by MSF in collaboration with the national and local health authorities to prevent malaria in young chil...
Conference Material
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Abstract

Innovative interventions for learning and development: improving psychiatric care through remote training and supervision

Nasser H, Jha Y, Keane G, Carreño C, Mental Health Working Group
2022-05-09 • MSF Scientific Days International 2022
2022-05-09 • MSF Scientific Days International 2022
INTRODUCTION
In December 2019, following a request from MSF’s intersectional working group for mental health and psychosocial services, MSF’s telemedicine (TM) services team implemen...

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Expanding access to lifesaving new TB tools
Expanding access to lifesaving new TB tools
Many settings with a high burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) lack access to advanced diagnostics and to groundbreaking new treatments. The Collection linked below spotlights work by MSF and collaborators to analyze barriers, identify gaps, and accelerate the roll-out of these tools to people whose lives hang in the balance. Several reports examine price, regulatory, and patent obstacles that persist despite considerable public investment into developing many of these tools. Other authors examine critical remaining weaknesses in care pathways—especially in screening and diagnosis, and particularly in children. Several studies describe new strategies that could be part of the solution, from a pilot program in Tajikisttan that trains family caregivers to treat children with DR-TB at home, to a person-centered care model adapted to a conflict zone in Afghanistan. Lastly, initial findings demonstrate that pregnant women—another vulnerable population—can be effectively treated for DR- and multidrug-resistant TB, improving maternal outcomes without harming neonates.
Yellow fever
Yellow fever
No description available
Diabetes care in humanitarian settings
Diabetes care in humanitarian settings
Diabetes affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide, a large majority of them living in low- and middle-income countries. Yet finding effective strategies, tools and policies for effectively managing this chronic illness—especially amid war, displacement or exclusion from care—is a neglected area of humanitarian medicine. Here we present a cross-section of work on this front by MSF and collaborators. Several studies assess the shift towards community-based, nurse-led models of care in rural settings. Others explore obstacles to diabetes care for war refugees living in camps in Jordan or Lebanon, highlighting how health programs can adapt to their needs. The demonstration that insulin retains potency for 30 days if cooled without refrigeration is opening doors to more patient self-management, as a case study in remote South Sudan shows. At the same time, MSF and others call for regulatory and financing policies that make diabetes medications and supplies cheaper, better adapted to humanitarian settings, and far more available to patients whose lives depend on them.
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