At its core, the purpose of humanitarian action is to save lives, relieve acute suffering and help restore the potential of individuals who find themselves in life threatening circumstances. MSF responds to crisis situations based on need alone.
Although every situation is unique they can be roughly grouped into four main categories:
-
Armed conflict
-
Natural disasters
-
Epidemic or endemic disease
-
Social violence and healthcare exclusion
Armed conflict
A man has bullet wounds re-dressed in Bangolo Hospital, western Ivory Coast, 2011. He was shot during post-election violence in Duekoue.
© Peter DiCampo/Pulitzer Center
Populations affected by armed conflict require comprehensive medical and humanitarian support.
They are often used as commodities of war, facing harassment, looting, abduction, rape and killings.
They may also be forced to flee their homes and seek refuge in places with little healthcare, clean water or other basic amenities.
Their poor living conditions are exacerbated by a crippled economy, weak infrastructure and a decimated healthcare system.
The effects of war
As well as treating the immediate victims of violence, MSF also works to cover a range of medical crises inherent to conflicts, such as:
- malnutrition
- disease
- mental health problems.
When needed, MSF also offers shelter materials, constructs wells and dispenses clean drinking water to people displaced by conflict.
Without this, these people are at risk from malnutrition and exposure to epidemics like malaria and tuberculosis.
Natural disasters
A makeshift MSF surgery area outside the Carrefour hospital after a massive earthquake rocked Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in 2010. © Julie Remy
Populations affected by natural disasters require an immediate medical humanitarian response.
They find themselves having suddenly lost their homes, material goods, family members and relatives. Survivors may be highly traumatised.
The poor are often most at risk, living in isolated, rural settings, with little food, sanitation and shelter.
In such settings, it is difficult to gauge the numbers of those affected. Limited local response capabilities often further slow relief efforts.
Emergency response
People caught up in natural disasters require rapid and diverse medical care and support. Access to the disaster area and the victims is usually complex and demands fast identification of multiple needs.
MSF provides medical support such as surgery, psychological and nutritional programmes, and preventative actions to address potential epidemic risks.
This may require constructing temporary medical centres, improving sanitation and providing clean drinking water, especially in areas at risk of water-borne diseases like cholera and dysentery. MSF also provides relief items such as blankets, tents and cooking oil.
These operations rely heavily on good communication and collaboration with national organisations, ensuring that local and international efforts complement each other to provide the best possible response.
Populations affected by epidemic or endemic disease
An MSF nurse examines the lungs of a TB/HIV co-infected patient in Chiradzulu District Hospital, Malawi.
© Julie Remy
People who live in precarious regions, remote and/or underdeveloped areas, slums of capitals and cities, camps or shantytowns, often do not receive strong support from the local and international authorities.
They are often minority groups, refugees or nomads. Women and children are most at risk of infectious and communicable diseases, in part owing to their dependency on others.
MSF's first response to disease outbreaks is to evaluate the outbreak, identify the type of disease and treat the people infected.
In the second stage of treatment and prevention, MSF carries out mass vaccination campaigns to prevent the spread of highly contagious diseases. Such vaccination campaigns are extremely challenging, with vaccines having to be procured from suppliers and transported across regions with little infrastructure and very few usable roads.
MSF also trains staff to identify and treat diseases, and raises awareness about the risks of epidemics through advocacy. Collaboration with local governments and authorities is crucial for a fast and effective response.
Social violence and healthcare exclusion
Every year hundreds of migrants squat in this Italian factory during the orange harvest, living in conditions worse than minumum UN standards for refugees in wartime. © Christian Sinibaldi
Minorities, ethnic groups, migrants and displaced people and refugees are often those most vulnerable to violence and those with least access to healthcare.
They are socially excluded as prisoners or the unemployed, medically excluded because of drug addictions and mental illness.
They may be sex workers or simply infected with HIV/AIDS or tuberculosis (TB). Living in environments where living conditions are poor and their rights are limited or nonexistent, they frequently receive inadequate support from local authorities.
MSF acts to alleviate these people's daily suffering with medical, psychological and social care.
However, to combat healthcare exclusion, projects that bring attention to healthcare access and the absence of medical services are essential.
MSF’s mission includes the act of speaking out and we are committed to bringing local and international authorities' attention to the causes of this suffering and the realities of our patients.
Click here to find out where we work, what we do and how we do it.