| Doctors Without Borders
Providing Medical Relief Worldwide Médecins Sans Frontières
(also known as Doctors Without Borders or MSF) delivers emergency
aid to victims of armed conflict, epidemics, and natural and man-made
disasters, and to others who lack health care due to social or geographical
isolation.
MSF was founded in 1971 by a small group of French doctors who believed
that all people have the right to medical care regardless of race,religion,
creed or political affiliation, and that the needs of these people
supersede respect for national borders. It was the first non-governmental
organization to both provide emergency medical assistance and publicly
bear witness to the plight of the populations they served.
A private, nonprofit organization, MSF is at the forefront of emergency
health care as well as care for populations suffering from endemic
diseases and neglect. MSF provides primary health care, performs
surgery, rehabilitates hospitals and clinics, runs nutrition and
sanitation programs, trains local medical personnel, and provides
mental health care. Through longer-term programs, MSF treats chronic
diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, sleeping sickness, and AIDS;
assists with the medical and psychological problems of marginalized
populations including street children and ethnic minorities; and
brings health care to remote, isolated areas where resources and
training are limited.
MSF unites direct medical care with a commitment to bearing witness
and speaking out against the underlying causes of suffering. Its
volunteers protest violations of humanitarian law on behalf of populations
who have no voice, and bring the concerns of their patients to public
forums, such as the United Nations, governments (in both home and
project countries), and the media. In a wide range of circumstances,
MSF volunteers have spoken out about forgotten conflicts and underreported
atrocities they have witnessed-from Chechnya to Angola, and from
Kosovo to Sri Lanka.
MSF is an international network with sections in 18 countries. Each
year, more than 2,500 volunteer doctors, nurses, other medical professionals,
logistics experts, water/sanitation engineers, and administrators
join 15,000 locally hired staff to provide medical aid in more than
80 countries.
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