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PublicationsInternational Activity Report 2011ChadChad bears the grim distinction of having the highest under-five mortality rate in the world. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in the country focus on maternal and pediatric services, and respond to emergencies. In Am Timan, MSF supports a Ministry of Health district hospital and seven health centers. Staff cared for more than 3,700 children on the pediatric ward, held some 7,300 antenatal consultations and assisted 1,795 births. More than 5,300 children under five were treated for malnutrition. In the southeast, in Kerfi health center, MSF provided comprehensive healthcare including nutritional support, blood transfusions and hospital referral both to Chadians displaced by conflict and the local community. Staff also offered reproductive healthcare and assistance for victims of sexual violence. The team treated more than 27,800 patients. Maternity staff held 3,500 antenatal consultations and assisted 188 births. As the displaced left the area, reducing pressure on health services, MSF withdrew from the health center. In Massakory, western Chad, MSF is mainly involved in treating malnutrition in under-fives and delivering emergency medical care to under-15s. During the time of year known as the ‘hunger gap,’ when food scarcity is an acute problem, more than 170 beds in Massakory hospital are reserved for children in need of nutritional support or other vital medical care. In total, about 1,200 children were admitted for malnutrition in 2011. Another 750 children were admitted with malaria, meningitis, diarrhea or respiratory infections. Around 3,200 severely malnourished children were treated in MSF’s outpatient feeding program, and more than 6,400 children under three received supplementary food to prevent malnutrition. Further north, in Nokou district, in Kanem, MSF extended its response to the nutrition crisis, treating 3,600 children. ![]() Obstetric fistulaAn estimated two million women live with obstetric fistulas worldwide, most of them in Africa, in poor and remote areas with limited or no access to maternal healthcare. Obstetric fistulas are injuries to the birth canal that are mostly caused by prolonged or obstructed labor and they generally result in incontinence, which in turn can lead to women being rejected by their families and communities. In Abéché’s regional hospital, where MSF supports gynecological and obstetric services, specially trained medical staff performed fistula repair surgery on 222 women, and assisted more than 2,980 births. Skilled obstetric care can prevent fistulas. MalariaThe malaria program in Moissala, Mandoul region, includes treatment and prevention activities, and focuses on children under five and pregnant women, for whom malaria is particularly dangerous. In a region where every child may have an average of two bouts of malaria per year, and where some villages are a three-hour walk from the nearest health center, bringing healthcare to the communities can make a crucial difference. MSF trains workers to go to villages to perform rapid diagnostic tests for malaria and provide treatment for simple cases. Children suffering complications are sent to the nearest health centeror transferred to a ward built by MSF at Moissala district hospital. More than 2,100 people were treated at Moissala hospital in 2011, and 17,000 mosquito nets were given to young children and pregnant women.
Moussa*
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