In February, Cyclone Batsirai and Cyclone Emnati hit the east coast of Madagascar just weeks apart, destroying numerous health care centers and impacting more than 150,000 people. In response, emergency teams from the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières’ (MSF) are providing care to people in isolated rural areas most affected by the damage.
Providing services in places with limited access to health care and other essential services is critical but difficult work. It takes almost two hours for the MSF emergency team to cover the 12 miles [20 kilometers] that separate the city of Mananjary—where MSF is based since Cyclone Batsirai hit—from the village of Mahatsara Lefaka. There, the roof of the health care center has been ripped off along with the solar panels that provided its electricity.