*Data from MSF International Activity Report 2023
Peru
Providing comprehensive medical and mental health care to Venezuelan migrants, refugees, and people injured in protests.
Our work in Peru
Throughout 2023, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams provided medical and mental health care to Venezuelan migrants and refugees in northern Peru and assistance to people injured during political protests in the capital, Lima.
What's happening in Peru?
Peru hosts the second-largest number of Venezuelan migrants and refugees in the world, with over 1.5 million living there by the end of 2023. Many arrive in Peru exhausted and dehydrated. Some have been subjected to violence, including sexual violence, and robbed by armed groups during an arduous journey across several borders that can take weeks or even months. Even after they have been in Peru for some time, many people continue to live in precarious, unhygienic conditions, exposed to multiple health issues.
As in previous years, most of the patients seen by our teams in Tumbes, the northern region bordering Ecuador, were Venezuelans who have settled there after traveling for weeks or even months, often on foot, to flee poverty, unrest, and political instability in their home country.
How we're helping in Peru
Many of our patients were exposed to violence during their journeys, including robberies and sexual assault, and had little access to food or water for long stretches of time. In Peru, they continue to live in precarious, unhygienic conditions, often facing exclusion from medical care due to their irregular administrative status. The services we ran in Tumbes included general health care, sexual and reproductive health care, mental health support, emergency referrals to hospitals, and treatment for chronic diseases. We offered these same services to migrants from other Latin American countries, as well as the local community.
From December 2022, political protests swept the country following the ousting of President Pedro Castillo, triggering a violent response from the army and the police, during which dozens of people were killed and over 1,200 were wounded. Our team in Lima immediately launched emergency activities on multiple occasions during the following months, providing first aid and psychological support to patients suffering from exposure to tear gas, pellet wounds, contusions, or mental distress.
At the end of the year, we decided to end our operations in Peru in early 2024 due to resource-related challenges and to enable us to respond to acute needs elsewhere in the world.
How we're helping
16,200
Outpatient consultations
430
Individual mental health consultations