*Data from MSF International Activity Report 2023
Mali
Access to medical care remains very limited in the north and center of Mali due to a lack of medical staff and supplies and spiraling violence between armed groups.
Mali floods affect 47,000 people as more heavy rains are forecast this season
October 7, 2024—Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF) teams in Mali are helping victims of recent floods in the Ténenkou, Douentza, and Bankass regions by distributing essential items such as blankets and mats. Malian authorities have declared a state of national disaster and launched an appeal for international mobilization after 47,000 people were affected in August, with around 100 injured and 30 dead.
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Our work in Mali
What's happening in Mali?
How we're helping in Mali
Many international humanitarian organizations withdrew from areas affected by fighting, as they were unable to gain access to people in need. Our teams remained in Koro and Douentza, in the central region of Mopti, responding to the needs of displaced people and assisting refugees from neighboring Burkina Faso.
MSF and other NGOs were also subjected to violence during the year; staff were kidnapped and assaulted, MSF-supported health facilities were looted, and our ambulances were attacked. In November, we were forced to evacuate our teams from Kidal, Boni, and Nampala due to a marked deterioration in security in these areas. Nevertheless, we continue to run medical activities and provide humanitarian aid to people in remote areas affected by the conflict.
In addition to caring for the war-wounded and responding to the needs of displaced people, our teams provided a range of medical services, including maternal and pediatric care, screening and treatment for malnutrition, mental health care, and emergency surgery across all our projects in the country.
In the capital, Bamako, we continued our project in partnership with the Ministry of Health, which focuses on providing care for women suffering from breast and cervical cancer.
How we're helping
530,000
Outpatient consultations
66,000
Patients admitted to hospitals
1,870
Surgical interventions
1,040
People treated for intentional physical violence