Two people help medical staff into personal protective equipment. PPE is used in epidemics and pandemics before people enter an Ebola high risk zone.
Crisis Response

Epidemics and pandemics

Millions of people still die each year from epidemics and pandemics – infectious diseases that are preventable or can be treated.

Putting epidemics and pandemics in context

Millions of people still die each year from infectious diseases that are preventable or can be treated.

Epidemics and pandemics are outbreaks of diseases such as cholera, measles and yellow fever that can spread rapidly and be fatal. Malaria is endemic in more than 100 countries. Millions are living with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis. Viral hemorrhagic diseases such as Ebola or Marburg are rarer but are potentially fatal. The coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic affected virtually every country on earth, infecting tens of millions of people and resulting in the death of over a million more.

In the last couple of years alone, MSF have responded to outbreaks of yellow fever in Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), plague in Madagascar, large-scale cholera and measles epidemics in several countries across Central and West Africa, and outbreaks of the long-forgotten disease diphtheria in Yemen and among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.

The people at highest risk are mainly living in poverty or in areas of great instability, such as in armed conflict or during mass displacement, where living conditions are precarious, access to healthcare is limited, and vaccination coverage is low.

Reacting swiftly once an outbreak is identified will ensure that the number of people at risk is quickly reduced and can significantly impact the number of people falling ill and those dying. Engaging in advocacy to support access to treatment, as in the case of HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, is crucial in pushing for effective responses.

 

Who is at risk
People queue outside the tent housing the MSF clinic at a refugee camp. It's easy for epidemics and pandemics to break out in these camps
MSF clinic in Arkoum refugee camp. 
© Mohammad Ghannam/MSF
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People in poverty or great instability

Epidemics and pandemics can place the strongest health systems under strain – but the people at highest risk are mainly those living in poverty or in areas of great instability. In these situations living conditions are precarious, access to healthcare is far from being granted to all of those in need, and routine vaccinations are often interrupted or have reduced coverage.

The resurgence of diphtheria in the refugee camps in Bangladesh in late 2017 is a testimony to the Rohingya’s exclusion from healthcare while in Myanmar. The majority of Rohingya were not vaccinated against any diseases, as they had very limited access to routine healthcare, including vaccinations.

People living in camp settings can also be extremely vulnerable to outbreaks, particularly if there is overcrowding and water and sanitation services are poor.

How MSF responds

The needs of affected patients and communities need to be at the heart of any outbreak response for it to be effective. Reacting swiftly can significantly impact the number of people falling ill and those dying of disease.
 
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