MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Bangladesh

Bangladesh

In 2024, in Cox’s Bazar, thousands of people received healthcare in Doctors Without Borders (MSF)’s eight health facilities.

MSF provided emergency care and sexual and reproductive health services, as well as mental health support and treatment for victims of sexual and gender-based violence

We also treated patients for a range of non-communicable diseases, acute watery diarrhoea, respiratory infections, dengue fever, and measles.

Our activities in 2024 in Bangladesh

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF IN BANGLADESH IN 2024 In 2024, following an upsurge in fighting in Myanmar, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams witnessed an increase in the number of Rohingya refugees arriving in Bangladesh, many with violence-related injuries.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Bangladesh

Since mid-2022, there has been a significant increase in violence inside the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps, due to conflict over the border in Myanmar. 

In September 2024, the fighting between armed groups reached such a level that we had to temporarily suspend activities in some of the camps for a number of days. MSF teams treated some of the injured. Earlier in the year, we also witnessed Rohingya boys and young men being threatened and pressured into returning to Myanmar to fight.

Scabies remained a major health issue in Cox’s Bazar. In the last quarter of 2024, we saw a sharp increase in cases compared to 2023, when numbers had reduced following a mass drug administration. An MSF-led assessment found reduced chlorination and poor water distribution across all camps, likely contributing to a rise in water-borne diseases.

A study carried out by Epicentre, MSF’s epidemiological centre, published in June, reported a high prevalence of hepatitis C infection in adults living in the camps. By December, MSF and other organisations had committed about 60 per cent of the needed resources to tackle the virus.

In the capital, Dhaka, MSF ran two clinics in Kamrangirchar district, offering sexual and reproductive healthcare, medical and psychological treatment for victims and survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, and occupational health services for factory workers.

IN 2024

 
Malnutrition

Rohingyas in Bangladesh: “If this is the better option, the other must have been a living hell”

Patient and Staff Stories 6 Oct 2017
 
Malnutrition

Rohingyas in Bangladesh: “People have lost everything”

Patient and Staff Stories 5 Oct 2017
 
Cholera

Rohingyas in Bangladesh: Immediate action needed to advert massive public health disaster

Press Release 22 Sep 2017
 
Bangladesh

Myanmar: International humanitarian access must be permitted

Press Release 18 Sep 2017
 
Bangladesh

Rohingyas in Bangladesh: MSF scaling up activities

Press Release 6 Sep 2017
 
Malnutrition

Starved for Attention: A Radical New Vision of Malnutrition

Press Release 2 Jun 2010