MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Somalia

Somalia

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is running a range of essential medical services in Somalia to assist people affected by conflict and climate shocks.

In 2024, droughts and floods forced over half a million people from their homes, bringing the total number of displaced people in Somalia to more than 3.5 million.  Many are living in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions in camps, with little access to healthcare, leaving them vulnerable to measles, cholera, and respiratory infections. Hundreds of thousands of people are facing severe malnutrition, as repeated extreme weather events have led to crop failures and the death of livestock, as well as a shortage of clean water.

Our activities in Somalia and Somaliland in 2024

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF IN SOMALIA IN 2024 In Somalia, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is running a range of essential medical services in Somalia to assist people affected by conflict and climate shocks.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Somalia

In Baidoa, the capital of South West state, which currently hosts more than 1.1 million displaced people, our teams are responding to the ongoing humanitarian crisis, which has been exacerbated by conflict and a lack of healthcare and other essential services. At Bay Regional hospital, we deliver emergency obstetric care, neonatal services, and inpatient care for children with malnutrition. In 2024, our outreach teams also worked in seven locations to ensure early detection and treatment of complications among expectant mothers and newborns, and refer them for specialist care.

In Puntland’s Galkayo North, our services include supporting the emergency room, maternity, and paediatric units at Mudug regional hospital, treating malnutrition and tuberculosis, and running mobile clinics to address the needs of displaced communities. In Galkayo South, Galmudug state, we work with a local hospital to provide emergency care, maternal and child healthcare, including vaccinations, and respond to emergencies in camps. In addition, we send mobile teams to remote areas where healthcare facilities have ceased to function.

Until April, we supported basic and specialist care in Kalabaydh, Sool region, and later in the year donated medical supplies to healthcare facilities in the region.

As part of our regular outreach work, MSF has helped improve healthcare facilities by upgrading water and sanitation systems, and training local healthcare workers in Somalia to support the Ministry of Health’s efforts to strengthen services.

IN 2024

 
Fatumazahra Khalif_Portrait
Access to Healthcare

Somalia: “Health promotion is vital”

Patient and Staff Stories 7 Jul 2023
 
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Worsening humanitarian conditions in overcrowded Dadaab refugee camps

Press Release 25 Jan 2023
 
MSF, Doctors without Borders, Somalia Baidoa
Somalia

Malnutrition Crisis in Baidoa

Patient and Staff Stories 21 Nov 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, A year in Pictures 2021
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The triple threat of climate change, conflict, and health emergencies: A deadly mix for the most vulnerable in fragile settings

Press Release 4 Nov 2022
 
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Somalia

Five facts on drought, malnutrition and disease outbreaks in Baidoa, Somalia

Latest News 13 Oct 2022
 
A young girl receiving measles vaccine in Odweyne district, Somaliland.
Measles

One of the largest measles outbreaks in the world: 100,000 children vaccinated

Latest News 4 Aug 2022