MSF staff in South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal speaking with a Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (DR-TB)patient

South Africa

In South Africa, we respond to disease epidemics, such as HIV and tuberculosis, and assist migrants with access to healthcare.

In October 2023, in partnership with the Eastern Cape Department of Health, we launched a project to improve the identification and management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in the Amathole District, which is MSF's first NCDs project in South Africa. We aim to apply lessons from two decades of working on HIV and tuberculosis (TB) in South Africa to enhance NCD care in rural settings.

After 12 years of operations, we closed our HIV/TB project in Eshowe, KwaZulu-Natal province. The project’s community-oriented approach helped to increase the integrated management of HIV, TB, diabetes and hypertension through nine community-based ‘Luyanda’ sites, which were successfully handed over to the DoH. Many achievements were made in the task-shifting of TB health promotion activities to teachers in schools, and we shared valuable feedback with the DoH on the decentralisation of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis (DRTB) services to the primary healthcare level.

Our activities in 2022 in South Africa

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2022.

MSF activities in South Africa in 2022 MSF launched a major response when floods hit South Africa in 2022. We also maintained our HIV and tuberculosis (TB) programmes and migrant health projects.
MSF_South_Africa_IAR_Map_2022

After 12 years of operations, we closed our HIV/TB project in Eshowe, KwaZulu-Natal province. The project’s community-oriented approach helped to increase the integrated management of HIV, TB, diabetes and hypertension through nine community-based ‘Luyanda’ sites, which were successfully handed over to the DoH. Many achievements were made in the task-shifting of TB health promotion activities to teachers in schools, and we shared valuable feedback with the DoH on the decentralisation of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis (DRTB) services to the primary healthcare level.

Flash flooding in parts of KwaZulu-Natal province in April 2021 caused hundreds of deaths, displaced over 40,000 people and severely damaged infrastructure, including water and sanitation services. MSF launched a substantial emergency response comprising medical teams and water, sanitation and hygiene experts. We supported mobile clinics in affected communities with medical staff and provided water storage and sanitation in shelters for displaced people. In addition, our geohydrologists implemented innovative techniques for improving water yield and quality from strategically drilled boreholes.

In September 2022, after 22 years, our teams working on HIV/AIDS and drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) in Khayelitsha handed all remaining activities over to authorities. We launched the project in the context of HIV/AIDS denialism at the highest levels of government, starting by working to improve methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission of the disease, and were soon allowed to expand our involvement to HIV treatment for people of all ages, as well as operational research. One of the project’s standout achievements was the integration of HIV and TB services in clinics. It also contributed to the improvement of DR-TB treatment and care by demonstrating that it is possible to substitute toxic injectable antibiotics with newer and more effective oral drugs.

At the end of 2023, we handed over our Tshwane Migrant Project to authorities and a local Community-Based Organisation after building the capacity to work with undocumented populations. The project provided access to medical care for undocumented people and migrants and actively advocated for continued access.

IN 2022

 
The catastrophic flash flooding that ensued on 11 April in the eThekwini region in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal Province has left 40,000 people homeless and many are sheltering in community-based schools, churches and halls without food, cookware, mattresses, blankets, clothes and basic hygiene products
South Africa

Three Issues to be aware of caused by the KZN flash floods

Press Release 13 May 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, eThekwini Floods
Floods

"I thought the house might go over sideways but it started sinking down." - Nozipho Sithole, flash floods survivor

Patient and Staff Stories 29 Apr 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, eThekwini, KZN floods
Natural Disasters

Flash floods survivors are thirsty, traumatised and exposed to disease

Latest News 29 Apr 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, KZN, eThekwini floods
Floods

Thousands with difficult access to water after KwaZulu-Natal’s devastating flash floods

Press Release 22 Apr 2022
 
In Eshowe in South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal Province, MSF assisted the department of health with establishing help desks outside clinics - triage points where all who wish to enter are screened using a screening tool, and possible COVID-19 patients are then referred to a separate tent for testing.
Coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

MSF urges governments to reject the draft COVID-19 text at WTO

Press Release 1 Apr 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, International Migrants Day
Migrants

8 things everyone should know about the harsh journeys that migrants undertake to South Africa

Latest News 29 Mar 2022