MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Ukraine
As war continued in 2024, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams responded to the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine.

MSF teams remained close to the frontline, delivering emergency medical treatment, while also expanding services in other regions to support long-term recovery, such as rehabilitation for trauma survivors, and mental health care.

As the war has evolved, we have adapted our response. In addition to providing essential trauma care in hospitals in Kherson, we ran mobile clinics and ambulance referrals in all regions along the frontline, which stretches for more than 1,000 kilometres.

Read more on our response to the war in Ukraine:

Our teams continued to respond to the war in Ukraine. We currently have approximately 20 international and 350 Ukrainian staff working in response to the war across the country. They work as medical staff (surgeons, doctors, nurses), psychologists, logisticians and administrators. Here is how we are responding:

Our activities in Ukraine in 2024

 Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF IN UKRAINE IN 2024 In 2024, as the international armed conflict in Ukraine showed no sign of abating, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) increased support for people affected by the violence by filling gaps in care.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in Ukraine

Our mobile teams screened for tuberculosis and offered treatment for chronic diseases, such as hypertension, mainly to elderly and vulnerable patients, many of whom had resorted to living in basements or shelters to escape the shelling. Our ambulances frequently responded in the aftermath of airstrikes, referring wounded patients to nearby hospitals.

In a shelter run by local organisations in Zernove, Kharkiv region, we offered psychological care to people who had moved from Russia and Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine. In Pavlohrad, our teams provided mental health and basic healthcare for people fleeing the encroaching fighting in Pokrovsk and Kurakhove, Donetsk region. However, in April, MSF’s office in Pokrovsk was destroyed by a missile. Five people were injured in the attack, including an MSF staff member.

We also increased our mental health activities in 2024. We focused on treating post-traumatic stress disorder at our dedicated centre in Vinnytsia, and established a professional and community network to deliver trauma care for displaced people. We also expanded our support to reach people who have endured prolonged exposure to traumatic experiences, helping them manage their symptoms.

In Cherkasy and Odesa, MSF’s rehabilitation services comprised physiotherapy, mental health care, and nursing support for people who have recently had trauma surgery, including amputations.

We continued to send professionals and medical supplies to hospitals near the frontline to provide training and resources for mass-casualty influxes.

IN 2024

 
Fierce fighting caused extensive damage to many buildings in Hostomel
War in Ukraine

Supporting local medical staff providing care in Hostomel

Patient and Staff Stories 11 May 2022
 
Brancardage d'un vieux monsieur dur passerelle de fortune.
War in Ukraine

Caring for the vulnerable people left behind by the war

Patient and Staff Stories 19 Apr 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ukraine, MSF's activities
War in Ukraine

Finding our most useful role in our response in and around Ukraine

Latest News 12 Apr 2022
 
UKRAINE. Pisky. 22 February 2022. A school destroyed during the fighting. MSF has been working in eastern Ukraine for the last eight years, trying to improve access to health care for remote, conflict-affected populations.
War in Ukraine

MSF team witnesses hospital bombing in Mykolaiv

Press Release 6 Apr 2022
 
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Ukraine, Medical train referral
War in Ukraine

“You have a medical train? I have patients for you”

Patient and Staff Stories 6 Apr 2022
 
A woman walks past building damaged by shelling in Mariupol, Ukraine, Sunday, March 13, 2022. The surrounded southern city of Mariupol, where the war has produced some of the greatest human suffering, remained cut off despite earlier talks on creating aid or evacuation convoys.
War in Ukraine

War in Ukraine: Displaced twice and now on the road again

Patient and Staff Stories 18 Mar 2022