MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in the United Kingdom
In the UK, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams provided asylum seekers with general and mental healthcare services.

In collaboration with Doctors of the World UK, we initiated a project to deliver general healthcare to people seeking asylum within the confines of the former military barracks at RAF Wethersfield in Essex.

This marks the first time we have engaged in a project addressing the health needs of people seeking sanctuary within the UK. We provided comprehensive assessments of the physical and mental health requirements of asylum seekers residing at RAF Wethersfield.

Our focus remained on providing essential medical care to people seeking safety within the large-scale containment site, while simultaneously addressing broader issues related to the broken asylum system and advocating for efficient and safe processes.

We first worked in the UK between April and June 2020, having provided patient care for people with COVID-19 in London.

Our activities in the United Kingdom in 2024

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF IN THE UNITED KINGDOM IN 2024 In 2024, Doctors Without Borders (MSF), in collaboration with Doctors of the World (DOTW) United Kingdom (UK), ran a mobile clinic outside a mass containment site for asylum seekers in Wethersfield.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, MSF activities in the United Kingdom

Increasingly restrictive and harmful migration policies, focused on deterrence and enforcement, and a lack of alternative safe routes, have forced people fleeing violence and persecution to risk their lives by crossing the English Channel in small, overcrowded boats. At least 78 people died attempting to cross the Channel in 2024, making it the deadliest year on record.[1]

In 2024, our teams provided essential medical care and called for safe and dignified accommodation for asylum seekers.

In July 2023, the UK government opened a large-scale asylum ‘accommodation centre’ in former military barracks in Wethersfield, rural Essex. Around 13 kilometres from the nearest town, this mass containment site holds men between the ages of 18 and 65, and has a maximum capacity of 800. All the men accommodated here crossed the English Channel to seek safety in the UK.

In November 2023, DOTW UK and MSF launched a mobile clinic outside the main gates of Wethersfield. The clinic offered in-depth general healthcare consultations for men held on the site, with translation services so they could communicate in their primary spoken language. The service also made referrals to safeguarding, emergency and other services, as appropriate. Between January and June 2024, our teams ran psychoeducation sessions.

The site is described as ‘prison-like’ by men living there, and many patients we treated had experienced violence, ill treatment, and abuse in their countries of origin and on their journeys to the UK. Most patients we saw had signs of psychological distress, and accommodation at Wethersfield was unsuitable for many people.

Overall, the unsafe and deeply distressing environment of the site has a profound and negative impact on the health, well-being, and dignity of the men accommodated there, and we have consistently called for its closure.

[1] Info Migrants- https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/63578/channel-migrants-continue-crossing-as-french-authorities-rescue-225

IN 2024

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