Country details

Burundi

Although Burundi has a policy of free healthcare for children and pregnant women, access to care is limited, primarily because of a shortage of staff. This particularly affects women. According to the World Health Organization, 4,000 women die in childbirth and approximately 1,000 women develop an obstetric fistula every year.

In western Burundi, Médecins Sans Frontières operates a centre providing emergency obstetric and gynaecological care in the town of Kabezi, in Bujumbura Rural province. The centre offers medical care for pregnant women experiencing complications in delivery and for newborn babies. Our team also runs an ambulance service that transports women needing emergency care from 23 health centres in the area and brings them to Kabezi.

Obstetric fistulas

Obstetric fistulas are injuries caused to the birth canal. Many women with obstetric fistula have to live with the unpleasant and debilitating effects of incontinence, which can also result in social exclusion.

In July 2010, we opened the Urumuri centre in the city of Gitega, central Burundi, to treat women with obstetric fistula. It is the only centre in the country that provides free, around-the-clock treatment. The plan is to treat 350 women per year for the next three years, and will be training Burundian doctors in specialist fistula surgery.

Malaria

Malaria is the main cause of mortality and illness in Burundi. It is responsible for 48 per cent of deaths among children under five. In 2010, two Médecins Sans Frontières teams treated 175,000 people for malaria and distributed 134,000 mosquito nets in the provinces of Kayanza, Ngozi and Karuzi.

A Médecins Sans Frontières team is dedicated to the surveillance and evaluation of medical alerts in Burundi. The team supported the national health authorities during outbreaks of cholera and measles in 2010, treating patients and assuring follow-up. Our staff also took part in a measles vaccination programme.

Médecins Sans Frontières has worked in Burundi since 1992.

Month in Focus March 2011

29/03/2011

Video update on Médecins Sans Frontières activities in March 2011

Category: Video gallery

The backyard disease

04/01/2011

In France, the last case of obstetrical fistula was operated on in 1957. Since then, the phenomenon has almost disappeared in the Western world. But in countries where access to healthcare continues to be rudimentary, many women...

Category: Field news

Malaria Emergency in northern Burundi

23/04/2010

Category: Photo Gallery

Alarming rise in malaria infections in Kayanza province, Burundi

01/02/2010

Malaria is endemic in Burundi. In recent months, presence of the mosquitoes responsible for spreading the deadly disease have been on the rise in the northern province of Kayanza, on the border with Rwanda, as heavy rains are...

Category: Field news

Médecins Sans Frontières emergency centre on brink of collapse due to floods

11/01/2010

Bujumbura, 8 January 2010. Heavy rains in the province of Bujumbura Rural, Burundi, caused Rusizi River to burst its banks, and flood the Médecins Sans Frontières Centre for Obstetrical Emergencies in Kabezi (‘CURGO’), where 42...

Category: Field news
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