Country details

Myanmar (Burma)

Low national and international investment in the health sector combined with tensions and low-intensity conflicts limit access to healthcare in many areas of Myanmar.

Myanmar remains largely isolated on the international stage and faces severe restrictions from the international aid community. Despite the return of the Global Fund, the country continues to suffer from a chronic lack of resources to tackle diseases like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

Working closely with local communities, Médecins Sans Frontières offers lifesaving treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS, basic healthcare, health education and reproductive healthcare, including antenatal and postnatal care, and nutritutional assistance. Our staff has been providing healthcare in Shan, Rakhine and Kachin states as well as in Yangon and Tanintharyi regions through a network of HIV/AIDS clinics and health centres. Our teams conducted nearly 660,000 general consultations across the country in 2010.

HIV/AIDS

More than 240,000 people are living with HIV in Myanmar, and an estimated 120,000 are in need of lifesaving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. However, treatment is currently available to only 21,000 people, and Médecins Sans Frontières was treating 18,300 of these people in 2010. Staff also provided symptomatic and palliative care and managed common opportunistic infections, which patients suffer from as a result of their compromised immune systems.

In Yangon, we operated four HIV clinics. In addition to treatment, staff offered health education, especially to high-risk groups such as intravenous drug users, men who have sex with men and sex workers, and helped prevent the transmission of HIV through voluntary testing and counselling and mother-to-child transmission prevention services. Médecins Sans Frontières continued to work in close collaboration with the Ministry of Health and other agencies in building up the technical capacities and resources of the various HIV/AIDS care programmes in the country.

Tuberculosis and HIV

Myanmar ranks among the 22 countries with the highest burdens of tuberculosis (TB) in the world. The national TB programme is underfunded and the lack of adequate regulation of the private sector means that there is no proper regimen for treatment, which leads to high levels of treatment failure and increased drug resistance.

TB is the most common opportunistic infection and the main cause of death for people living with HIV. Our team provides TB treatment within the context of its HIV programmes and is currently giving free treatment and counselling to 2,540 TB patients across the country, most of whom are also HIV positive.

In Dawei, in the south of Myanmar, our team runs a HIV and TB clinic for a local population consisting mainly of migrant workers and fishermen. Staff also conduct outreach activities in the surrounding district, going out in the community to test people and see patients who may not be following their treatment regime.

In Yangon, an Médecins Sans Frontières pilot project offers treatment and care for multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) in partnership with the Ministry of Health. This is the first programme in the country offering treatment for MDR-TB. In 2010, 44 patients enrolled in the programme. In October, we set up an HIV and TB programme in Insein prison in Yangon.

Malaria

Malaria is one of the leading causes of mortality in Myanmar. Médecins Sans Frontières clinics provide free diagnosis, treatment and prevention measures in areas where the disease has high prevalence rates. In Rakhine state, for example, staff tested more than 400,900 people and treated more than 122,380 patients for malaria in 2010.

Natural disaster

Cyclone Giri hit the west coast of Myanmar in November. In its aftermath, Médecins Sans Frontières conducted around 17,000 medical consultations through mobile and fixed clinics and distributed food as well as construction kits to help rebuild affected communities.

Médecins Sans Frontières has worked in Myanmar since 1992.

Myanmar: Médecins Sans Frontières Calls for Increased Response to Cyclone Aftermath

10/11/2010

More than two weeks after Cyclone Giri struck the west coast of Myanmar on 22 October, the emergency response is insufficient to meet people's needs. The cyclone caused massive destruction in villages east and south of Sittwe,...

Category: Press releases

Myanmar: One year after cyclone Nargis

01/05/2009

One year after cyclone Nargis massively damaged the Irrawaddy Delta, reconstruction work is in progress, thanks to the effort of many national and international agencies.

Category: Field news

Myanmar: One year after cyclone

01/05/2009

2 May 2008, Cyclone Nargis struck southern Myanmar with tremendous force leaving around 140,000 dead or missing, and many more destitute.

Category: Video gallery, MSF Response

A Life of Fear with No Refuge: the Rohingya’s Struggle for Survival and Dignity

23/02/2009

Weak, dehydrated and traumatized, the Rohingya people stepping off the boats that make it to Thailand’s shores tells an alarming story. This is a story that begins across the Andaman Sea that the Rohingya risk their lives to...

Category: Field news

A preventable fate: The failure of ART scale-up in Myanmar

25/11/2008

The situation for many people living with HIV in Myanmar is critical due to a severe lack of lifesaving antiretroviral treatment (ART). Médecins Sans Frontières currently provides ART to more than 11,000 people. That is the...

Category: Reports
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