Country details

Nigeria

Ethnic and religious tensions flared again both in the north and the south of Nigeria in 2010. Health services continued to suffer from a lack of resources.

Emergency response teams   

A Médecins Sans Frontières emergency response unit based in Sokoto, in the northwest of the country, provided rapid assistance for disease outbreaks, natural disasters, violent crises and population displacements in four states. The team intervened after flooding in Sokoto state, distributing relief items and basic medical care to thousands of displaced families. The team also treated patients after outbreaks of measles, meningitis and cholera. In the states of Katsina, Bauchi and Borno, our teams treated 9,481 patients for cholera between August and November.

In central Nigeria, emergency teams responded to cholera and measles outbreaks in Kaduna and Plateau states: staff vaccinated more than 15,600 children in Kaduna and treated some 2,600 patients for measles. Teams offered assistance after violence in the city of Jos, providing medicines and medical supplies to the main health facilities.

Lagos

Lagos has a population of around 18 million, and in such a large city the needs of vulnerable people are often neglected. In July 2010, our teams began working at Aiyetoro health centre in the slum area of Makoko, providing general and reproductive healthcare, and emergency care. Malaria, respiratory infections and chronic diseases were the most common illnesses suffered by patients. Using the centre as a base, Médecins Sans Frontières is extending its work via mobile clinics. The first began work in Otto in October 2010. In early 2011 a mobile clinic will serve the Badia and Riverine lagoon areas.

Maternal and child health

The lack of access to healthcare in northern Nigeria has a heavy impact on women and children. In Sokoto state, a mobile medical team supports the Goronyo health centre and surrounding villages. The team provides general healthcare, including obstetric and paediatric care, and runs a feeding programme. In 2010, a prevention of mother-to-child transmission programme was launched at Goronyo for pregnant women with HIV.

In Jigawa state, 402 women underwent fistula repair surgery. Our centre in Jahun, which opened in 2008, also offers comprehensive emergency obstetric and neonatal care. Such care can prevent fistula, which are injuries to the birth canal often caused by long labour without a midwife or the option of a caesarean section. Many women with obstetric fistula have to live with unpleasant and debilitating symptoms, including incontinence, which can result in social exclusion. More and more women are now coming to the hospital to give birth: there were 3,649 deliveries in the maternity ward in 2010, more than double the number in 2009.

A team working from Kazaure hospital, also in Jigawa state, started providing care for severely malnourished children in June following a regional nutrition crisis. More than 6,600 children received treatment at the feeding centre and 1,700 were hospitalised.

Trauma care

Violence remained a problem in the Niger Delta. The team operating the 75-bed trauma centre in Teme hospital, Port Harcourt, was one of the first to use internal fixation to repair fractures. This technique allows patients to walk again within just a few weeks, in contrast to the old traction system, which requires months. In 2010, our staff treated 10,850 people in the emergency department, 42 per cent of whom had violence-related injuries. Overall, more than 2,000 patients were admitted to the trauma centre, and more than 3,500 surgical interventions were carried out. Médecins Sans Frontières also treated 645 victims of sexual violence, providing medical care and counselling.

Handover in Bayelsa

Since 2008, Médecins Sans Frontières has been running a health centre in Ogbia district, Bayelsa state, in the Niger Delta. In the first few months of 2010, we held 4,700 consultations and vaccinated 5,400 children after an outbreak of measles. Local and national authorities took over the project in April 2010.

Lead poisoning

Small-scale gold mining was directly related to severe lead poisoning in seven villages in Zamfara state, in the northwest of the country. Villagers were crushing and drying lead-containing ore in and close to their homes. At the request of the Ministry of Health, Médecins Sans Frontières treated more than 400 children for lead poisoning in two care centres, and staff worked with villagers to raise awareness of the risks of gold mining. The damage is considered one of the worst recorded heavy metal contaminations in the world.


Month in Focus December 2011

19/12/2011

Video update on Médecins Sans Frontières activities in December 2011.

Category: Video gallery

Nigeria: Fighting the fistula stigma

30/08/2011

Journalist David Wroe and photographer Penny Bradfield visited the Médecins Sans Frontières emergency obstetric and fistula repair program in Jahun, northern Nigeria. Their story and photos were published in the Sydney Morning...

Category: Media

Médecins Sans Frontières receives Green Star Award for leadership in environmental emergencies

19/05/2011

BERN, 18 May 2011—International medical aid organisation Médecins Sans Frontières today accepted a 2011 Green Star Award for leadership in environmental emergencies, at a ceremony in Bern, Switzerland.

Category: Press releases

Italy must drastically improve conditions facing refugees, asylum seekers and migrants fleeing North Africa, including Libya

05/05/2011

3 May 2011: Once again, international medical aid organisation Médecins Sans Frontières calls on Italian authorities to drastically improve reception conditions for new arrivals, particularly for the most vulnerable - women,...

Category: Press releases

Lampedusa, Italy: Seeking Refuge, Finding Suffering

05/05/2011

Médecins Sans Frontières calls on Italian authorities to drastically improve conditions for refugees, asylum seekers and migrants fleeing North Africa, including Libya

Category: Position Statements
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