Country details

Papua New Guinea

Social violence is rife in Papua New Guinea and Médecins Sans Frontières provides medical and psychosocial care to survivors of sexual and domestic violence. Contributing factors to the violence are manifold and include poverty, urbanisation and unemployment, drug and alcohol abuse, and limited government capacity to provide adequate care.

Lae is Papua New Guinea’s second largest city, and our team runs a Family Support Centre at Angau Memorial General Hospital. Family Support Centres offer a safe space to people escaping domestic or social violence. Patients receive medical care, but also social and psychological support. Our staff at the centre offer comprehensive, free, medical and psychosocial care to around 200 new patients a month.

In the rural town of Tari, in the southern highlands,  our teams provide emergency surgery at Tari hospital and work in a Family Support Centre. In 2010, staff carried out more than 13,000 general consultations and more than 5,400 mental health consultations in Tari and Lae general hospitals.
Hidden and Neglected: The Medical and Emotional Needs of Survivors of Family and Sexual Violence in Papua New Guinea was published in December 2010 and reports on Médecins Sans Frontières’ experience in the provision of medical and psychosocial care in the country. Médecins Sans Frontières makes a number of concrete recommendations for action by national authorities, civil society and international donors, particularly regarding the establishment and operation of Family Support Centres. 

Cholera outbreaks

The emergency response to a cholera outbreak in East Sepik province, in the north of the country, concluded in mid-2010. We set up 12 treatment units, 2 treatment centres and 22 oral rehydration points, and trained over 1,000 health workers in clinical management and infection control. We also provided material, training and staff in response to a further outbreak in the Fly River area in November 2010. In total, staff treated more than 580 people for cholera in 2010.

Médecins Sans Frontières has worked in Papua New Guinea since 2009.

Returning to Bougainville’s neglected south

15/07/2011

After a ten year absence, the international medical-humanitarian organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières, has returned to the Autonomous Region of Bougainville in Papua New Guinea, to assist in delivering much-needed healthcare in...

Category: Field news

Hidden and Neglected: The medical and emotional needs of survivors of family and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea

01/02/2011

This Médecins Sans Frontières report highlights the urgent, unmet medical and emotional needs of survivors of family and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea. It recommends concrete action in order to meet these needs.

Category: Reports

Papua New Guinea: Médecins Sans Frontières completes emergency cholera intervention

12/03/2010

March 8, 2010. Médecins Sans Frontières has completed a seven month long emergency cholera intervention in Papua New Guinea.

Category: Field news, Outcome

The Age: On the medical frontline, where the numbers are very raw

08/03/2010

Vanessa Cramond, Medecins Sans Frontieres' medical co-ordinator in Papua New Guinea writes an opinion piece for The Age.

Category: Media, Editorials

Médecins Sans Frontières forced to withdraw staff because authorities cannot ensure hospital security

18/12/2009

On 15 December 2009, Médecins Sans Frontières announced its withdrawal of all international staff from a hospital in Tari, Papua New Guinea because of continued insecurity on hospital grounds. “In the past few weeks, there have...

Category: Field news
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