*Data from MSF International Activity Report 2024

Russian Federation 2020 © Seymur Veliyev/MSF
Russia
Providing comprehensive care for drug-resistant tuberculosis, HIV, and people displaced by the conflict in Ukraine.
Our work in Russia
Until August 2024, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) ran programs in Russia to improve treatment for patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) and HIV as well as assist people displaced by the conflict in Ukraine.
How we're helping in Russia
In January 2024, we expanded the DR-TB program we had been running in the northern region of Arkhangelsk to Ivanovo in central Russia. Our teams provided expertise and technical assistance to the health authorities, with a special emphasis on implementing new treatment regimens, improving patients’ adherence, and integrating person-centered care into services. The collaboration aimed to contribute to the evidence base for more effective and less toxic treatment of DR-TB, with hopes to scale up these science-backed protocols across Russia.
In Moscow and Saint Petersburg, we worked with local NGOs to prevent HIV among key groups and provide them with medical care. Urban areas in Russia attract a large number of people seeking work and income opportunities. However, individuals from vulnerable groups, especially undocumented migrants, often struggle to obtain medical care and support in big cities.
In southwestern Russia, we worked with local partners supporting people displaced by the armed conflict in Ukraine. Due to limited registration to work in Russia, we had to rely on local NGOs in the cities of Belgorod, Rostov-on-Don, and Taganrog to ensure that people affected by the conflict received medical and mental health support, which included outpatient consultations provided by our team, as well as social support. By August, together with our partners, we had responded to the needs of thousands of people displaced from Ukraine and within Russia.
However, in August 2024 we received a letter from the Russian Ministry of Justice, conveying its decision to withdraw the MSF’s affiliate office in the Russian Federation from the register of affiliate and representative offices of foreign NGOs. In September, 32 years after we began working in the Russian Federation, we were forced to close our operations in the country.

How we're helping
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People started treatment for multi-drug resistant tuberculosis
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