*Data from MSF International Activity Report 2024

Tanzania 2021 © MSF/Alawiya Mohammed
Tanzania
Providing health care to Burundian refugees and responding to disease outbreaks.
Our work in Tanzania
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) runs a range of projects in Tanzania, providing health care to Burundian refugees and host communities, responding to disease outbreaks, and improving mother and child health services.
What's happening in Tanzania?
When violence broke out in Burundi in 2015, thousands of people fled over the border into Tanzania and sought refuge in Nduta camp. Despite the authorities’ plans for the camp’s closure, we continued to deliver vital medical services to both the refugees and the local community in 2024, including malaria prevention activities such as indoor residual spraying campaigns.
How we're helping in Tanzania
MSF supported the Ministry of Health’s responses to disease outbreaks, including three cholera interventions launched in Lindi and Simiyu regions. In Kilwa district, our teams set up cholera treatment centers and supported the existing cholera treatment center in Itilima district. As well as improving the quality of care and the local capacity for early detection and surveillance, we referred suspected cases to cholera treatment centers and oral rehydration points, strengthened community engagement and awareness, and helped with patient contact tracing.
During 2024, we also continued to run our project aimed at enhancing access to basic and specialized health care services, particularly for mothers and children, through seven public health facilities in Liwale, a southern region located near the border with Mozambique. To improve the referral network, particularly for patients living in remote and underserved areas, we provided two additional ambulances.

How we're helping
46,900
Outpatient consultations
5,770
Births assisted
1,790
People treated for cholera
More news and stories
Learn about MSF’s journalistic roots and our commitment to bear witness and speak out about the plight of the people we treat.
Learn about MSF’s journalistic roots and our commitment to bear witness and speak out about the plight of the people we treat.