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HP session at Rogbereka village

Sierra Leone

MEDSF health promoter, Beatrice Turay, discusses the importance of vaccination, the various vaccines available for children and how mothers and caregivers can access them with community members in Rogbereka village, Tonkolili district. Sierra Leone, May 2024.
© Daniel García/MSF

In Sierra Leone, we work in Kenema district to reduce high maternal and child mortality rates, providing pre- and post-natal care in our hospital. We also provide care to remote villages in the district through mobile clinics.

Our activities in 2024 in Sierra Leone

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MEDSF in Sierra Leone in 2024 Médecins Sans Frontières (MEDSF) is working to reduce Sierra Leone’s maternal and child mortality rates, which are among the highest globally. We also run a project improving access to tuberculosis (TB) treatment.
Sierra Leone IAR map 2024
Country map for the IAR 2024.
© MEDSF

In Kenema district, Eastern province, pregnant women, lactating mothers, and children under the age of five receive lifesaving medical care in the 164-bed mother and child hospital built by MEDSF. In addition, we run mobile clinics to serve communities living in remote villages where no healthcare is available. Our teams provide rapid malaria testing and treatment, vaccinations for children under five years old, family planning, antenatal care, and referrals to specialist facilities. In 2024, we also supported six general healthcare facilities in the district, by donating medical supplies, renovating buildings, and training Ministry of Health medical staff.  

In Tonkolili district, Northern province, our teams continued to support 12 healthcare facilities by supplying medicines, completing rehabilitation work, providing water and sanitation services, and training medical staff. With our support, we aim to reduce maternal and child deaths in Mile 91, Magburaka town, and the surrounding villages. In 2024, we drilled seven boreholes in the district to ensure that people have safe drinking water. In Magburaka government hospital, we continue to offer specialist care for pregnant women, lactating mothers and children under the age of five, and support the referral of patients in need of more advanced care from a general healthcare facility to the hospital.

In Bombali district, also in Northern province, MEDSF is working to improve access to diagnosis and treatment for both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB for adults and children. People who are at high risk of contracting TB are provided with preventive therapy through the country’s National Leprosy and Tuberculosis Control Programme, of which MEDSF is supporting the roll out.

 

in 2024
 
Medical examination
Sierra Leone

Treating mpox in Sierra Leone’s outbreak hotspot

Voices from the Field 8 Jul 2025
 
Midwives assisting a postpartum patient during breastfeeding at Kenema hospital. They are participating in the MEDSF Academy for Healthcare's Midwifery clinical care training programme
Sierra Leone

Complementing the knowledge and skills of the medical staff in Sierra Leone

Project Update 27 May 2025
 
The Old and New Tuberculosis Medecine
TACTiC – Test, Avoid, Cure Tuberculosis in Children

New approach improves diagnosis and treatment of children with TB in Sierra Leone

or.ke 22 Mar 2024
 
Ebola in Foya, Lofa county, northern Liberia
Haemorrhagic fevers

Five things to remember a decade after the Ebola outbreak in West Africa

Project Update 20 Mar 2024
 
Magburaka - Enhancing access to maternal health care in Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone

Helping pregnant women access timely and quality maternity services

Project Update 20 Sep 2023
 
Kenema Hospital first construction phase.
Sierra Leone

New hospital to counter high maternal and child mortality rates

Project Update 14 Jun 2019

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