Shaimaa Shams Eddine, patient
The health system in Lebanon – a country which hosts over 850,000 registered Syrian refugees – has continued to crumble in recent years due to social and political unrest, economic collapse, and the Beirut blast.

Despite the efforts of the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health in supporting basic and specialist healthcare for refugees, the cost of consultations, laboratory tests, and medication remains a barrier for a significant number of refugees.

MSF ensures access to free, high-quality healthcare for vulnerable people, including refugees and migrant workers. Our activities include reproductive health services, general and intensive care, treatment for non-communicable diseases, and routine vaccinations for children, in Akkar, Zahle, South Beirut and in the Bekaa valley. We also provide treatment for children with thalassemia in Zahle.

Our teams are currently running COVID-19 vaccination campaigns, including in nursing homes and in prisons. We are also conducing health education sessions which include informative messages about COVID-19 vaccination and the ways to register to get vaccinated.

Our activities in 2022 in Lebanon

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2022.

MSF in Lebanon in 2022 Since 2019, Lebanon’s multi-layered crisis has pushed more than 80 per cent of its population into poverty. Médecins Sans Frontières is supporting the national health system to address the immense unmet medical needs.
Lebanon IAR map 2022

The highly privatised healthcare system in Lebanon is a major barrier to ensuring accessible, affordable and high-quality medical services for all. In the past three years, it has become increasingly difficult to obtain healthcare, as more and more people have seen their income plummet, forcing them to rely on deteriorating public services and medical humanitarian organisations for medical assistance.  

In 2022, we continued to adapt our long-term activities to cover the needs of Lebanese people, as well as refugees and migrants, who often have limited access to medical care. Lebanon is home to an estimated 1.5 million refugees, mainly Syrians and Palestinians, many of whom live in precarious conditions in displacement camps. The country also hosts around 250,000 migrant workers.

Our services include reproductive healthcare, mental health support, paediatrics, surgery, wound care, treatment for chronic diseases, and routine vaccinations for children. In 2022, we also provided treatment for children in Bar Elias living with thalassaemia, an inherited blood disorder that affects the production of haemoglobin.

In addition, we responded to emergencies, most significantly, the first cholera outbreak in Lebanon for almost three decades. As thousands of cases were recorded, we opened two cholera treatment units in Bar Elias and Arsal, and several oral rehydration points in Tripoli, Beirut, Bar Elias and Arsal. To curb the spread of the disease, we ran awareness-raising and infection prevention campaigns, and distributed hygiene kits, containing items such as soap and detergent. Our teams also supported the national vaccination campaign by conducting door-to-door cholera vaccinations in the north and northeast of the country.

We are constantly increasing our support to the Lebanese health system, by training staff and donating medicines and medical supplies, and building the capacity of health facilities across the country. Strengthening and enhancing the capacity of healthcare providers at local and national levels remains a priority.

 

in 2022
 
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Access to Healthcare

Stories from non-communicable chronic diseases patients in Lebanon

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Lebanon -Providing medical care to Syrian refugees in the Bekaa Valley
Lebanon

Treating chronic diseases among Syrian refugees, a priority for MSF

Project Update 16 Apr 2014

Contact us

Shatila Camp
MSF Lebanon

Hamra main street, Domtex building, 5th floor
Beirut, Lebanon
Area zip code: 1103