Publications
Malaria surveillance among the displaced Karen population in Thailand April 1984 to February 1989, Mae Sot, Thailand.
Right from the arrival of the displaced Karen people in Thailand, Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) identified malaria as the top priority problem. A program of patient care based on the coupled laboratory/dispensary was set up in April 1984.
Long-acting chloramphenicol versus intravenous ampicillin for treatment of bacterial meningitis.
In most developing countries, bacterial meningitis (BM) is associated with a high case-fatality rate. The search for a simple, convenient, and inexpensive antibiotic treatment remains a priority.
Malaria during pregnancy in an area of unstable endemicity.
A prospective study of malaria during pregnancy was conducted between September 1986 and December 1989 in an area of unstable (mesoendemic) malaria transmission on the Thai-Burmese border.
[Risk factors for malnutrition in 0-59-month-old infants in 2 districts of Niger].
A nutritional survey by cluster sampling at 2 degrees, carried out in April 1987 within a range of action of 6 health structures in Niger, has permitted the calculation of the weight/height index among children aged from 0 to 59 months and the malnutri
Outbreak of pellagra among Mozambican refugees--Malawi, 1990.
Micronutrient deficiency disorders, including pellagra, have emerged as major problems in refugee populations that depend on international relief assistance for food supplies.
Practical field epidemiology to investigate a cholera outbreak in a Mozambican refugee camp in Malawi, 1988.
Of all populations affected by cholera, refugees are at particular risk of infection due to overcrowding and poor sanitation.
Visceral leishmaniasis in southern Sudan.
Reports made by Médecins Sans Frontières in Khartoum on an outbreak of visceral leishmaniasis among displaced people from the western Upper Nile prompted an investigation at Ler Hospital, the second largest in the region.
Measles outbreaks in the Mozambican refugee camps in Malawi: the continued need for an effective vaccine.
Between November 1988 and January 1989, measles outbreaks occurred in 11 Mozambican refugee camps in Malawi with five camps principally affected. A total of 1214 cases were reported.