Happy Mother’s Day From EMERGENCY!
It doesn't matter what you call her.What matters is that you keep her in your thoughts, today and every day.
It doesn't matter what you call her.What matters is that you keep her in your thoughts, today and every day.
Kayan will continue to return to the centre for follow-up consultations and we will be waiting for him. We might even see him return independently, as he becomes a young man.
Knowing that young patients like Saran and Yeshi are getting better fills us with pride, and drives us to keep working to ensure the right to healthcare in the Central African Republic.
More than half of these attacks occurred in in the capital, where EMERGENCY’s surgical centre has been offering treatment to victims of war since 2001.
When the outcome includes a smile…we’re pretty happy about it!
After an intense period of training with the staff at our Medical and Surgical Centre in Anabah, Doctor Amin, ‘our’ Amin, has passed his specialist exam at Kabul University.
During the 80 days I spent at the centre, I truly experienced what it means to give care without distinction or discrimination.
We’re trying. And judging by the expression of the little boy as he eats, and his mother’s smile, our recipe is seeing some success.
Asfandiar and Jzheyn's tale is a difficult one. But it's also a love story.
Hedayat is 38 years old. He’s been working as a surgeon at EMERGENCY’s Surgical Centre for War Victims in Kabul for 14 years.