Lifesaving Care in Mali’s Embattled Douentza Region

While fighting drives families from their homes and humanitarian actors from communities, International Medical Corps’ local medical staff in Douentza, Mali, is delivering lifesaving care.

Providing care in the field.

Written by Daniel Coulibaly, Medical Mobile Clinic Doctor; Jacob Roberts, Communications Specialist; Photos by Daniel Coulibaly
First published October 14, 2024 by International Medical Corps

In central Mali, Dr. Daniel Coulibaly attends to a young child under a rocky outcropping. The natural shelter in the village of Every provides relative privacy, so community leaders suggested the site for medical consultations and vaccinations. Dr. Daniel is part of an International Medical Corps mobile medical unit (MMU) providing healthcare in Mali’s Douentza region, where the government has enforced a tight blockade for more than a year in response to ongoing violence among armed groups. The situation is so dangerous that many humanitarian organizations have stopped operations altogether. Without a stable health system, our MMU is the only available health service for thousands of people.

Members of our MMU and local volunteers carry health supplies to their village.
Local volunteers help our MMU team carry health supplies to a village in Douentza, Mali.

When they flee their homes to escape the violence, the people of the Douentza region—like many internally displaced persons (IDPs)—are under intense pressure and able to bring only minimal possessions, which reduces their capacity to earn a living. With limited financial means and diminished mobility, these IDPs depend on whatever basic social services are available within walking distance. Because many settle at IDP sites in remote areas, far from any functional health structure, “Taking care of these populations is challenging, because the villages where they live are extremely insecure and inaccessible,” Dr. Daniel says.

He explains that non-displaced populations living in Douentza’s insecure areas also struggle with access to medical services, which armed skirmishes often disrupt, making safe travel to health facilities impossible. “Alleviating suffering and seeing the joy on patients’ faces when we visit their communities—it really motivates our team,” he says.

To meet the health challenges of the people in Douentza, our MMU provides integrated services that include mental health, reproductive healthcare and nutritional health. Even though the only space to treat people might be under the protection of a cliffside alcove, our teams have conducted curative consultations for more than 3,200 people, and antenatal consultations for more than 500. And between November 2023 and June 2024, we vaccinated nearly 1,100 children in the Douentza region against measles.

Members of our MMU and local volunteers carry health supplies to their village.

“We are grateful for the opportunity to serve to the communities of Douentza,” says Souley Abdou, International Medical Corps’ Program Director in Mali. “It is heartening for our teams to see community members’ enthusiasm and joy when we arrive to provide medical care.”

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Angels in Medicine is a volunteer site dedicated to the humanitarians, heroes, angels, and bodhisattvas of medicine. The site features physicians, nurses, physician assistants and other healthcare workers and volunteers who reach people without the resources or opportunities for quality care, such as teens, the poor, the incarcerated, the elderly, or those living in poor or war-torn regions. Read their stories at www.medangel.org.

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