Annual Report

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Annual Report 2014 People First


Copyright © 2015 by Elizabeth Harris All Rights Reserved. Printed and bound at MassArt Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières doctorswithoutborders.org


Annual Report 2014 People First



“Humanitarian action is more than simple generosity, simple charity. It aims to build spaces of normalcy in the midst of what is abnormal.� Dr. James Orbinskithen, President of MSF Interneational


01 People First, Introduction

25 Project Support

29 Financial Report

33 Our Donors

47 How to Donate



Doctors Without Borders was created on the belief that all people have the right to medical care‌

Photo by Samantha Maurin/MSF


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

1971 Médecins Sans Frontières is founded.

1976 War in Lebanon msf conducts surgery in the organization’s first major response in a war zone.

In The Beginning Amid the Parisian upheavals of May 1968, a group of young doctors decided to go and help victims of wars and major disasters. This new brand of humanitarianism would reinvent the concept of emergency aid. They were to become Médecins Sans Frontières (msf), known internationally in English as Doctors Without Borders.

1980 War in Afghanistan msf medical teams cross the Pakistani –Afghan border. They travel by mule for several weeks to reach injured civilians living in remote areas.

1984 Famine in Ethiopia. msf starts programs to treat malnutrition in hunger-stricken regions of the country.

A New Medicine In 1971, Raymond Borel and Philippe Bernier, journalists from the medical review Tonus, issued an appeal to establish a band of doctors to help people suffering in the midst and wake of major disasters. The “Biafrans,” who had been attempting to start an emergency medical response group themselves, jumped at the chance: “In the back of our minds was the fact that we’d already done this and we wanted to do it again,” says Bernard Kouchner. “We wanted to ensure sufficient knowledge of this new type of medicine: war surgery, triage medicine, public health, education, et cetera.” “It’s simple really: go where the patients are. It seems obvious, but at the time it was a revolutionary concept because borders got in the way. It’s no coincidence that we called it ‘Médecins Sans Frontières.”

Building MSF

1986 Civil War in Sri Lanka msf organizes mobile clinics and hospital programs to treat citizens injured and traumatized in the fight between the government and the Tamil Tigers.

Since 1980, msf has opened offices in 28 countries and employs more than 30,000 people across the world. Since its founding, msf has treated over a hundred million patients —  w ith 8.3 million outpatient consultations being carried out in 2012 alone. msf has also maintained its institutional and financial independence, and the organization has continued to be critical of both itself and the broader aid system when appropriate, all in the name of trying to help direct more effective and timely aid to those who need it most. 2


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

What We Do Every year, Doctors Without Borders  /  Médecins Sans Frontières (msf) provides emergency medical care to millions of people caught in crises in some 70 countries around the world. msf provides assistance when catastrophic events  —  such as armed conflict, epidemics, malnutrition, or natural disasters  —   overwhelm local health systems. msf also assists people who face discrimination or neglect from their local health systems or when populations are otherwise excluded from health care.

msf is a neutral and impartial humanitarian organization that aims first and foremost to provide high- quality medical care to the people who need it the most. It does not promote the agenda of any country, political party, or religious faith, and, as such, endeavors to communicate its history, background, and capabilities to all parties in a given situation so that it may gain the necessary access to populations in need. On any given day, more than 30,000 doctors, nurses, logisticians, water and sanitation experts, administrators, and other qualified professionals working with msf can be found providing medical care around the world.

1991 Civil War in Somalia msf runs surgical programs in war -stricken Mogadishu and aids refugees in neighboring countries

1992 Famine in Somalia msf alerts the international community to widespread famine and opens programs to treat malnourished children and adults.

1994 Genocide in Rwanda msf remains in the capital, Kigali, throughout the genocide of more than 800,000 Tutsis and “moderate” Hutus by Hutu extremists, and makes the unprecedented decision to call for international military intervention.

1995 Srebrenica Massacre msf speaks out against the subsequent massacre of some 8,000 Bosnians and the mass deportation and abuse of thousands by Serbian troops.

1999 Srebrenica Massacre msf provides medical care to displaced civilians in Kosovo and in refugee camps in Albania, Macedonia, and Montenegro.

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regardless of gender, race, religion, creed or political affiliation. Photo by Elisabeth Griot


The needs of these people outweigh respect for national boundaries. Photo by Ton Koene


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

2000 Civil War in Sierra Leone msf treats victims of the country’s brutal civil war.

2002 Malaria Killing Millions in Africa Malaria in several countries shows increased resistance to common antimalarials, msf increases its use of artemisinin therapy and pushes for wider availability of the treatment.

2005 Earthquake Hits South Asia msf runs mobile clinics for people trapped in remote villages and sets up surgical tents to treat thousands injured in the massive earthquake that hit the Kashmir region of Pakistan and India.

2009 Chaos in Pakistan Amid violence and displacement in Pakistan’s northern provinces, msf provides emergency care at 12 sites. Security is a constant concern.

Impartiality and Neutrality msf offers assistance to people based on need and irrespective of race, religion, gender, or political affiliation. We give priority to those in most serious and immediate danger. Our decisions are not based on political, economic, or religious interests. msf does not take sides or intervene according to the demands of governments or warring parties.

Bearing Witness

2011 Treating Victims in DRC msf responded to mass rape in the Democratic Republic of Congo, treating more than 100 women, children, and men for sexual assault after they were attacked by militias.

The principles of impartiality and neutrality are not synonymous with silence. When msf witnesses extreme acts of violence against individuals or groups, the organization may speak out publicly. We may seek to bring attention to extreme need and unacceptable suffering when access to lifesaving medical care is hindered, when medical facilities come under threat, when crises are neglected, or when the provision of aid is inadequate or abused. 6


In times of armed conflict

Photo by Diala Ghassan/MSF


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

people first In conflict zones, MSF does not take sides. We provide medical care based on needs alone, and work hard to try and reach the people who need help the most. In numerous countries, Doctors Without Borders is providing medical care to people caught in war zones. Some may have been injured by gunfire, knife or machete wounds, bombings, beatings, or sexual violence. Others are cut off from medical care or denied the ability to seek the treatment they need. This could be a pregnant woman who cannot reach help to deliver her baby, or someone with a chronic condition who has no way to resupply his medicines. Conflict’s consequences are manifold, and msf has historically attempted to respond with speed, focus, and flexibility in order to deliver the necessary care to those most in need. In 2012 and 2013, msf provided surgical care in approximately two dozen countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Syria, Haiti, Nigeria, Iraq, South Sudan, Somalia, and Jordan, among other countries. msf also provided medical care to refugees and internally displaced people seeking sanctuary in camps and other temporary shelters. Today, in numerous countries around the globe, msf teams are running vaccination campaigns and water  - and- sanitation projects, providing basic medical care through clinics and mobile clinics, building or rehabilitating hospitals, treating malnutrition and infectious diseases, and providing mental health support. Field teams also provide shelter and basic supplies  —  blankets, plastic sheeting, cooking pots, and more  —   when people have been uprooted from their homes and have nothing to help them survive.

In conflict: We do not take sides. We provide aid based on needs alone. Only highly trained, experienced staff can work in conflict situations. Each mission has specific safety regulations. Doctors Without Borders is safest when everyone in a conflict zone knows we are independent, neutral, and impartial. One of the ways in which we are able to demonstrate our independence to different parties is to ensure that all our funding for work in conflicts comes from private individuals. We do not accept government grants.

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Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Conflict in Gaza July 14th, 2014, Doctors Without Borders sent additional staff and resources into gaza. This was to support Gaza City’s al Shifa hospital, but one surgeon was refused entry at the border, reportedly because of a paperwork discrepancy. During a brief lull in the bombing, 28 patients managed to reach msf’s clinic in Gaza City, more than had been able to access the facility since Israel’s current military campaign begin. With the onset of a ground invasion by the Israeli Defense Force and the resumption of aerial bombing, however, mobility had once again become constricted and medical facilities were preparing for new waves of casualties from a campaign that had already resulted in more than 200 deaths, a frighteningly high percentage of them civilians, including many women and children, in the densely packed Gaza Strip.. msf staff in KhanYounis and Rafah distributed dressing kits for patients living in the south of the Gaza strip, where growing numbers of people who’ve evacuated their homes after warnings by the idf to do so are seeking whatever shelter they could find. Unrelenting violence in Gaza and the West Bank continues to have medical, psychological and social consequences for Palestinians. The Israel  –Palestine conflict and inter  -Palestinian violence has increased people’s need for medical and psychological care, and has reduced the availability of drugs, medical equipment and services to treat them. msf runs programs in Occupied Palestinian Territory aimed at meeting the needs not covered by Palestinian health systems.

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Gaza City

GAZA

289 surgical procedures 248 psychological evaluations 239 physiotherapy sessions 116 specialized surgery 112 staff 1 recovering child named Almahdi Mohammad, five years old, suffered leg fractures when his bedroom wall collapsed on him after being struck by a shell. Mohammad’s mother wheels him out of MSF’s postoperative care clinic in central Gaza. He will be evacuated to Germany to continue treatment, but his mother will not be allowed to go with him. Photo by Aurelie Baumel/MSF


In an epidemic outbreak

Photo by Wendy Marijnissen/MSF


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

people first msf has a long history of responding to epidemic outbreaks of cholera, meningitis, measles, malaria, and other infectious diseases that spread rapidly and can be fatal if not treated. Over the past decade, msf has also become involved in the treatment of the devastating pandemics of hiv/aids and tuberculosis (tb), which is the leading cause of death for people with hiv/aids msf also treats neglected diseases such as kala azar, sleeping sickness, and Chagas, diseases that largely affect the world's poorest people and for which there are, at present, few effective treatment options. Furthermore, msf treats and advocates for people afflicted with drug - resistant and multi-drug resistant forms of tb that require lengthy, difficult treatment regimens. msf believes in bringing the highest quality medical care possible to its patients. Through the Access Campaign, msf pushes for improved diagnostics and treatments for diseases that disproportionately affect the world's poor, along with urgently needed second - l ine drugs for the growing numbers of patients developing resistance to firstline medicines. msf has also called attention to the need for appropriate pediatric formulations for children with hiv/aids, and improved treatments and diagnostics for tuberculosis, for which there have been virtually no new advances in treatment since the 1960s. In 1999, msf co- founded the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (dndi) which brought together drug researchers, medical practitioners, and pharmaceutical companies to explore alternative ways of developing medicines— basing research and development priorities on need rather than profit. In 2007, dndi and the pharmaceutical company sanofi-aventis launched asaq, an effective and easy - to - use treatment for malaria. More recently, msf and dndi worked to develop and implement the first viable new treatment for sleeping sickness in a quarter of a century, nifurtimox - eflornithine combination therapy (nect), and they are now working to find and clinically test a new drug to treat Chagas disease. In recent years, msf has responded to measles epidemics in several countries (particularly in Central and West Africa), a dengue fever outbreak in Honduras, kala azar outbreaks in South Sudan and elsewhere, and a widespread outbreak of cholera in Haiti, where the organization treated more than 60 percent of all the cases that presented in the country, and on the border between Guinea and Burkina Faso, where teams showed the efficacy of using cholera vaccines after outbreaks had begun. msf also supported the governments of Niger and Mali as they implemented the use of a new, low -cost and longer - lasting vaccine for meningitis a.

Research Doctors Without Borders is well known for its humanitarian medical work, but it has also produced important research based on its field experience with vulnerable populations.

Increased MSF is also pushing for increased research into neglected diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, sleeping sickness, and leishmaniasis – through increased funding, investing in research and development (R&D) capability in developing countries, and supporting alternative models for R&D.

Abandoned Drugs Some treatments are no longer produced. MSF is calling on companies and governments to find solutions to bring unprofitable but medically necessary drugs back into production.

Safeguards MSF is also supporting developing countries in codifying into law the “safeguards” that are allowed under international trade rules to protect medical access.

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Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Ebola in West Africa We have treated hundreds of people with Ebola and helped to contain numerous life-threatening epidemics this year. msf’s West Africa Ebola response started in March 2014 and counts activities in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. In response to a confirmed case in Mali, an msf team arrived in the country this week to reinforce msf’s regular mission and provide technical support to the Ministry of Health. msf currently employs 263 international and around 3,084 locally hired staff in the region. The organization operates six Ebola case management centers (cmc’s), providing approximately 600 beds in isolation. Since the beginning of the outbreak, msf has sent more than 700 international staff to the region and admitted more than 5,200 patients, among whom around 3,200 were confirmed as having Ebola. More than 1,200 brave patients have survived. More than 1,019 tonnes of supplies have been shipped to the affected countries since March. The provisional 2014 budget for msf’s Ebola response in West Africa is €51 million. msf will continue its operational response in 2015, and is currently estimating operational budgets beyond 2014. So far, msf has approved institutional funding for a value of €20m and have raised some €28m in private funds.

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SIERRA LEONE

Monrovia

GUINEA

LIBERIA

5,200 patients 3,200 confirmed Ebola patients 3,084 locally hired staff 1,200 recovered patients 600 beds in isolation 6 Ebola case management centers 1 recovered man named Marvin Healthcare worker Marvin Kai was originally sickened after treating patients, but is now Ebola free after spending a month in a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) center in Liberia. He is now back living with his wife and son in Monrovia, Liberia.

Photo by Martin Zinggl/MSF


When disaster strikes

Photo by Tomas van Houtryve/VII


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

people first Within a matter of minutes, natural disasters such as earthquakes, tsunamis, and hurricanes can overwhelm an entire population. Thousands of people are injured or traumatized by the loss of family, friends, and homes. Clean water, health care and transport are also often casualties in these disasters. Rapid medical care and coordinated emergency response are vital to protect survivors. From large - scale catastrophes to local emergencies, msf’s network of aid workers and supply warehouses around the world means we can quickly respond to disasters. Indeed, we treated our first patient after the Haiti earthquake within three minutes. With more than 40 years of experience, we are experts in rolling out emergency responses in complex settings. We put highly skilled medical staff, logisticians and water and sanitation experts into disaster zones. Over decades we have built up a system of logistical support and a large pool of experienced msf staff that can be mobilized in a short space of time. Nearly 90 percent of our funds are raised from the generosity of private donors, which gives msf an unrivaled level of independence. Because of this, we are able to respond immediately without having to lobby governments or institutional donors for aid. We only appeal for extra funds if the disaster is very big and we really need extra support from the public.

Emergency Preparedness Because we already run projects in more than 70 countries around the world, we often have aid workers already nearby when a natural disaster strikes. They are supported by emergency teams on permanent standby in headquarters, who are experts at doing quick assessments and organizing immediate response. Medical and logistical supplies, in the form of pre -packaged kits ready for rapid deployment, are stored in warehouses in key locations worldwide, and a roster of experienced staff willing to drop everything and leave immediately to work in a disaster means we can be there where people need us as quickly as possible. Urgent medical cases cannot wait.

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Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Typhoon in the Philippines Typhoon Haiyan, or Yolanda, as it is known locally, ripped through the central Philippines on November 8, 2013. It caused a disaster of a scale unprecedented in the past century in the country. Whole communities were flattened, while a tsunami - l ike storm surge claimed thousands of lives. Roofs were blown off and livelihoods were swept away. Following the disaster, many areas were inaccessible; bridges were destroyed, roads were impassable, power and communications were cut off, and fuel was in short supply. Partially damaged schools, stadiums, and churches were turned into evacuation centers, where survivors crammed together waiting for help to come. Some 16 million people have either lost their homes or livelihoods, and more than 6,200 people were killed. The devastation caused by the typhoon was an intense blow to a country battered by one disaster after another within a matter of months, if not weeks   —   including displacements in southern Mindanao due to fighting in August 2013, and the earthquake that rattled Bohol province in October 2013, less than a month before Typhoon Haiyan. The Visayas region was hardest hit by the typhoon. Encompassing Leyte, eastern Samar, and Panay islands, it is one of the poorest regions in the Philippines. This, combined with the sheer force of the wind and water and the scattered geography of the archipelago, presented extreme challenges   —  fi rst for the survival of the population and second for the delivery of relief. msf was able to provide emergency assistance to communities on three of the most affected islands: Guiuan and nearby towns on eastern Samar; Tacloban, Tanauan, Ormoc, Santa Fe, and Burauen on Leyte; and Estancia, Carles, and San Dionisio on mainland Panay, as well as several outlying islands. This included addressing acute and immediate medical trauma needs; restoring basic medical services and facilities; providing shelter, reconstruction kits, water and sanitation facilities; and offering psychosocial support to both children and adults. Over the past months, msf has gradually reduced its activities, handed over medical programs to local actors, and closed projects where our services and expertise are no longer necessary. Today, msf is still providing comprehensive health care services in the hardest - hit areas of Tacloban and Guiuan.

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Philippines

Leyte

72,100 outpatient consultations 29,100 relief kits distributed 290 surgical interventions 1 brave little boy named Datu Rodel kisses his four year old son Datu in Tacloban City, Leyte, four days after Typhoon Haiyan passes in November 2013. MSF has provided relief and first aid to Rodel, Datu and their family while recovering from the Typhoon.

Photo by Julie Remy


When fleeing persecution or conflict

Photo by Isabel Corthier/MSF


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

people first More than 44 million people are fleeing conflict or persecution around the world. msf works around the world to provide refugees and internally displaced people (idps) with everything from psychological care to lifesaving nutrition. We set up hospitals in refugee camps, we help women give birth safely, we vaccinate children to prevent epidemics and we provide safe drinking water. Refugees are protected under international law. The United Nations refugee agency (unhcr) is responsible for leading and co-ordinating international action to protect refugees and resolve refugee problems worldwide. Its primary purpose is to safeguard the rights and well- being of refugees. While idps often flee their homes for similar reasons to refugees (armed conflict, human rights violations, natural disasters) technically, they are not refugees. An idp has not crossed an international border to find refuge and therefore remains legally under the protection of his or her own government, even if that government is the cause of their flight. Today, there are 28 million idps in 52 countries around the world. Half of the world’s idps are fleeing conflicts in just four countries: Colombia, Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sudan. Around three quarters of all idps are women and children. Despite international law calling for the protection of civilians in conflict, belligerents often deliberately target women and children as part of their strategy. And, while programs exist to provide surgical and other care to these victims, the vast majority will not receive the care they need because they live in regions where the healthcare system has collapsed and where it is too dangerous for independent aid agencies to operate.

Refugees There are currently more than 15 million refugees around the world. IDPs are not defined as refugees because they have not fled their home countries. There are more than 28 million IDPs around the world. Half of the world’s IDPs are fleeing conflicts in just four countries.

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Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Displacement in Iraq Since January 2014, violence in Iraq has driven an estimated 1.8 million people from their homes. According to official figures, nearly half of them are taking refuge in schools, camps, or unfinished buildings in the Kurdish Regional Government (krg). Their situation remains extremely precarious, however. Some 465,000 displaced people have poured into just the krg’s Dohuk governorate, where local authorities are struggling to cope with their increasing needs. Displacement camps are being built, but only one is ready thus far, meaning that most people are trying to endure overcrowded and unsanitary living conditions at a time when temperatures are starting to drop ahead of winter. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (msf) is reinforcing its activities to try and cope with the medical needs. In Dohuk, msf is carrying out medical consultations in three mobile clinics and in one of the most poorly equipped camps, in Zakho, an msf team is preparing to install latrines, showers and washing areas to reduce the risk of an epidemic. All told, msf teams have provided more than 3,500 consultations to displaced people across Iraq over the past month. msf continues to make every effort to increase its activities to further support the population. Despite the ongoing conflict in Iraq, msf is striving to provide medical care to the Iraqi people, as well as Syrian refugees in Iraq. msf has worked continuously in Iraq since 2006, in various locations in the north and south of the country. In order to ensure its independence, msf does not accept funding from any government, religious committee, or international agency for its programs in Iraq, and relies solely on private donations from the general public around the world to carry out its work. msf currently employs over 300 staff in Iraq.

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Syria Kurdish Region iraq

465,000 displaced people 193,800 consultations 10,800 individual and group mental health consultations 2 strong refugees named Furat and Karida 52 -  year- old Furat and 22 month old granddaughter Karida fled their home in Syria and into the Kurdish region of Iraq. They found themselves in the care of an MSF health care clinic after weeks of malnutrition and lack of shelter. Furat and Karida have gained their strength with the help of MSF workers and are undergoing therapy sessions to help cope with their tramatic displacement.

Photo by Diala Ghassan/MSF



Doctors Without Borders / MĂŠdecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

When we put people first we have the numbers to show for it. 9,029,071

Outpatient consultations

477,666

Admitted patients

182,234

Malaria cases treated

233,825

Severely malnourished children admitted to inpatient or outpatient feeding programs

17,082

Moderately malnourished children admitted to supplementary feeding centers

341,645

HIV patients registered under care

325,532

Patients on first-line anti-retroviral treatment

5,473

Patients on second-line anti-retroviral treatment

18,489

Pregnant women who received prevention of mother to child transmission of hiv (pmtct) treatment

16,838

Babies born in 2013 who received pmtct treatment

182,234 77,346

Women who delivered babies, including caesarian sections Major surgical procedures, including obstetric surgery, under general or spinal anesthesia

1,062

Patients medically treated for sexual violence

1,954

Patients newly started in second-line treatment for drug-resistant TB

155,308 27,909 2,497,255

Individual and group mental health sessions People treated for Cholera People vaccinated against Measles in response to outbreak

129,870

People treated for Measles

162,414

People vaccinated against Meningitis in response to an outbreak

1,746

People treated for Meningitis

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Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Project Support Projects described in this section were made possible in part by generous contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations in the United States. The great majority of funds msf collects are unrestricted to any particular project, which is essential to msf’s ability to react to emergencies as they unfold. The dollar amounts here reflect the total msf -usa funding directed by msf to field programs in a given country. These amounts are part of total project costs presented by msf international in its 2013 international activity report, which is available at www. doctorswithoutborders.org /our - work  /publications /annual - reports.

Africa Burkina Faso $455,000 In 2012, msf launched an emergency response for refugees in Mali who had fled to Burkina Faso. Most were initially housed in the border province of Oudalan but later moved further inland. msf thereafter scaled down its activities, though it ran mobile clinics for Malians who remained in the Dibissi camp and residents in Gandafabou health district. The team provided basic health care consultations, vaccinations  —   primarily for tetanus and measles   —   and referrals to the hospital in Dori. Cameroon $1,000,000 Central African Republic $8,154,480 Chad $4,690,000 Democratic Republic of Congo $21,736,220 Ethiopia $3,257,412 Guinea $900,000 Kenya $4,922,500 Lesotho $500,000 Madagascar $500,000 malawi $1,500,000 mali $3,601,082 mauritania $688,640 mozambique $1,700,000 25

Niger $3,062,591 Nigeria $4,600,000 Republic of the congo $500,000 Sierra Leone $3,000,000 Somalia $11,675,207 Sudan $1,210,896 Swaziland $2,550 Uganda $690,000 Zimbabwe $4,129,238

Americas Haiti $16,650,000 Many Haitians still cannot access medical care, even as poor living conditions, particularly in camps for people displaced by the 2010 earthquake, continue to cause health problems. The post - earth -quake cholera crisis persists, too, particularly during the rainy season. Since October 2010, msf has treated one-third of the more than 700,000 people infected with cholera, and teams still run two cholera treatment centers in Port - AuPrince, distribute hygiene kits, and manage water


Carmen Is 32 years old. She lives in Tete, a town on the Zambezi river in northern Mozambique, with her husband, Victorino, and two children. She found out she was HIV- positive in 2007 and started on anti-retroviral treatment in 2009. Today she is alive and healthy, looking after her family and going to evening school to improve her qualifications for work. Photo by Brendan Bannon

chlorination points. Nearly 10,000 cholera patients were treated in 2013 as well. msf also runs several specialized hospitals, including a 130-bed emergency obstetric hospital in Port -Au -Prince that provides free, 24- hour care for pregnant women with complications and a full range of reproductive health services. Teams assisted 5,450 births during the year. msf also still manages the 160-bed hospital in Léogâne that was set up after the 2010 earthquake, providing basic health care for women and children, specialist services (primarily for obstetric emergencies), and cholera treatment. Colombia $1,000,000 Colombia $1,000,000 Honduras $600,00

With funding to expand treatment many more people like Carmen could have real futures to plan for with their families and in their communities. And we could see light at the end of this tunnel.

Asia Philippines $4,403,446 Typhoon Haiyan killed more than 6,000 people in the central Philippines, displaced more than four million, and destroyed numerous hospitals and clinics. msf teams arrived the next day, and over the next two weeks, amid huge logistical obstacles, used trucks, boats, planes, and helicopters to reach outlying areas, assess needs, and set up medical activities. In Tacloban, msf erected a 60 -bed inflatable hospital with an emergency room and outpatient department, and provided surgical, maternal, 26


manuela A refugee girl named Manuela waits to have her bandages changed in a Doctors Without Borders tent in Garoua-  Boulaï District Hospital in Cameroon. Her family fled the violence in their village on a truck transporting wood. Several were wounded when the truck got into an accident. The refugees were referred to the Cameroon hospital from the MSF hospital in Bouar, Central African Republic (CAR), when the situation became too unstable in the area.

and mental health services. Mobile clinics tended to people who could not reach health centers. Teams distributed relief items to 3,000 families in Tanauan as well. In Leyte, msf provided staff, supplies, and water and waste disposal support to the district hospital, while also distributing relief supplies to 48,500 people and offering mental health support to 11,470. Teams based on Panay island delivered aid to 21 smaller islands, rehabilitated 13 health facilities, and vaccinated 4,650 children against polio and 14,990 against measles. Staff distributed more than 11,000 relief kits, food for 11,000 families, and 1.2 million liters of chlorinated water. msf set up a 60 - bed tent hospital in Guiuan, Samar island, with an operating theater, delivery 27

Photo by Laurence Hoenig/MSF

room, and maternity unit. Teams worked in rural health centers on Samar, ran regular mobile clinics on smaller islands, offered psychosocial support to adults and children, and supplied clean water for 20,000 people each day. Tents, cooking equipment, and shelter kits were distributed in isolated communities. Many acute emergency activities were completed by January 2014, but msf maintained a strong presence in areas where health services hadn’t yet recovered. Afghanistan $5,500,000 Bangladesh $500,000 India $500,000 Myanmar $3,006,820 Pakistan $4,500,000


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Caucasus and Central Asia Armenia $517,500 Since 2005, msf has worked to improve the diagnosis and treat- ment of dr -tb in Armenia, which has some of the world’s highest dr- tb rates. msf treats patients, provides support to help them complete the arduous treatment regimen, helps implement infection control policies, and works with moh tb and dr- tb programs throughout the country. msf also supports the National Tuberculosis Program’s “compassionate use treatment” for patients with xdr - tb. The msf team aims to enhance the national program’s capacity to implement dr- tb response plans and gradually hand over activities. Georgia $500,000 Kyrgyzstan $2,300,000 Russian Federation $1,850,000 Ukraine $2,000,000 Uzbekistan $1,000,000

After two years of negotiations, msf received permission to open a project south of Cairo in 2014 for people with hepatitis C, which affects an estimated 12 percent of Egyptians. msf also trained volunteer Egyptian doctors in Cairo to respond to medical needs during demonstrations. Iraq $3,254,860 Jordan $8,129,272 Occupied Palestinian territories $2,200,000 Syria $4,670,000 Turkey $961,463 Yemen $5,950,000

Other $240,000 msf  - usa also contributed small amounts to programs in Cambodia, Ivory Coast, Lebanon, and other parts of the globe.

International Projects Middle East Egypt $951,440 Amidst ongoing political upheaval, msf’s mother  -and-  child program at the Abu Elian clinic on Cairo’s outskirts carried out an average of 1,700 monthly consultations  —   most for children with respiratory infections, intestinal parasites, skin diseases, and diarrhea  —   while also providing referrals and transport and covering hospital costs for pregnant women. msf also offered mental health care to migrants who’d been victims of violence and treatment for sexual violence at Cairo’s Nasr City mental health clinic. Additionally, during a harsh winter, teams in Cairo and Alexandria provided medical and psychiatric consultations to vulnerable families.

Access Campaign $741,800 Drugs For Neglected Diseases Initiative ( DNDi) $2,004,302 Epicentre $430,000 Access Campaign $741,800 Drugs For Neglected Diseases Initiative ( DNDi) $2,004,302 Epicentre $430,000 MSF Innovation Fund $2,004,302 MSf Internations Office $2,142,612

Total $171,134,520

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Financial Report In 2013, despite worrisome initial projections, MSF- USA’s total revenue increased by 10.3 percent vs. 2012 Reaching a total of $221.6 million. This allowed msf - usa to increase its direct field support to more than $171 million. Once again, the percentage of our expenses devoted to activities within our social mission exceeded 85 percent, while fundraising and general management expenses accounted for 12.6 percent of all expenditures. msf -usa funded activities in 48 countries, with the greatest allotment of funds going to the Democratic Republic of Congo ($21.7 million), Haiti ($16.6 million), and South Sudan ($11.7 million). A total of $10.5 million was also raised to fund msf’s response to Typhoon Haiyan and ongoing assistance in the Philippines throughout 2014. Once again, our significant and prompt response to emergencies has been made possible thanks to the hundreds of thousands of individual donors that support msf-usa. msf thanks all those who helped make this work possible.

STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES AND CHANGES IN NET ASSETS The following summary was extracted from MSF-USA’s audited financial statements

Revenues

2014

2013

Contributions and private grants

206,993,170

184,147,094

Contributions pledged

1,993,347

5,158,361

Total Public Support

$208,986,517

$189,305,455

Investment Income

357,192

212,526

Gain (Loss) on Investments and Actuarial Gain (Loss) on Annuities

909,186

573,071

Other Revenue

44,940

46,164

Grants from Affiliates

11,282,340

10,671,977

Total Other Revenue

12,593,658

11,503,738

Total Revenue excluding gifts in kind

$221,580,175

$200,809,193

Public Support

OTHER REVENUE

29


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Expenses

2014

2013

Emergency and medical programs

171,134,520

162,566,427

Program Support and development

5,915,520

5,363,430

Field Staff

8,637,536

8,304,843

Communications

3,572,066

3,600,491

Total Program Services

$208,986,517

$179,835,191

Management and General

2,723,698

2,635,325

Fundraising

24,658,058

24,517,940

Total Supporting Services

27,381,756

27,153,265

Total Expenses excluding gifts in kind

216,641,398

206,988,456

Investment return in excess of designated amounts

25,389

Other Changes

25,389

Excess (deficit) in net assets

$4,964,166

$(6,179,263)

Net Assets

2014

2013

Net assets at the beginning of the year

160,912,434

167,091,697

Increase /(Decrease) in Net assets

4,964,166

(6,179,263)

Net assets at year end

$165,876,600

$160,912,434

PROGRAM SERVICES

SUPPORTING SERVICES

30


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

STATEMENT OF Financial POSITION 2013 Revenues

2014

2013

Cash & Equivalents and Short Term Investments

130,478,364

127,857,643

Receivables

28,594,362

26,201,070

Other assets

17,789,212

14,588,518

Total Assets

$176,861,938

$168,647,231

Liabilities and Net Assets

2014

2013

Grants Payables

1,530,556

0

Other Payables

3,633,962

2,908,267

Other Liabilities

5,820,820

4,826,530

Total Liabilities

10,985,338

7,734,797

Unrestricted Net Assets

146,537,230

149,148,202

Temporarily Restricted Assets

18,805,353

11,478,756

Permanently Restricted Assets

534,017

285,476

Total Net Assets

165,876,600

160,912,434

Total Liabilities and Net Assets

$176,861,938

$168,647,231

31


Expenses EXCLUDING IN-KIND EXPENSES 2014

Management and general 1.2%

Program Services 87.4%

Fundraising 11.4%

32


Our Donors MSF ACKNOWLEDGES OUR DONORS Scenes from MSF’s Chatuley hospital in Haiti. WHO HAVE MADE MULTI -YEAR COMMITMENTS msf is extremely grateful for the financial support it receives from individuals, foundations, and corporations. Your generosity allows msf to respond to emergencies based on medical humanitarian needs and to operate independent of political, economic, or religious interests.

$1 MILLION+ Mr. James Chambers

Daniel Maltz

Google, Inc.

Estate of Anne B. Milton

Sue and Bill Gross

Estate of Anne Ottolenghi

M∙A∙C aids fund  / m∙a∙c Cosmetics

Estate of William R. Payden

Estate of Peter A. Morgan

Jerome and Patricia Pesenti

Estate of Fred Snitzer

Elisa S. Rizzo

$500,000  -  $ 999,999 Anonymous ( 2 ) Estate of Sarah M. Bekker Estate of Carol J. Coleman Microsoft Giving Campaign Estate of Grant Rowold Estate of Virginia M. Sorenson Estate of John C. Stuart Su-Haw Chu Wang Trust Estate of Dennis Sullivan Swain Barber Foundation Worthington Campbell, Jr. 2001 Trust

Estate of Robert L. Schiesel Schwartz Survivor’s Trust Wallace Genetic Foundation The Warburg Pincus Foundation Mr. Robert J. Weltman Estate of Robert J. Werner $100,000 - $249,999 Adame Family Trust The Ajram Family Foundation Estate of Helen Pamela Allen Estate of Helga N. Alten Estate of Patrick A. Bianchi Bridgewater Associates Incorporated

$250,000 - $499,999

The Brightwater Fund

Anonymous (2)

Estate of Maryada F. Buell

Bloomberg Philanthropies

Charles Butt

Bruderh of Communities

Caerus Foundation, Inc.

Estate of L. June and H. Rae Colvey

The Charles Engelhard Foundation

Estate of William Fisher, Jr.

Estate of Roman Colbert

Games Done Quick

Estate of Margarita Corbaci

Estate of Merrill H. Goldwyn

CREDO Mobile

Hau`oli Mau Loa Foundation

Mr. Roger Enrico

Ms. Haley Hunter -  Zinck

Expedia, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas J. Lamonica

Estate of Robert Gene Farr

Ruth & David Levine

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Goldring

33


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Estate of Dorothy Goodman

Estates of William and Barbara Scholz

Harari Family Charitable Fund

Edward & Barbara Shapiro

IBM Employees Services Center

Estate of Helen Sheldon

Rajiv & Latika Jain

Alan Sheposier

Estate of Joan P. Jass

Christine M. Simone

The Jordan Family

Mr. Henry Smeal

Estate of Mary Kaiser

Estate of Susan Smith

Katherine C. Springer Trust

Lois and Arthur Stainman

Wendy Keys & Donald A. Pels

Stavros Niarchos Foundation

Estate of Lenore Latimer

Sutton - Sudhalter Family Trust

Lenore Hanauer Foundation

Anna Marie & John E. Thron

Live Nation

Thomas & Ancella Toldrian

Lopatin Family Foundation

Tortora Sillcox Family Foundation

Estate of Poh - Gek

Estate of Elizabeth A. Vernon

Low Lucretia Philanthropic Foundation, Inc.

Walter & Elise Haas Fund

Mr. Harold E. Morris

Estate of Mary L. Washatka

MOTHER Denim

Ms. Monique Weil

Musk Foundation

Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Welch, Jr.

Neukom Family Foundation

Joyce A. White

Estate of Berit Oppegaard

Estate of Harry F. Wolcott

PARC Foundation

World Bank Community Connections Fund

Estate of Hubert G. Parmentelot

Estate of Louise K. Yates

Partridge Foundation

ZBI Employee Allocated Gift Fund

Estate of Gertrude L. Peet The Peierls Foundation, Inc. Estate of Annette R. Plante Randell Charitable Fund Suzanne Reed Trust Estate of Louise Richman Estate of Walter S. Russell Satter Foundation

$50,000 - $99,999 Anonymous 21st Century Fox ALIXPARTNERS LLP Thomas J. & Karen Allen Estate of George W. Barclay Dr. Cori Bargmann Barkley Fund Estate of Nancy A. Bautz

How you can help Multi-year commitments help provide MSF with a predictable revenue stream that better serves our ability to respond rapidly to emergencies and ensure the continued operation of our programs. By the close of 2013, MSF had received 173 multi-year commitments toward this effort, totaling $33,699,945. To learn how you can support our efforts through the Multi-year Initiative, please contact Mary Sexton, Director of Major Gifts at 212-655-3781 or mary.sexton@newyor

34


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Anonymous

Fred & Lucy Lee

21st Century Fox

Estate of Marie Leonard

ALIXPARTNERS LLP

Lewis 1991 Unitrust

Thomas J. & Karen Allen

The Lloyd A. Fry Foundation

Estate of George W. Barclay

M9 Charitable Fund

Dr. Cori Bargmann

Estate of Elizabeth Macready

Barkley Fund

The Manhattan Music Group, LLC

Estate of Nancy A. Bautz

Mr. Austin Marxe

Mr. and Mrs. Benenson

Mr. Satyen Mehta & Ms. Véronique Brossier

Mr. Richard Bergmann & Ms. Denise Filakosky

Maurice R. Meslans & Margaret E. Holyfield

BNY Mellon

Estate of Gloria K. Metzger

Borrego Foundation

Millicent & Eugene Bell Foundation

Mr. Andrew M. Bostrom

MoneyGram Foundation

Estate of Howard S. Bremond

Neil Kreitman Foundation Nordstrom

Peter & Carol Budko

Estate of Stephanie L. Normann

The Butterfly Fund

Ms. Susan E. O’Connor

Estate of Ruby Cohn

The Orinoco Foundation

Countess Moira Charitable Foundation

Estate of John Papp

Mr. & Mrs. John de Csepel

The Parker Family Foundation

Estate of Alvena B. Deerkop

PB & K Family Foundation

Donald & Jeanmarie Donahue

The Phelan Foundation

Estate of Arthur K. Dunlop

Estate of Harriet Presser

Estate of Patricia E. Dwyer

QBE Americas

Eaglemere Foundation, Inc.

Estate of Frederic G. Rauber

Barbara and Joseph Ellis

Red 3 Fund

Epic Systems Corporation

Redlich Horwitz Foundation

Dr. Lydia Lee Feng

The Reusing & Cole Family Charitable Fund

FJC, A Foundation of Donor Advised Funds

The Rice Family Foundation

Estate of Ann Follansbee

Rivendell Foundation

Mr. Robert Friede

Robert A. James Memorial Fund

Clifton A. Gaskill

The Rona Jaffe Foundation

George L. Shields Foundation, Inc.

Estate of Edythe L. Rosser

Mr. John Gibson

Estate of Barbara Row

Goldman Sachs

James Rushton

Estate of Myron Bernard Goldware

Mr. Harry Sagheb & Mrs. Azar Sagheb

Estate of Doris M. Goodman,

Samsung Electronics America

MD Estate of Ellie M. Hartog

Steve & Anne Schneider

Mr. Jan Hatzius & Ms. Linda - Eling Lee

Estate of Cleo Sonnedecker

Mr. & Mrs. Willis S. Hesselroth

The Spark Fund

Incentive Logic

The Spurlino Foundation

James & Anna Hoag Fund

Stella and Charles Guttman Foundation, Inc.

Kaiser Permanente

Estate of Arthur Stern

Estate of Sarah M. Klivans

SurveyMonkey

Alex & Leander Krueger

Lee Tepper & Dorine Real

35


Ting Tsung & Wei Fong Chao Foundation G. Tiphane Estate of Mary E. Touhey The TripAdvisor Charitable Estate of Jean M. Trubey Turton Family Fund Van Ameringen Foundation, Inc. Dr. Willem Vedder Mr. Bertrand Viriot Mr. & Mrs. Wang Warmenhoven Family Foundation Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. Wasily Family Foundation Wells Fargo Community Support Campaign Ms. Miriam Williams Stephen & Nathalie Wong Karen B. Yoh Foundation

American Jewish World Services Anbinder Family Foundation Dr. Geoff Andersen Calvin W. Anderson Ankeny Foundation Annie Bennett Glenn Fund The Anschutz Foundation Ms. Elaine Antoniuk Mrs. Charlotte D. Appleton Franklin and Ellen Arcella Armony Erel Charitable Fund Robert Arnow Sartaj & Akankshi Arora The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation Mr. Paul Asente & Mr. Ron Jenks Ms. Janet Asimov Association for Continuing Education Dr. Amy Atkeson & Mr. Jonathan Atkeson

$10,000 - $49,999

The Atmos Foundation

Anonymous

Sanjiv & Sujatha Augustine

Anonymous donor from Celgene Corporation

Autodesk, Inc.

Anonymous in Chicago, IL

Mr. Frederick M. Ayers III

1993 Irrevocable Trust of Bette D. Moorman

The B&L Foundation

3 N&M, Inc.

B.T. Rocca, Jr. Foundation

Dr. Kamran Abbasi

Euan & Angelica Baird

Abercrombie & Fitch

Ms. Linda Baker

Mr. Scott Abrams

Balanced, Inc. for Crowtilt, Inc.

Adobe Systems Incorporated

Mr. Martin Balser & Mrs. Cecile Falk Balser

AE Charitable Foundation-Tony & Judy Evnin

Bank of America Matching Gift Program

Aetna Foundation

The Banning Fund

AGFA Health Care Corporation

The Baobab Fund

Meena & Liaquat Ahamed

Mr. Edward Barad & Ms. Carol McCully

Mr. Karan Ahooja

Barbara Ross Charitable Trust

AIG Matching Gifts Program

Ruth N. Barber CLAT

Alan L. Blum Family Fund

Kris & Elizabeth Barber

The Albert and Doris Pitt Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Brett Barker

Dr. Hans Ulrich Aldag

Charles and Betty Barker

Estate of Barbara Alerding

Richard Barna & Eileen Maisel

Alice Rowan Swanson Foundation

Ms. Mary Rinne Barnett

Ms. Eugenie Allen & Mr. Jeremy Feigelson

Barnum Family Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Samuel E. Allen

Barry & Wendy Meyer Foundation

Mrs. Simin N. Allison

Barbara Bartlett Sloan & Howard Sloan

The Alvin & Peggy Brown Family Foundation

Bartolucci Family Fund

Alwan Family Trust

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Baruch

36


Nan Bases

Mark A. & Nancy Briggs Blaser

Mr. Carl Bates

Trust of Judith Blohm

Ms. Jocelyn Bauer

Blood Systems, Inc.

Ms. Elizabeth Baughan

Bloomberg

Mr. Peter J. Baughan

Ms. Susan L. Blount & Mr. Richard A. Bard

Bearden Family Charitable Trust

Mrs. Elizabeth Boardman Ross

Estate of Helga Becker

Mike & Julie Bock

William & Debbie Becker

Dr. & Mrs. William E. Bolton

Bob & Peggy Beckham

Mr. Noah Bonsey

Beeler / Domotorffy Charitable Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Calvin D. Boothe

Miss Freja Beha Erichsen

Ms. Charlotte T. Bordeaux

The Behemoth

Timothy Boudreau

Dr. Clyde H. Belgrave

Mr. & Ms. Kent R. Bourquin

The Ben & Mavis Huang Foundation

Mr. Craig Bowen & Ms. Esther Diez

Benjamin R. Bibler Memorial Foundation

Ms. Erin J. Bowman

Bennack-Polan Foundation

Ms. Lucille Boxhoorn & Ms. Susan M. Boxhoorn

Mr. Rob Bennett & Ms. Amy K. Butler

The Boye Foundation, Inc.

Mr. Philip Bentley

Brad Lemons Foundation

Dr. Robert Berenson

Mr. Neal C. Bradsher

Mrs. Kathleen Berger

Jodee R. Brandon

Estate of Gale Berlin

Dr. Elizabeth A. Holland & Mr. Gene Brandt

Mr. Jerry M. Bernhard

Cheryl & Ken Branson

Elayne P. Bernstein & Sol Schwartz

Brian E. Boyle Charitable Foundation

Estate of Jerome Bernstein

Bridgemill Foundation

Bernstein, Litowitz, Berger & Grossmann

Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Bridges

Mr. Richard L. Berry

Jim & Lynn Briody

Mr. William J. Berry

Broadway Cares / Equity Fights AIDS

Dennis M. & Carol Berryman

Broder Family Foundation

Rebecca, Gary, Eric and Elizabeth Bertch

The Brooks Family Foundation

The Besson’s Landing Foundation, Inc.

Ms. Kathleen Brosnan

Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Beswick

The Brown Foundation, Inc. of Houston

The Betty and Wes Foster Family Foundation

Clifford & Toni Brown

Betty West Mending Fund

Mr. & Mrs. David M. Brown

Ms. Victoria E. Beynon

Ms. Natanya Brown

Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey F. Bier

Phil & Valerie Brown

The Bill Maher Trust

Ms. Sharon Browning

Estate of Diane Biren

Mr. & Mrs. Ross D. Bruner

Mr. Jim Birkemeier

Mr. & Mrs. John Buckley

Ms. Margaret B. Birkemeier

Budget Bolt, Inc.

Victoria & Hank Bjorklund

Mr. Steven E. Buller & Ms. Anne L. Walsh

BlackRock Matching Gift Program

The Bunting Family Foundation–Fund B

Estate of Ellen L. Blair

Mrs. Joan M. Burke

Blaker Family Fund

Estate of William M. Burke

Bryan & Rebecca Blankfield

Mr. Robert W. Burns

37


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Clifford Burnstein

Churchill Family Charitable Fund

Ms. Linda Byars

Cisco Foundation

Thomas J. Byrne

Anne M. Clark

Mr. Clinton R. Stevenson, Jr.

Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton LLP

Calico Fund

Estate of Mary J. Cleary

Ms. Patricia Callahan & Mr. David Dee

The Clemens Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Gregory P. Callimanopulos

Clifton & Thelma Garvin Foundation

Ms. Charlotte Campbell

Cogan Family Foundation

Mr. John Y. Campbell & Ms. Susanna Peyton

Estate of Thelma Cohen

Martha Campbell

Cole Foundation

Candice Bergen Charitable Foundation

Prentiss and Lee Cole

Ms. Louise M. Cantrell

Cole-Crone Foundation, Inc.

Scott & Amy Canute

Virginia F. Coleman

Cape Flattery Foundation

The Collier Family Fund

Carl Jacobs Foundation

Commonwealth Cares Fund, Inc.

Mr. Sherman B. Carll

Concept2, Inc.

Dr. Louis Carnendran

Rose Frances Connelly

Caroline Blanton Thayer Charitable Trust

Coonan - Rosebrough Foundation

Caroll J. Haas Foundation

Paula Cooper & John Macrae III

Miss Jane G. Carruthers

Mrs. Jeannie Cooperman

Pamela & John Casaudoumecq

Kathleen & Randy Corbet

The Catharine Hawkins Foundation

Ms. Cecilia Cordova

John Cawley & Christine Marshall

Courtenay C. & Lucy Patten Davis Foundation

Mrs. Joan Challinor

CrankStart Foundation

William Chan

Mr. Ronald Creamer

Laurence & Michele Chang

Ms. Christina Crowley

Chapman Family Fund

Ms. Dianne Christensen

Ms. Abbe Levin

Currey & Company, Inc.

Chester F. Chapin Charitable Lead Unitrust

Mr. Josef Engel

Charles Spear Charitable Trust

Cushman Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. David D. Charlton

Cynthia and Robert J. Stetson Foundation

Estate of Joan Chatfield  - Taylor

Frances Dakers

Cheapoair.com

Estate of John F. Dalenberg

ChemADVISOR, Inc.

Dancing Tides Foundation

Ms. Ellen M. Chen

Danellie Foundation

Ms. Lucy Chen

Susanne & William Daniell

Ying Chen

Rollin and Mary Dart

Ms. Polly Cherner

Dr. Piyuse R. Das & Dr. Geeta Singhal Das

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Chlapaty

The David Geffen Foundation

Mr. Yvon Chouinard

David May Foundation

The Chris A. Wachenheim Foundation

The David Vickter Foundation

Dr. & Mrs. Richard Christenson

Joan K. Davidson (The J.M. Kaplan Fund)

Abigail & Lynn Christiansen

Ms. M. Patricia Davis & Mr. Wesley P. Callender Estate of

Chubb’s Matching Gift Program

Gerald L. Day

38


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Ms. Alison Hills & Mr. Kelly M. Klaus

Mr. & Mrs. Eric Jackson

Dr. Jan Hirsch

Estate of Karen S. Jackson

Mr. Charles Hirschler

Mrs. Marie Jacobs

Hitz Foundation

James & Anna Larson

Ms. Nancy Hoagland

James and Tanya Mahood Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Sturtevant Hobbs

The Jaquith Family Foundation

Dr. Michel Hoessly & Dr. Selina Luger

The JEC Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Creighton Hoffman

Jerome & Marlene Brody Foundation, Inc.

R. Bruce & Diana Lyte Holcomb

Jim Troxell Foundation

Holland & Knight

Jockers Family Foundation

Estate of Henry Holland

John & Patricia Antoine Charitable Trust

Mr. John M. Horner

John A. Baldessari Fund

Hotels.com

John A. Sellon Charitable Residual Trust

The Howard and Barbara Farkas Foundation

Mr. Colby Johnson

The Howard Bayne Fund

Mrs. Katherine Johnson

Frank & Nicky Howell

The Jonathan & Kathleen Altman Foundation

Dr. Judith Hsia & Mr. Ernest J. Isenstadt

Ms. Joan H. Jones

Mr. Po-Wen Huang

Mr. Lyle V. Jones

Rand Huebsch

The Joseph F. McCrindle Foundation

Hufnagel Family Charitable Gift Fund

Joseph H. Mitchell Giving Account

Dr. & Mrs. Carl C. Hug, Jr.

Josephine B. Haas Fund

Ms. Nancy Hughes

Judith McBean Foundation

Dr. & Mrs. Matthew H. Hulbert

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Jungmann

Mr. Lee Hultgren

Andrew Justin and Family

The Human Fund

Kabam

The Human Rights Project, Inc.

Mr. Thomas Kailath

Carla & Paul Hummel

Geoffrey & Michele Kalish

Sara & David Hunt

Mr. Kenneth Kamins & Ms. Judith Selbst

The Hunter - White Foundation

Katharina and Joseph Schober Foundation

I.J. and Hilda M. Breeden Foundation

Ms. Annie Rorrer

Estate of Leah Ice

Mr. Michael Katin

Dr. Omer Ilahi

The Kaufman Family Foundation

In Memory of Carol Lindstrom

Mr. & Mrs. Avinash Kaushik

In Memory of Helen Sellers Davis

Mr. & Mrs. Louis Kay

ING Group

Mr. & Mrs. Glen Keane

Estate of James D. Ingram

Keefer Family Charitable Trust

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy N. Ingram

Mr. & Mrs. William M. Keeler

Intex Solutions, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Keiser

Dr. Brian Ip

Keith & Mary Kay McCaw Family Foundation

Ira A. Roschelle MD Family Foundation

The Keith Haring Foundation

The Irving Foundation, Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Keith

Irving S. Weinstein Philanthropic Fund #4

Todd & Maggie Keller

J. W. Kieckhefer Foundation

Mr. Ogden E. Kellogg Sr.

Mr. & Ms. Charles John Jacklin

Mr. Randall Kempner

39


Kerby Family Foundation

The Laverna Hahn Charitable Trust

Dr. Jules A. Kernen

Dr. David M. Lawrence

Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Kerns

Lee & Luis Lainer Family Foundation

The Kevin Bailey and Pat Reilly Fund

Ms. Cherin Lee

Ms. Mary Ellen Keyser

Mr. Geoffrey Lee

Jane and Paul Khoury

Mr. & Mrs. Henry Lee

Mr. & Mrs. John Kim

Philip and Cynthia Lee

Mrs. Cornelia Kittredge

Leerink Swann, LLC

Mr. Michael Klein

Mr. & Mrs. Stanford G. Lehne

Dr. & Mrs. Don Kleinmuntz

Mr. Thomas A. Lehrer

Estate of Leroy C. Klema

The Leir Charitable Foundations

Pete Klosterman

Mr. Jeffrey D. Leppink & Ms. Jane A. Freeman

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Klosterman

Ms. Ruth Lepson

Mr. James M. Klosty

Estate of Evelyn Lerner

Mr. George R. Knapp

Leslie Goldberg Charity Fund

Mrs. Joyce M. Kneeland

Leslie Peter Foundation

Kofax, Inc.

Lester Poretsky Family Foundation

Dr. Claudia A. Komer

Estate of Andrew Ben Letson

Mrs. Marlise C. Konort

Ms. Anne Levin

Mr. Takashi Kousaka

Lewis I. Cohen Fund

Mr. Axel Kramer & Ms. Patricia Hallstein

Dr. Kathy Lewis

Caleb Kramer & Ryan Allen

Marjorie R. Lewis

Mrs. Ursula Krause

Ms. Nancy Mary Lewis

Krell Family Foundation

Mr. Randall A. Lewis

Peggy G. Kriegel

LexisNexis

Mr. & Mrs. Hayder Kuba

Estate of Julia S. Li

Mr. & Mrs. E. Joseph Kubat

Liberty Garden

Kuhn Foundation

H.W. & Patricia Lichtenberger

Thom Kuhn & Diane O’Connell

Mr. Charles Liechti & Mrs. Helgard Liechti

Mr. Surender Kumar Jain & Mrs. Chitra Jain

Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Inc.

Emily Kunreuther

Mr. & Mrs. Adrian Lyne

Ms. Karen K. Kurnick

The Lynn R. & Karl E. Prickett Fund

Mr. Laurence L. Spitters

Stephen J. Lynton

L & S Soll Fund

The Neall Family Charitable Foundation

Nicki H. Ladany Trust Lake Family Foundation Mr. Steven Lamb & Ms. Sally Lamb Mr. Walter Lambeth & Ms. Jenna Kimberlin Lance Spain Charity Fund Dr. John E. Lane

Gifts -in-kind and pro bono support msf is grateful to the following companies for their gifts in  -  kind and pro bono support of our medical programs around the world:

Robert & Diane Lang

Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP

Lanza Family Foundation

FedEx

Ms. Polly Lau

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP

Mr. Albert Laub

40


Mr. & Mrs. Robert Macdonald

Dorothy S. McPherson

Jane C. MacElree

Ms. Christina Mednick

Estate of Mary C. MacEwan

The Melrose Fund

Madden/ Masson Family Fund

Estate of Doretha Melvin

Vince & Abigail Maddi

Mendelsohn Family

Mr. Vic Makau

Ms. Helen Mendler

Jane and John Malarkey

Dr. Richard Menning

Ms. Janet Malcolm Botsford

June & John Mercer Merch Lackey, Inc.

Malcolm Hewitt Wiener Foundation

Mrs. Alice D. Mertz

Mr. Anthony M. Malizia

Mr. Paul V. Messina

Dr. Albert P. Malvino

Mr. Joseph W. Metz

Manaaki Foundation

Mrs. Marie-Noelle Meyer

Estate of Louise Mangini

Mrs. Salma Mikhail

Mr. Josh R. Manion & Ms. Julie K. Oberweis

Mr. Colin Miller

Mr. & Ms. James Newton

Mr. David B. Miller

The Marc Haas Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Jack E. Miller

Dr. Carole L. Marcus

Mr. Jonathan Miller & Ms. Myriam Barenbaum

The Margaret H. and James E. Kelley Foundation

Lewis & Jean Miller

Mr. Eugene Markus

Mr. and Dr. Robert A. Miller

Marquis George MacDonald Foundation

Walter E. D. Miller

Martha J. Weiner Charitable Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Mills

Fay Chandler

Mintec, Inc.

Estate of George W. Martinek

The Mishaw Family

Ms. Mary J. Wallach

Stephen & Lucia Missall

Mary Lynn Richardson Fund

Mr. Charles Dee Mitchell

Mary Owen Borden Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Fredrick Mitchell

Mr. & Mrs. John W. Mason

Mr. Ray Mithun

Estate of Walter R. Mathews, Jr.

Mike and Susan Mokelke Lani Monroe Galetto

The Mattsson McHale Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Monroe

Max and Yetta Karasik Family Foundation

Ms. Tertia Moore

Mr. & Mrs. Steven Mayer

Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Morawetz

Ms. Barbara C. McGinnis

Dr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Morel

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen P. McCandless

Marti Morfitt & Patrick Weber

Mr. & Mrs. Mike McCarthy

Morgan Stanley

Mary & Tom McCarthy

The Moriah Fund

Ms. Mary McDyer

Mr. & Mrs. G. Glen Morie

Mr. & Mrs. Paul McEvoy, Jr.

Frances L. Morris

Douglas & Patricia McGrady

Ruth & Morris Williams, Jr.

Brian McInerney & Nancy Shepherd

Alan & Cheryl Morrow

MCJ Amelior Foundation

MSI International East

Estate of Ruth H. McKay

Ms. Anita Muchlado

Dr. Kennon P. McKee

Mueller Charitable Gift Fund

Andrew and Jill McMahon

Brigitta U. Mueller, MD

Ms. Anne F. McMillen

Father Martin Muller

41


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Mushett Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. David Pauker

The Namaste Foundation, Inc.

Paul & Patricia Hogan Charitable Foundation

The Nancy Allison Perkins Foundation

Paul Bechtner Foundation

The Nancy Taylor Memorial Fund

Paul Funk Charitable Account

Dr. Amir Nashat

PB Foundation, Inc.

George Nast

Mr. & Mrs. Morris B. Pearl

Mr. Edward C. Naylor

Ms. Prudence Pease Cutler

John Nelson & Kate Gessner

Mark & Laurie Pedry

Netscout Systems, Inc.

Amanda Peet & David Benioff

Estate of Norman J. Newcomb

Dr. Melike Pekmezci

Mr. Tri Nguyen

Dr. & Mrs. Mark Pentecost, Jr.

Mr. Herb Nichols

Dr. Angela Peterman & Colonel Edward Ponatoski

Julius & Carol Nicolai

Ms. Elizabeth I. Peters

Nobel Peace Prize Forum

Mr. & Mrs. John D. Peters

Ms. Jeanne Nolan

Sarah M. & Michael D. Peterson

Norman Foundation, Inc.

Theodore Petroulas & Nasimeh Alikhani

North Peninsula Jewish Teen Foundation

Mr. John Ira Petty

Mr. & Mrs. Lowell E. Northrop III

Estate of Jane G. Pfeiffer

Northwest Federal Credit Union Foundation

Estate of Paul Pfeiffer, Jr.

Estate of Dennis R. Norwood

Dr. Tuan V. Phan, MD

Mrs. Joan K. Novick

Michael & Jane Pharr

Mrs. Emily H. Nugent

Philadelphia Stock Exchange Foundation

Oak Lodge Foundation

Troper-Wojcicki Foundation

The Oak Tree Philanthropic Foundation

Ms. Nancy J. Phillips

Vania & Barbara O’Connor

Philotimo Foundation

Grazyna & Michal Odyniec

Geoff Pike

John O’Farrell and Gloria Principe

Pinecrest Fund

Joseph D. O’Gorman

Polaner Family Supporting Foundation

Omega/Cinema Props

PolicyLink

One Man Left Studios, LLC

Dr. & Mrs. Frank P. Polyak

Yoko Ono Lennon

Mr. Donald Porteous

Mr. Michael L. Overton

Sarah & Richard Porter

Jane Dale Owen

Dr. Robert T. Porter

William R. Padnos

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Porter

Ms. Marcia Page

Posner Partners

Wayne Paglieri

Potel/Blum Family Fund

Mr. Rinaldo Pagnucco

Mr. Louis E. Potempa

Ms. F. Taylor Pape

Richard Pozen, MD & Ann Silver Pozen

Mr. & Mrs. A. Neil Pappalardo

Praxis Foundation

Mr. Chang K. Park

Premier Access Insurance Company

Mr. Rick Parod

Ms. Gretchen Preston & Dr. Gregory P. Meisner

Ms. Christa Patterson

Joe & Kathy Pretlow

Patuxent Investment Corporation

Robert O. Preyer, Professor Emeritus

Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Patz

Mr. & Mrs. G. Kent Price

42


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Estate of Mary Felton Price

Mr. Paul E. Robertson

Mr. G. Daniel Prigmore

The Robin O’Brien Fund

The Protege Partners, LLC

Mrs. Audrey Robinson

Ms. Margaret M. Prowse

The Rock Brook Consulting Group

Mark & Sueann Pugh

Richard Rockefeller, MD

Mr. John Purdon

Ms. Laura Roeder

Qatalyst Partners

Rogers & Goffigon

Mr. John Queralt

Mr. Christopher W. Rogers

R.F. Technologies, Inc.

Jean Lucier Roland

R/GA

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Roland

Dr. Lee S. Shearer & Mr. John D. Radice

Dr. Chris Rolitsky

Rakitzis Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Ron Howard

Dr. James Darryl Ramsey

Mr. Lawrence Rose

Ms. Maja Ramsey

Sheldon Rose

Sascha N. Rand & Kalpana Gajjar

Rosen Family Foundation

Mr. Sal Randazzo

Ms. Harriet Rosenbloom

.

Linda E. Ransom & James J. Capra, Jr

Mr. Gregory G. Rapawy & Ms. Jessica S. Boger Red Hot Chili Peppers Red Mountain Fund Mr. & Mrs. Sam K. Reed Mr. Jonathan Reed The Refinery Mr. Mark Reiber Linda and Richard Reiss Rennoc Corporation Foundation, Inc. Estate of Florence Resnikoff The Rhoades Foundation Richard & Marianne Reinisch Foundation

Bruce and Lori Laitman Rosenblum Mr. Michael Rosenthal Nancy & Paul Ross Roth Armstrong Hayes Foundation Estate of Marvin Rothenberg Mrs. Julia K. Rowse Rsw Foundation, Inc RTJC Hogan Family Foundation Dr. Dean Rubine & Dr. Ruth Sample Mr. & Mrs. Raymond L. Ruder Jack and Susan Rudin James & Barbara Rutherford Estate of Margaret Ruzzo Ryan Memorial Foundation

The Richard and Natalie Jacoff Foundation

S.H. Cowell Foundation

Richard E. Rudolph Family Foundation

Ladan Sahafi

Estate of Jon A. Rinnander

Mr. Akram Saigh

Dr. Petra & Randy Rissman

Mr. Thomas P. Saine

Frank & Joan Ritchey

Estate of Isabella Salman

Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP

Ms. Sheila Saltiel

Robert & Gloria Sherman Family Foundation

Donald & Laura Sanders

Robert & Maxine Hannifin Trust

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Sanfacon

The Robert and Betty Forchheimer Foundation

Sargent Family Foundation

Robert Ellis Foundation

Mr. William Sarnoff

The Robert M. Schiffman Foundation

Erv and Kathy Sauer

Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Gould

Mr. William M Savery

Robert W. Baird and Company

David & Beth Sawi

Ms. Lora J. Robertson

Estate of Jane E. Sawyer

43


The Schaffner Family Foundation

Mr. & Mrs. David J. Stevenson

Scheidel Foundation

Drs. Mark & Mary Ellen Stinski

Ms. Rebecca F. Schiller

Ruth Stoltz

Schoellerman Foundation

Mr. Oliver W. Stone

Susan R.S. Schofield

Mr. Paul A. Stotts

Peter & Jocelyn Schultz

Andrew & Theresa Strain

Rosanne & Alan Schulz

Mr. & Mrs. George D. Strohmeyer

Bob and Kimberly Scott

Mr. & Mrs Maxwell Sturgis

Ms. Nadya K. Scott

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Sukup

Seafood Supply Company

Sullivan & Cromwell

Tim & Judith Sear

Mrs. Frances W. Sullivan

The Seifert Family Foundation Dr. Shobha Sharma Sheerin Family Fund Shevlin Mr. Michael Shields The Shifting Foundation Dr. & Mrs. Peter Shimkin Estate of Albert L. Shostack Ann Monteith Silberman Estate of Elizabeth Simms Simple Actions Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey A. Skoff The Skolnick Foundation Ms. Betty Slaymaker Mr. & Mrs. Rod Smallwood Solstice Bahamas Vacation Rental Cherida Collins Smith Lawrence & Ann Smith Estate of Nancy P. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Sherif A. Soliman Dr. A. E. Solomon Dr. & Ms. Allen Solomon The Solstice Foundation, Inc. Southern Cross Fund Andrew & Sandra Soye Mr. & Mrs. Dan Spicer Stack Exchange, Inc. Ms. Beverly Ann Stadum Mr. David Stanford Estate of Blanche K. Stanton Stein Family Charitable Fund Estate of Wayne K. Stein Estate of Harold & Ruth Stern

$5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous (9) Anonymous Bosch A & J Saks Foundation Ms. Arlene H. Gage Mr. Martin Granger Activision Blizzard, Inc. Mr. Edward M. Acton Mrs. Mary W. Adams Mr. Samuel Adams Advanced Computer Concepts Heinz & Margaret Aeschbach Asha & Sajjan Agarwal Agora Group, Inc. Jayant & Preeti S. Ahuja Mr. Kasser Akil Michael and Pamela Albert Mr. Yves Albouy Alchemy Foundation Alesia Family Foundation Alice Lawrence Foundation, Inc. Allen Foundation, Inc. Ms. Edith Allen Mr. Etienne Ardant Ms. Sallie W. Arens Argon Masking, Inc. Pedro M. Arguello Ark Foundation Armstrong Family Foundation The Armstrong Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Norman Arnheim Madeleine & David Arnow Mr. George E. Arnstein Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Asher

44


Mr. Rahul Ashok & Ms. Fiza Warsi

Ms. Jann J. Bellamy

Mara & Keith Aspinall

Mr. Tony W. Broski, Sr

Mr. & Mrs. Kurt Asplundh

Brothers Industry Fund

Latham & Watkins LLP

Ms. Brown Johnson

Drs. Howard & Colleen Austin

Mr. Albert Brown, Jr.

Mr. Emanuel Ax

Ms. Catherine D. Brown

Dr. & Mrs. Alan A. Axelson

Mr. Douglas Brown

Mr. Hugh Aycock

Ms. Jane A. Brown

Julian and Stephanie Ayer

Mr. Jorg Brown

Dr. Victoria Azara

Dr. Nancy Brown

Mr. & Mrs. Michael

Mr. Robert W. Brown

Azhadi Dr. Kent P. Bach

Ms. Kaci J. Burger

Joan R. Baer

Ms. Elaine Burke

Ms. Martha Baer & Ms. Sara Miles

Ms. Laura Burkhardt

Mr. Michael Baier

Caroline B. Burnett

Dr. Julia P. Bailey

Mr. & Mrs. David H. Burns

Ravi & Jill Bajaj

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Burns

Ms. Suzanne Bakdash

Dr. & Mrs. Howard Burt

Carl & Suzon Baker

Ms. Katherine B. Bush

Mr. Leland L. Baney

Mr. Nathan T. Bush

Bank Adjustment Holding

Susan Okie Bush

Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey Barker

Ms. Carol H. Duncan

Mr. & Mrs. Gentry Barnes

James Duncan, MD

Baron & Baron

Mr. Kevin A. Dunn

Ms. Sandra Barrett

Mr. David J. DuPont

The Barrington Foundation, Inc.

Mr. Joseph E. Durham T

Mr. Mike Barry

he Dusky Foundation

Ms. Prudence Barry

Mr. Joseph Dwaileebe

John & Susan Bartocci

Terry and Jane Dwyer

Bassford Remele

Dr. Adam Kim

Mr. & Mrs. Gordon R. Batcheller

Mr. & Mrs. William A. Kimbrough

Mr. Stephen A. Bates Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Kent Kime

Ms. Gretchen Batra

Mr. & Mrs. Darrell S. Kindred

Mr. Cecilio Batres

Jeffrey & Deborah King

David and Anne Baxter

Mr. J. Eric King & Ms. Kathlene Thiel

Mr. Timothy Beare

Mr. Patrick E. King

Estate of Mary June Beck

Mr. & Mrs. Alan C. Kingston

Ms. Cristie J. Becker

Ms. Jessica Knight Douglas

Dr. and Mrs. Jason Beckermann

Mr. Jerry Knoll

The Becket Family Foundation

Knopf Family Foundation

Russ & Cordy Beckstead

Mr. William Koenigsberg

Becky & Doug Pruitt Family Fund

Mr. Roger L. Kohn

Mr. & Mrs. James F. Behm

Mr. John Koone

Beilfuss Charitable Giving Fund

Mr. Ronald Kopacz

45


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

Mr. John D. Kopp, Jr.

Mr. Jim Ritter

Mr. Robert Lindsay

Elisa Rivlin & Eric Nadler

Ms. Elicia Ling

Robert J. Frisby Foundation

David & Amy Lippitt

Estate of Robert N. Riley

The Lipton Foundation

Mr. Christopher W. Ruddy

Lisa Duke Foundation

Mr. Jack F. Ruffle

Dr. & Mrs. Harold W. Lischner

Mr. & Ms. Erik O. Samwel

Mr. David W. Locascio

San Pablo Senior Center

Mr. David Loeb Jr. Loft Fund

Professor & Mrs. Richard H. Schlagel

Estate of Jennifer W. Mack

Mr. Edward Schmidt

Estate of David MacKenzie

Mr. Friedrich W. Schmidt

Sandy and Carolyn Mackenzie

Ms. Elizabeth Schneider

Ms. Marcia T. MacKinnon

Mr. & Mrs. Tim Shaw

Kathy & Brian MacLean

Ms. Barbara C. Shea

Ms. Clara MacNamee

Mr. & Mrs. Jerold Shea

Ms. Ann K. Macrory

Hope & Jeffrey Sheffield

Ms. Mary C. Madden

Mr. Alan Stewart

Drs. Mark & Kathryn Peilen

Mr. Matthew Stichick

Mr. Robert Penfield

Donald & Mary Stirling

Ying Peng

Ms. Irene Stober Murphy

Ms. Pamela Pescosolido

Sean and Sandra Sweeney

Mr. John M. Angelo

Sweet Maria’s Coffee

Mr. & Mrs. A. Neil Peterson

Ms. Laurie Swett

Mr. Nicholas Petraglia

Sy Syms Foundation

Leslie Petteys

Dr. Susan Sypolt

The Pew Charitable Trusts

Mr. Julius Szelagiewicz

Freddie & Marisa Peyerl

Mrs. Vernon B. Thomas

Mr. & Mrs. Rahn G. Pitzer

Dr. Catherine Todd

Planet Productions

Mr. Fabrice N. Toka

Poets for the Planet Fund

Tom Anzalone Charity Fund

Ms. Cynthia Point

Mr. & Mrs. Howard Wang

Ms. Judith Polzer & Mr. Julian Flear

Ms. Sylvia Ware

Printpack, Inc.

Mrs. Lynn Warshow

Mr. William Prinzmetal

Dave & Lori Wathen

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Prior

Mr. Alexander Watson

John & Barbara Prochnau

Mary & Steve Watson

Helen Raffel Dr. Kevin & Mrs. Karla Rahn The Stewart J. Rahr Foundation Mrs. Julia F. Rainer Kanwal & Deepraj Randhawa Dr. Mohammad H. Razavi Dr. Homaune Razavi Dr. Kjell-Arne Ringbakk

46


Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières US Annual Report 2014

People first since 1971 TO MAKE a DONATION 1-888-392-0392 www.doctorswithoutborders.org/donate/index.cfm Doctors Without Borders 333 Seventh Avenue, 2nd Floor New York, ny 10001-5004. For more information about our programs or ways to make a generous donation, please call our Donor Services team at 212-679-6800. On behalf of our field staff and the people we assist worldwide, thank you.

TO CONTACT US Tel: 212 - 679 - 6 800 Fax: 212 - 679 - 7016 www.doctorswithoutborders.org

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