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mental health services in the southernmost provinces of Thailand
An MSF psychologist provides an individual consultation to a patient. Thailand, July 2019.  
© MSF
We work to provide mental health support to vulnerable communities in southern Thailand.

We are working in collaboration with both government and non-governmental organisations to provide counselling services for the most vulnerable sections of the community, especially women and orphans, in areas affected by unrest.

The psychological support includes individual and group counselling, psychosocial education and stress management.

Additional medical services such as physiotherapy and pain management are also offered.

Our activities in 2024 in Thailand

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF in Thailand in 2024 In 2024, Médecins Sans Frontières ran two projects in Thailand to address the healthcare needs of people affected by conflict.
Thailand IAR map 2024
Country map for the IAR 2024.
© MSF

For seven years, our teams worked to improve the provision of basic medical services and mental health support in the country’s Deep South, a region that has been plagued by sporadic fighting for two decades.  

We collaborated with local organisations in the provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat, to increase access to healthcare, especially for survivors of ill-treatment who are hesitant to seek assistance, or who are excluded from existing services. We ran a holistic programme, with a particular focus on mental health, which included individual and group therapy, psychosocial education, and stress management. We also offered physiotherapy, pain management, and social support, and organised community-based activities to raise awareness of mental health issues.  

Due to an overall decrease in the level and intensity of the violence in recent years, and our decision to hand some of our activities over to our partner organisations, we closed the project in June.

Meanwhile, in northern Thailand, we assisted patients from Kayah and Kayin states[1] in eastern Myanmar with referrals for specialised healthcare in facilities in northern Thailand, as they are unable to obtain these services over the border, due to the ongoing conflict.
 

[1] also known as Karenni and Karen states.

 

in 2024
 
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When MSF criticised the forced repatriation of Hmong to Laos

Project Update 31 Dec 2009
 
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MSF welcomes promising HIV vaccine trial with cautious optimism

Project Update 28 Sep 2009
 
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MSF denounces the policy of forced repatriation of the Hmong population of Huai Nam Khao camp back to Laos, and refuses to work under military pressure

Press Release 20 May 2009
 
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Report 20 May 2009
 
Thailand

Providing HIV/AIDS treatment and care to prisoners in Thailand

Project Update 1 Dec 2008

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