A safe space for LGBTQI+ patients in San Pedro Sula
Making care more inclusive isn’t just the right thing to do – it saves lives.
It’s late afternoon on a quiet street corner in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, but for a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) team, the main work is about to begin. Several boxes sit on the curb holding dozens of sexual and reproductive health kits to be distributed to LGBTQI+ people and sex workers – some of the city’s most marginalised communities. As an MSF truck pulls in, the team prepares to load the boxes and set off for a night of outreach work.
“The community gets to know us and recognises our staff,” says Armando Salinas, MSF’s health promotion supervisor. “We tell people: ‘We are here with you, we can help you, trust us, and come to our services because they are for you.’”
During these visits, the health promotion team provides education and awareness on sexual and reproductive health. For many marginalised people, this care and support would otherwise be inaccessible due to discrimination and exclusion in health care settings. This can discourage them from accessing care and lead to serious consequences for their health: LGBTQI+ people and sex workers are at greater risk of contracting HIV/AIDS, certain cancers, mental health conditions, and other health conditions, and are often targets of sexual and gender-based violence, which itself can cause a range of medical and psychological consequences requiring care.
With these factors in mind, in 2021 MSF opened a clinic in San Pedro Sula, the second-largest city in Honduras, tailored to the needs of LGBTQI+ people, sex workers, and survivors of sexual violence. With the values of inclusivity and respect at its core, the program offers comprehensive medical and mental health care in a space free of stigma and discrimination, where all patients are treated with dignity and respect and get the care they need.
“We approached the community, gained their trust, and learned about the needs,” says Diana Davila, MSF’s mobile health manager. “Based on that, we created strategies to improve access to care."

What LGBTQI+ patients face at the doctor’s office
Societal stigmas and prejudice against LGBTQI+ people often surface in health care settings, turning them into a hostile environment where patients face being misgendered, outed, or mistreated based on their identity. In the absence of adequate health care settings, many people put off going to a doctor until their health has deteriorated, sometimes to the point that it’s too late.
“When we go to a public hospital or a health center, we're always faced with the looks of doctors who don't have any training in diversity or inclusion,” says Jefry, a patient at MSF’s clinic in San Pedro Sula. “They're always judging, they're always giving us dirty looks. And that makes us not want to go to a health center to receive medical care.”

In Honduras, medical forms and records use the name and gender assigned at birth in accordance with patients’ national ID documents. “From the moment you enter [a health facility], they won’t call you by your name,” Salinas explains. “If I'm a trans woman, they'll always list the male gender. If I'm a trans man, they'll list the female gender, not the gender with which I identify. And that's where the differentiation of services begins.”
In many places around the world, health professionals do not receive the training required to help LGBTQI+ patients, resulting in knowledge gaps and inappropriate care. That’s why the MSF clinic is tailored to the patients’ needs, including sexual and reproductive health care, mental health care, and a robust health promotion program to overcome mistrust and misinformation arising from decades of exclusion.
The facility also has an in-house laboratory offering rapid testing, which means patients don’t have to leave the safe space of the clinic to access their test results. “We come here and feel confident getting tested,” says Melissa, a trans patient and sex worker. “We feel at home.”

Staff at the MSF clinic are trained on diversity and inclusion to ensure patients’ identities are treated with respect. This includes gestures like asking a patient for their preferred pronoun and calling them by their chosen name instead of what’s on their national ID. “We give people the opportunity to present themselves as they see themselves and how they feel, and we treat them accordingly,” says Salinas.
Mental health support without judgement
In a small office at the end of a corridor decorated with rainbow-hued drawings made by patients, 20-year-old David settles into a couch for a therapy session with MSF psychologist Jessica Zúniga. “When I arrived here, I was in a very bad place,” he explains. “I’ve been attacked in public. It makes me afraid … and there’s no way to protect ourselves, no place we can go to or call to report it.”
Experiencing discrimination and being targeted for who you are can have a profound impact on mental health. LGBTQI+ people face a greater risk of suicide and suicidal thoughts, mood disorders and anxiety, and substance abuse. At the same time, seeking mental health support can be daunting to those who may feel unable to express their true selves to a therapist.
“Patients tell us that sometimes other providers mix their values, whether social or religious, into the consultation, and that's why they sometimes feel uncomfortable and discriminated against,” explains Zúniga. "When patients first come to me, they put up a barrier because they have the impression that maybe they’ll receive the same kind of [prejudiced] care here. But once patients open up to the process and see that this is a safe, confidential, and prejudice-free space, they tell us they feel quite accepted here.”
Like many, David was initially hesitant to seek care. “I was afraid that there would be a problem with talking about my issues in such an open way,” he says. “When I realized there was this place that was specifically for the community, I felt safer. And that's why I decided to come.” He’s now been attending therapy for a year, which has helped him build coping skills to face his fears.
For Jefry, the experience was similar. “The first time I accessed mental health care was at MSF, and I think it marked a turning point in my life," he shares. “I now consider myself a stronger, more emotionally intelligent person, and I feel I can better cope with the discrimination and rejection I face or may face every day."
A model of dignity and respect
Since 2021, the MSF clinic in San Pedro Sula has provided a range of medical and mental health services for people from vulnerable and marginalised communities. Sexual and reproductive health is a focal point, with services such as testing for sexually transmitted diseases, including rapid HIV tests; preventive vaccination; contraceptives, including injectables, IUDs, implants, and oral medications; and pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP and PEP) for protection against HIV. It also has a robust mental health program, including an emergency hotline for patients in crisis, such as victims of sexual violence.

“MSF is more than a doctor's office or a clinic,” says Jefry. “It's a safe space we can go to without fear of being rejected or disrespected, where I can receive medical care without any prejudice.”
No one should be denied access to medical and mental health care simply because of who they are or whom they love. MSF is committed to ensuring that every individual, regardless of identity, has access to the comprehensive care they need. Making care more inclusive isn’t just the right thing to do – it saves lives.
Before Jefry started coming to MSF’s clinic, “I'd never had access to psychological care,” he says. “The first time I did was at MSF, and I think it marked a turning point in my life.” Photographer: Fritz Pinnow Kawas | Date: 06/01/2026 | Location: Honduras
MSF health promotion manager Armando Salinas (center) and his team prepare to set out for “night outreach,” a weekly outreach activity to foster connection and trust with marginalized communities such as LGBTQI+ people and sex workers. During these visits, the team distributes sexual and reproductive health kits and provides health education, psychosocial support, and information about accessing health care in the safe, inclusive space of the MSF clinic. Photographer: Fritz Pinnow Kawas | Date: 22/08/2025 | Location: Honduras
MSF health promoter Kenia Donaire prepares sexual and reproductive health kits to be distributed during the team’s weekly outreach activities in marginalized communities, including LGBTQI+ people and sex. Photographer: Fritz Pinnow Kawas | Date: 20/08/2025 | Location: Honduras
Melissa, a trans woman and sex worker, poses for a picture in the waiting room at MSF’s clinic in San Pedro Sula. “MSF is very important for the LGBTQI+ community because it has included us in places where we feel safe coming for a general check-up, PrEP treatment, or HIV tests.” Photographer: Fritz Pinnow Kawas | Date: 22/08/2025 | Location: HondurasEN_Article_ Honduras SPS inclusive care.docx
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Rebaone Mogoera
About Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is a global network of principled medical and other professionals who specialise in medical humanitarian work, driven by our common humanity and guided by medical ethics. We strive to bring emergency medical care to people caught in conflicts, crises, and disasters in more than 70 countries worldwide.
In South Africa, we currently run a non-communicable diseases (NCDs) project in Butterworth, Eastern Cape province, where we support the Department of Health (DoH) in improving care for patients with diabetes and hypertension. The project focuses on improving screening, diagnosis, management, and prevention of NCDs through advocacy, research, health promotion, training, and mentorship of Community Healthcare Workers.
MSF is also recognised as one of the pioneers in providing antiretroviral treatment (ART) in the public sector. It started the first HIV programme in South Africa in 1999. The organisation's earlier interventions in the country have primarily been on developing new testing and treatment strategies for HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis (TB) in Eshowe (Kwa-Zulu Natal) and Khayelitsha (Western Cape). The Eshowe project was handed over to DoH in 2023 after 12 years of operations. The Khayelitsha project was closed in 2020 after 22 years of activities and campaigning for improved HIV and TB treatment.
Other projects we have been involved in include our Migrant Project in the country's capital, Tshwane, which was handed over to authorities and a local Community-Based Organisation after building the capacity to work with undocumented populations. We also previously offered free, high-quality, and confidential medical care to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in Rustenburg, North West province.
To learn more about our work in South Africa, please visit this page on our website (www.msf.org.za). To support MSF’s work:
- SMS “JOIN” to 42110 to donate R30 Once-off
- Visit https://www.msf.org.za/donate