Yemen: ​ MSF hands over hospital in Taiz, Yemen, after a decade of care

Since 2015, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has operated the Mother and Child Hospital in Al-Houban, Taiz governorate — one of the few facilities providing free, high-quality healthcare in a region deeply affected by a more than a decade-long conflict. At the end of July 2025, after 10 years of service, MSF officially handed over the hospital to the Ministry of Health (MoH). Just before the handover, patients and the hospital equipment were moved to the new premises, jointly built by MSF and the MoH.

"After offering various medical services for over a million patients in our mother and child hospital in Taiz Houban over the past 10 years, we are handing over this facility to the Ministry of Health, fully staffed by well-trained professionals and equipped. At the same time, I find it very emotional to leave, after spending three years in this beautiful and challenging country with its incredible people", said Tila Muhammad, MSF country director, based in Sanaa.

Ambulances outside MSF’s Mother and Child hospital in Houban. Date: 15/09/2021 | Location: Houban | Photographer: Nuha Haider

Although the handover decision comes amid a challenging humanitarian landscape, including recent reductions in global aid, suspension of USAID funding and regional tensions – which have all further strained the health systems in Yemen - the handover was envisioned years ago. Namely, the transition itself started when MSF decided to work in co-management with the MoH.

When MSF started the intervention in Taiz Houban in 2015, the area was identified as one of the most underserved in Taiz. ​ 

“Since the opening we have been providing essential healthcare, emergency services for children under five, comprehensive maternity care including C-sections, treatment for malnutrition and more. We have also responded to outbreaks, supported complicated pregnancies and offered lifesaving referrals, as well as trauma care due to the conflict. Over the years, the 168-bed hospital evolved into a full-scale general hospital offering critical care to the local population,” says Allan Silver Emuna, MSF Hospital Director.

Dr Saeeda Ahmed checks on a premature baby in the newborn unit at MSF’s Mother and Child hospital in Houban. Date: 15/09/2021 | Location: Houban | Photographer: Nuha Haider

The impact of MSF’s intervention in Taiz Houban over the past decade is significant: MSF treated some 185,000 children under five years old in our ambulances, while over 200,000 were admitted to the emergency room. MSF staff assisted with 67,000 deliveries and provided post-natal care to 133,000 patients. We treated 13,846 children and babies for malnutrition, performed over 10,000 surgical interventions, and admitted 32,165 children to pediatric and neonatal wards. In total, over a million patients received treatment in Taiz Houban Hospital over the past 10 years. 

With a population of around 940,000 people in Taiz City and surrounding areas, patients often travelled long distances to reach the hospital as, for many of them, it was the only place they could access healthcare. ​ 

Laboratory technician Islah Abdul Razzaq tests a sample from a patient at MSF’s Mother and Child hospital in Houban. Date: 03/10/2021 | Location: Houban | Photographer: Nuha Haider

Abrar Mohammed, MSF health promotion supervisor, has worked in the hospital since the beginning. She explains the bond built between the community and MSF over the years: “Overall, the community has a great respect and appreciation towards the hospital, as it is the only facility providing free of charge services, related to mother and child health care, although, sometimes there is also frustration within the community, as it doesn't cover all the health needs of the local community. In private hospitals in Taiz Houban, a basic c-section can cost up to 1,000 USD, which is ten times the average monthly salary, if you have a job." 

In addition to co-building the new hospital, MSF will support the authorities with incentives for the hospital staff, medicines and other relevant goods and supplies necessary for the normal operation of the Taiz Houban hospital for the next six months. This will ensure a proper handover and continuation of services for the local community.

Health educator Kafaa Abdul Raqeeb talks to mothers in the inpatient therapeutic feeding center (ITFC) at MSF's Mother and Child hospital in Houban about complementary food to help prevent future malnutrition in their children. Date: 16/09/2021 | Location: Houban | Photographer: Nuha Haider

MSF is not leaving Yemen or its people. MSF remains present in the country and offers healthcare services to the people in ten out of 22 governorates.

MSF has been working in Yemen since 1986 and has maintained a continuous presence in the country since 2007. Years of conflict have decimated Yemen’s public infrastructure, while millions of people lack access to clean water, food and medical care. MSF’s work in Yemen and around the world is guided solely by medical needs and carried out without influence from political, religious, or economic agendas. This is made possible by our independent funding — over 95 per cent of which comes from private donors, allowing us to assess needs freely, access communities and directly deliver the assistance we provide.

Read more about our activities in Yemen

Msizi Keca

Communications and Media Intern, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa

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:

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