41. Under careful supervision, this Sudan schoolboy is treating his classmates' eyes for trachoma. This will ensure that treatment countinues after the trachoma control team leaves the district Subject(s): Health PersonnelHealth PromotionChildPublic HealthWorld Health Organization
42. This little boy is having an eye check-up which should ensure that any threat to his sight is recognized in time and prevented. Many thousands of less fortunate children go blind unnecessarily every year for want of simple precautions or low-cost treatment Subject(s): Health PersonnelPublic HealthChildWorld Health Organization
43. Members of the trachoma control team examine an elderly patient in a rural area. Although trachoma is the principle cause of blindness here, many cases are also found of such ailments as cataract and glaucome. Some cases will respond to simple surgical treatment Subject(s): Health PersonnelPublic HealthWorld Health Organization.
44. The silver screen flickers in the Indian night. Television can convey a particularly vivid health message, but most developing countries sets are rare outside the large towns Subject(s): Public HealthHealth EducationWorld Health Organization
45. Cholera can thrive where poverty, overcrowding and primitive sanitation are found together, as in this Asian city Subject(s): Public HealthWorld Health Organization
46. Ancient and modern meet in Kazakhstan. A flying doctor service brings urgent medical care to rural populations whose home is the tradiaitonal nomas'd tent Subject(s): AircraftEmergency Medical ServicesHealth PersonnelWorld Health Organization
47. Trained Ayurvedic practitioners treating a girl with rheumatoid arthritis. Medical ethics today has ceased to be a matter for physicians alone,but is rather the concern of the whole community Subject(s): Medicine, TraditionalChildWorld Health Organization
48. A therapist trying to restore the use of a patient's rheumatic fingers Subject(s): World Health Organization
49. Miss G. learns again to eat by herself, using a specially designed spoon Subject(s): WomenWorld Health Organization