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DUKAS_185094514_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Yagana Mohammed sits inside the UNFPA-supported reproductive health clinic at the Muna Garage IDP camp, after receiving a contraceptive implant as part of her family planning care. The clinic offers essential services to displaced women, promoting safe reproductive choices and maternal health in crisis-affected communities.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094492_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Yagana Mohammed sits inside the UNFPA-supported reproductive health clinic at the Muna Garage IDP camp, after receiving a contraceptive implant as part of her family planning care. The clinic offers essential services to displaced women, promoting safe reproductive choices and maternal health in crisis-affected communities.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094470_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
A UNFPA health professional attends to a woman who has just delivered her baby at the Women exit the UNFPA-supported reproductive health clinic called Integrated Maternal Health Facility and Women and Girls Safe Space at the Muna Garage IDP camp after attending educational sessions on maternal health and family planning. These community-focused lectures aim to empower displaced women with knowledge about their health and well-being.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094481_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
A UNFPA health professional attends to a woman who has just delivered her baby at the Women exit the UNFPA-supported reproductive health clinic called Integrated Maternal Health Facility and Women and Girls Safe Space at the Muna Garage IDP camp after attending educational sessions on maternal health and family planning. These community-focused lectures aim to empower displaced women with knowledge about their health and well-being.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094503_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
A UNFPA health professional attends to a woman who has just delivered her baby at the Women exit the UNFPA-supported reproductive health clinic called Integrated Maternal Health Facility and Women and Girls Safe Space at the Muna Garage IDP camp after attending educational sessions on maternal health and family planning. These community-focused lectures aim to empower displaced women with knowledge about their health and well-being.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094460_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Young student nurses at the Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094450_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094430_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094442_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_185094435_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_185094425_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094420_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094416_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094410_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_185094413_EYE
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
'Difficult choices': aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria.
Staff at a UN-run clinic in country's north-east worry about growing funding gaps amid dismantling of USAID.
Nurses attend to pregnant women at Yerwa Primary Health Centre in Shehuri South. The facility provides essential maternal healthcare services to women in the community, supporting safe pregnancies and childbirth.
Fati Abubakar / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_111455329_DAN
Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019.
Duchess Catherine, Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019. ( DANA-No: 02028394 ) *** Local Caption *** 02028394
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_111455326_DAN
Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019.
Duchess Catherine, Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019. ( DANA-No: 02028393 ) *** Local Caption *** 02028393
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_111455325_DAN
Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019.
Duchess Catherine, Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019. ( DANA-No: 02028392 ) *** Local Caption *** 02028392
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_111455324_DAN
Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019.
Duchess Catherine, Kingston Hospital Maternity Unit, London, UK, 27th December 2019. ( DANA-No: 02028391 ) *** Local Caption *** 02028391
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_119604670_TOP
Mono Negative
Early arrivals
Greeting the New Year - which is nolder than they are - with optimistic cries are these six babies , born after midnight last night and whon here in teh arms of nurses at Queen Charlotte's Hospital, Shepherd's Bush , LOndon
1 January 1951 (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)
TopFoto -
DUKAS_16594160_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Samajan, who has four children, including this new born baby, poses for a portrait at her home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594159_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Samajan, who has four children, including this new born baby, talks to a Community Based Educator (CBE) about the importance of vaccinations at her home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594157_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Samajan, who has four children, including this new born baby, talks to a Community Based Educator (CBE) about the importance of vaccinations, using a talking book as a learning tool, at her home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594150_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Kadrigol Namodin, who has eight children, breast feeds her new born baby on the floor on the one room she lives in with her husband and all of her children in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. She is visited on a weekly basis by a CBE (Community Based Educator who gives her lessons on how to look after her baby and children better. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594149_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Nafisa Jan Mohammed, three months pregnant with her ninth child and who has recently suffered a stroke that has crippled half her body and made her unable to walk, sits on her bed in the one room she shares with her husband, nine children and mother in law, in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594148_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Kadrigol Namodin, who has eight children, helps one of her younger children wash their hands outside of her house in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. She is visited on a weekly basis by a CBE (Community Based Educator who gives her lessons on how to look after her baby and children better. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594147_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
One of the daughters of Nafisa Jan Mohammed, who is three months pregnant with her ninth child and who has recently suffered a stroke that has crippled half her body and made her unable to walk, cooks for her mother in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594146_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
A son of Samajan, who has four children, poses for a portrait in a broken window at the families home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594133_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Nafisa Jan Mohammed, three months pregnant with her ninth child and who has recently suffered a stroke that has crippled half her body and made her unable to walk, sits on her bed in the one room she shares with her husband, nine children and mother in law, who is seated on the floor , in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594132_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
A daughter of Samajan, who has four children, poses for a portrait at the families home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594117_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Young girls collect water from a central collection point near to an open sewarage drain in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594116_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Samajan, who has four children, including this new born baby, talks to a Community Based Educator (CBE) about the importance of vaccinations, using a talking book as a learning tool, at her home in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594115_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Nafisa Jan Mohammed, three months pregnant with her ninth child and who has recently suffered a stroke that has crippled half her body and made her unable to walk, sits on her bed in the one room she shares with her husband, nine children and mother in law, who is seated on the floor , in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594111_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Kadrigol Namodin, who has eight children, discusses how to look after her new born baby with a Community Based Educator (CBE), who is using a talking book as a learning tool, and who has been trained by Care International in the one room she lives in with her husband and all of her children in District 5 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 13th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594163_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Fawizia Nabi, who has 11 children, poses for a photograph in her home in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010. A Community Based Educator (CBE) who has been trained by Care International has been visiting her for nearly a year and she has started to take contraception. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594162_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Women arrive with their children to a Health Shura that is organised by a Community Based Edcuator twice a month at a health centre in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594161_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Alia Walezada (C) a CBE (Community Based Educator) talks to Farida, a 32 year old mother of seven children who has been recently displaced from Kandahar, about the importance of contraception at her mothers home that she is now living in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594158_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Alia Walezada (L) a CBE (Community Based Educator) talks to Farida, a 32 year old mother of seven children who has been recently displaced from Kandahar, about the importance of contraception at her mothers home that she is now living in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594153_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Fawizia Nabi, who has 11 children, greets the CBE (Community Based Educator) as she visits her home in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594152_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Asidi, 18 years old and who has just given birth to her first child listens while a CBE (Community Based Educator who has been trained by Care, uses a talking book as a learning tool to demonstrate important health messages for new mothers at her home in District6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594151_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
An elderly woman holds her grandchild while the queue to see a dotor at a maternal health clinic that is held weekly at the Dashbarchi hosptial in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594131_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Alia Walezada a CBE (Community Based Educator) uses a talking book to describe aspects of primary and child healthcare to Farida, a 32 year old mother of seven children who has been recently displaced from Kandahar at her mothers home that she is now living in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594130_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Alia Walezada (C) a CBE (Community Based Educator) gets Farida to a 32 year old mother of seven children who has been recently displaced from Kandahar, ato use her thumb to sign for her prescription of contrapception at her mothers home that she is now living in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594120_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Fawizia Nabi, who has 11 children, listens to a talking book that a CBE (Community Based Educator) uses as a learning tool at her home in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594118_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
A child of Farida, recently displaced from Kandahar, pours some of the families monthly grain ration into her grandmothers hands before it is ground to make the families bread in District 6 of Kabul, Afghanistan on the 12th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594155_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
A group of 18 CBE's (Community Based Educators) who have been trained by Care International sit in a weekly meeting of CBE's that is held in Nijat Hospital in District 7 in Kabul, Afghanistan on the 11th October, 2010. Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594141_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Norsia Najafi, who has been a Community Based Educator (CBE) since 2005, demonstrates to women in a Health Shura(Meeting) that she organises twice a month how to use the pill correctly in District 7 in Kabul, Afghanistan on the 11th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594140_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Women and their children listen to Norsia Najafi, who has been a Community Based Educator (CBE) since 2005, demonstrate the importantance of nutrition at a health shura she organises bi monthly in District 7 in Kabul, Afghanistan on the 11th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com© Kate Holt / eyevine (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594139_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Norsia Najafi, who has been a Community Based Educator (CBE) since 2005, demonstrates to women in a Health Shura(Meeting) that she organises twice a month the importance of diet and sleep for pregant mothers in District 7 in Kabul, Afghanistan on the 11th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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DUKAS/EYEVINE -
DUKAS_16594138_EYE
Working to improve women's health in Afghanistan.
Women stand with their children and grandchildren outside a house that was used to host a bi monthly health shura (meeting) for women in the community in District 7 in Kabul, Afghanistan on the 11th October, 2010.Under the Taliban, maternal healthcare dropped to an all time low in Afghanistan. Because women were excluded from education, there were hardly any trained midwives left in the country. Over the last few years, NGOs such as Care International have been working to cut maternal and child deaths in the country, which remain some of the highest in the world.
© Kate Holt / eyevine
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