201. "Dr. R.D. Lawrence" Diabetic Ward at King's Hospital, London Subject(s): Hospital UnitsWorld Health Organization
202. A routine check-up for a diabetes sufferer Subject(s): AgedPhysical ExaminationPatientsWorld Health Organization
203. A young diabetic learns how to give himself injections by first practicing on an orange Subject(s): InjectionsWomenWorld Health Organization
204. Eating, even in class - meals and snacks have to be taken at regular intervals Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
206. Testing urine for sugar is a serious business for the young campers at Camp Glyndon, Maryland Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
207. [A physician demonstrates how easy it is to inject insulin] Subject(s): PhysiciansInjectionsChildWorld Health Organization
208. Autonomy is essential for diabetic sufferers: Daily self-injection Subject(s): InjectionsChildWorld Health Organization
209. Giving herself insulin injections is part of everyday life for this ten -years- old girl Subject(s): InjectionsChildWorld Health Organization
210. A young physician in Hungary makes her rounds and pays particular attention to families where a xase of diabetes exists. She is explaining to the mother of such a family how to prepare a balanced diet suited to the special requirements of diabetics Subject(s): WomenWorld Health Organization
211. The crutch that cripples. This Soviet poster reads:"In drinking somebody else's health, you risk harming your own." Subject(s): USSRWorld Health Organization
216. The drug ward in English psychiatric hospital. Spells of illness and confinement usually from a large part of a drug user's life Subject(s): Hospital UnitsInjectionsWorld Health Organization
217. Heavy cigarette smoking increases the risks of a variety of serious diseases. Public health campaigns have so far had little effect on the smoking habits of adolescence Subject(s): World Health Organization
220. Treatment of drug dependent persons and preventive education must be adapted to the specific culture ans socio-economic pattern of the courntry in which it occurs. This is a self-help group in New York Subject(s): World Health Organization
222. One common characteristic shared by those who take 'speed' is youth. They have to be young to withstand the beating the drug gives them, with its long periods of frenzied activity, days and nights without sleep or food. As most consistent drug users cannot and will not hold a steady job, and as few 'square' friends will put with their frequent mood changes, they tend to drift ever more closely together Subject(s): World Health Organization
223. Rolling a "joint" - a marijuana cigarette (Amsterdam) Subject(s): WomenWorld Health Organization
224. Fitting the right lenses in his spectacles in a brisk and matter-of-fact process. But for this elderly patient , it means he can once more see the world about him Subject(s): EyeglassesWorld Health Organization
225. The health worker skillfully administers a local anaesthetic which will ensure that the forthcoming cataract operation is painless Subject(s): InjectionsNursesCataract ExtractionPatientsWorld Health Organization
226. Nodules or lumps in the skin produced by the parasitic worms are one of the early signs of onchocerciasis Subject(s): ChildPhysiciansWorld Health Organization
227. A child at play. However, the game this little turkish girl is playing with is specially made for blind children who have to substitute the sense of touch for that of sight Subject(s): World Health Organization
230. Shiro Fukurai is a sculptor who teaches at the municipal school for the blind at Kobe in Japan Subject(s): World Health Organization
231. Xerophthalmia is hard to detect. Young children are often brought to hospital much too late to save their eyes Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
232. The Director of the "last-chance hospital" gets ready to operate. She wears magnifier over her spectacles and has slipped on runner gloves. The operation is a corneal graft Subject(s): USSRWorld Health Organization
233. After the operation a bandage remains on the eye to which sight has been restored Subject(s): BandagesNursesHospital UnitsPatientsWorld Health Organization
234. Tonograph used for the early detection and diagnosis of claucoma. The drainage speed of eye fluid is registered and interpreted. [i.e. glaucoma] Subject(s): Equipment and SuppliesWorld Health Organization
235. Eye position tests for the early detection of squints take place regularly in primary schools in Switzerland. Other tests are perfromed in secondary schools Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
236. Direct method of examining the fundus oculi or eyeground Subject(s): OphthalmologyEquipment and SuppliesPhysiciansWorld Health Organization
237. Examination of the retina with a binocular ophtalmoscope [i.e. ophthalmoscope] Subject(s): PhysiciansOphthalmologyEquipment and SuppliesWorld Health Organization
238. A recent method of diagnosing detachment of the retina by examining the eyeground with a three-mirror glass devised by Professor Goldman of Berne, Switzerland Subject(s): OphthalmologyEquipment and SuppliesWorld Health Organization
239. [A blind and deaf Chinese girl is learning to speak English] Subject(s): TeachingChildWorld Health Organization
240. Electro-retinogram: modern apparatus devised to measure the electric potential of the retina Subject(s): Equipment and SuppliesWorld Health Organization
241. This young Indian girl's face reflects the suffering caused by trachoma. Some two million are estimated to be blinf as a reuslt of this eye disease Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
242. The saga of trachoma is a sad tale of warm climates, dirt, dust and flies Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
243. One or two generations ago, people accepted blindness caused by trachoma as inevitable Subject(s): WomenChildWorld Health Organization
244. [Health worker registers villagers for trachoma treatment] Subject(s): World Health Organization
245. One infectious eye disease alone - trachoma - has left some two million sufferers blind around the world, like this old man at an eye clinic in Burma. The answer to this major public health problem is prevention-Before it is too lateto effect a cure Subject(s): World Health Organization
246. The saga of trachoma is a sad tale of dirt, dust, warm climates and flies Subject(s): ChildWorld Health Organization
248. A preventable disease - river blindness - cost this man his sight Subject(s): World Health Organization
249. The fixed-wing aeroplane can make accurate insecticide drops at 60 mph over open stretches of river Subject(s): AircraftWorld Health Organization
250. A pest that causes all the trouble. A close-up of the blackfly, Simulium damnosum, feeding on human blood Subject(s): World Health Organization