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22. Eating, even in class - meals and snacks have to be taken at regular intervals
23. [A young diabetic testing his blood sugar level]
24. Testing urine for sugar is a serious business for the young campers at Camp Glyndon, Maryland
25. [A physician demonstrates how easy it is to inject insulin]
26. Autonomy is essential for diabetic sufferers: Daily self-injection
27. Giving herself insulin injections is part of everyday life for this ten -years- old girl
28. Nodules or lumps in the skin produced by the parasitic worms are one of the early signs of onchocerciasis
29. Xerophthalmia is hard to detect. Young children are often brought to hospital much too late to save their eyes
30. Eye position tests for the early detection of squints take place regularly in primary schools in Switzerland. Other tests are perfromed in secondary schools
31. [A blind and deaf Chinese girl is learning to speak English]
32. 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
33. The saga of trachoma is a sad tale of warm climates, dirt, dust and flies
34. One or two generations ago, people accepted blindness caused by trachoma as inevitable
35. The saga of trachoma is a sad tale of dirt, dust, warm climates and flies
36. [Indian infant with flies around her eyes]
37. This man being led through a village in Upper Volta is blind as a result of river blindness - onchocerciasis - and nearly 60 per cent of the people in his village suffer from this disease
38. One of the telltale sings of onchocerciasis is the fibrous nodule which forms under the victim's skin. This child of two already has such a nodule on his head
39. In districts heavily infected with onchocerciasis there are villages where all the adults are blind
40. Stockholm's Karolinska hospital - this boy works a stationary bicycle while his heart is being tested for abnormalities
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