- Health worker drives to several factories to give a series of talks1
- Hypertension detection team at work in India. A standard method of compiling the data from such surveys has been suggeseted by WHO, but it is a flexible system and can be modified to suit local conditions1
- Immunize and protect your child1
- Landing at Inuvik1
- Landing of a flying ambulance near a lonely dwelling in Canada's north1
- Milk supplies (3 million quarts daily) come from 47,000 dairy farms with a cow population of 1million. Here, Head Public Health Sanitarian, Hermen Miller, inspects a tank in one of the city's 35 bottling and pasteruizing plants1
- One of the blood sampling techniques during an epidemiological survey in Togo1
- Prevention is essential to protect life and there is no substitute for vaccination and immunization1
- Professor Robert Debre1
- Public health nurse checks blood pressure of an elderly patient. Such routine checks will help to reduce the threat of heart attacks and strokes in this high-risk area of Finland1
- Rat catching is part of the routine activities of the port authorities1
- Safegarding the health of 8 million people: The women in charge, Dr. Leona Baumgartner, Commissioner of Health for New York City, inspects slum clearing1
- Safeguarding the health of 8 million people ... is a sanitation problem of giganitc proportions1
- The Japanese have the greatest respect for the next man's health1
- The call to the hospital1
- The kiss of life: practical instruction for a village health worker in Samoa1
- The positive approach to discourage young people from smoking1
- The right to a smoke-free environment is spreading in public places, public transport and at work1
- 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 towns1
- 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 treatment1