The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_1258
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT3) RAMPUR, India -- Jan. 18, 2003 -- INDIA-POLIO-3 -- The polio virus -- almost vanquished worldwide thanks to a cheap and widely available vaccine -- has made a defiant comeback in India. The reason, according to government officials and community leaders, seems to be a rumor that the oral vaccine is part of a government population control scheme. No one knows how it started, but its effects are now clear. Tehazib Jahan with her 4-year-old daughter, Uzma, in Rampur, India, Jan. 7, 2003. Uzma was stricken with polio after she did not receive her full dose of vaccine. (Amy Waldman/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2003-01-18
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Amy Waldman/The New York Times/Redux
15814415
0,83MB
19cm x 25cm przy 300dpi
18, 2003, 7, A, ACCORDING, AFTER, ALMOST, AMY, AND, ARE, AVAILABLE, BE, BUT, CHEAP, CLEAR, COMEBACK, COMMUNITY, CONTROL, DAUGHTER, DEFIANT, DID, DOSE, EFFECTS, FULL, GOVERNMENT, HAS, HER, HOW, IN, INDIA, IS, IT, ITS, JAHAN, JAN, KNOWS, LEADERS, MADE, MEDIAXPRESS, NEW, NO, NOT, NOW, NYT3, OF, OFFICIALS, ONE, ORAL, PART, POLIO, POPULATION, RAMPUR, REASON, RECEIVE, REDUX, RUMOR, SCHEME, SEEMS, SHE, STARTED, STRICKEN, TEHAZIB, THANKS, THAT, THE, TIMES, TO, UZMA, VACCINE, VANQUISHED, VIRUS, WALDMAN, WAS, WIDELY, WIECK, WITH, WORLDWIDE, YORK,