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  • A woman attends her sister who suffer AIDS in a government hospital supported by CARE International in Vilanculos, Mozambique, Aug. 2009.  Unitaid, a program financed by a new mechanism that charges a small fee to airline tickets, has raised $1.2 billion over the past three years for treatments of HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in poor countries. The woman on the left suffers of osseous tuberculosis.
    LAT01-16-MuniT-D-45.JPG
  • A doctor working with CARE International, checks an HIV positive woman before giving her the antiretroviral drugs in a rural hospital in Mapinhane Hospital, Inhambane province, Mozambique, Aug. 2009. There is approximately one doctor per 44.000 inhabitants.  For most Africans living with HIV, antiretroviral drugs are still not available. Unitaid, a program financed by a new mechanism that charges a small fee to airline tickets, has raised $1.2 billion over the past three years for treatments of HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in poor countries.
    LAT01-16-MuniT-D-46.JPG
  • A young man with AIDS waits to start a chemotherapy session to fight Kaposi´s Sarcoma, a cancer linked to AIDS, in a government hospital supported by CARE International in Vilanculos, Mozambique, Aug. 2009.  Unitaid, a program financed by a new mechanism that charges a small fee to airline tickets, has raised $1.2 billion over the past three years for treatments of HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in poor countries.
    LAT01-16-MuniT-D-49.JPG
  • Teresa, 13, helps her aunt, Joanna, 27, to eat some food at the Vilcanculo´s Hospital which is assisted by CARE, Vilanculos, Inhambane province, Mozambique. August 2009. Teresa, took long time before realizing that she has AIDS, she came to the hospital when she couldn´t walk and talk. She is slowly recovering since she started taking antiretroviral drugs. For most Africans living with HIV, antiretroviral drugs are still not available. Unitaid, a program financed by a new mechanism that charges a small fee to airline tickets, has raised $1.2 billion over the past three years for treatments of HIV, malaria and tuberculosis in poor countries.
    LAT01-16-MuniT-D-52.JPG
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