View allAll Photos Tagged HealthAssessment

Once ashore, researchers removed the net and assessed the injuries sustained from a boat propeller.

 

Activities were conducted under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permit # MA770191

To access remote areas in the Delta, IOM mobile medical teams, like this one, use Zodiac inflatable boats as well as other motorized boats to bring in medical assistance. © IOM

A Syrian family is undergoing medical evaluations to measure their height, weight, and blood pressure before proceeding to meet with an IOM physician for a physical examination.

Researchers examined the manatee for any visible scars or injuries, but overall the young male was healthy, fit and ready to be released shortly after the capture.

 

Activities were conducted under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permit # MA770191

An IOM medical staff is drawing blood from a patient to test them for common diseases as specified by Canadian medical standards for those wishing to resettle in Canada.

Children belonging to the Ngöbe-Buglé community are among the target beneficiaries of the Finca Sana project.

The Myanmar government sponsored a diplomatic tour of the delta allowing foreign diplomats to take photos and visit government-run camps in the area.

The head of a mobile team helps a young girl find the right size of rubber boots. In 2008, using money from a benefit concert and individual donors, IOM and its partners handed out rubber boots to Ngöbe-Buglé children on the participating farms to help protect them from parasites and other health risks.

Hundreds of newly arrived IDPs queue in the heat in Zone 2 of the Menik Farm camp to consult overstretched government doctors brought in from hospitals around the country. Five USAID-funded primary health care centres built by IOM in Zone 2 will reduce pressure on this central facility. © IOM

 

A family comes in for a medical consultation in an IOM fixed clinic at Nga Kwat village in Bogale Township. Aside from the one in Nga Kwat, other fixed clinics have been set up to support the primary health care services being provided in Kyun Thar Yar and Nga Kwat in Bogale, Seikma in Pyapon and Kyae Chan Chaung Pyar and Yuzana 2 in Mawlamyinegyun. © IOM

Juliet was twice abducted by rebels during the war. They used her for sex and for carrying bombs. From the sexual abuse, she has difficulty walking and has HIV. Her daughter can't go to school because Juliet doesn't have the money to pay for her uniform o

OFWs from Lebanon wave to the local media and airport staff upon arrival. IOM repatriated Filipinos stranded in Lebanon , many of whom are migrant workers. The conflict in Lebanon has displaced hundreds of thousands of Lebanese and left many migrants from several countries stranded.

IOM is focusing efforts on containing the spread of cholera in camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs). Among the activities are hygiene promotion and a cholera information campaign. IOM Haiti's graphic cartoon newspaper, Chimen Lakay recently released an issue about cholera prevention.

Muslim woman at prayer in building bombed during the war, Waterloo.

A nurse attends to a patient at a Cholera Treatment Centre in Nyamhunga, Kariba in Zimbabwe. Although fatality rates dropped to 4.6 per cent as of 26 February 2009, the epidemic is still not under control. © IOM

Cmdr. Dale Bates, of the U.S. Public Health Service, entertains a Haitian children with photos after conducting a health assessment in their village to determine future medical aid. Kearsarge has embarked personnel from all branches of the U.S. military and medical personnel from the Canadian and Brazilian armed forces, as well as health care professionals from the U.S. Public Health Service, Project HOPE and International Aid to conduct hurricane relief operations in Haiti. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Erik C. Barker/Released)

Marketing students Emma Ritchie (left) and Alexandra Pomatto (right) investigate branding theory and community health marketing theory to propose a new model of community branded health messaging in a post-COVID world on Friday, March 4, 2022 in Chico, Calif. Students are working on a collaborative project with professors from the Kinesiology and Psychology Departments to establish an innovative, sustainable framework for students to provide ongoing exercise and mental health assessments for Chico State students, staff, faculty, and Butte County residents.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/Chico State)

Avery Lambrite (right) checks the heart rate of Kathryn Mercurio (left) as students work on a collaborative project with professors from the Kinesiology and Psychology Departments to establish an innovative, sustainable framework for students to provide ongoing exercise and mental health assessments for Chico State students, staff, faculty, and Butte County residents on Friday, March 4, 2022 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/Chico State)

Scott Kruetzfeldt sets up equipment as students work on a collaborative project with professors from the Kinesiology and Psychology Departments to establish an innovative, sustainable framework for students to provide ongoing exercise and mental health assessments for Chico State students, staff, faculty, and Butte County residents on Friday, March 4, 2022 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/Chico State)

IOM medical staff distributes deworming tablets to children from Kyaung Su village school in Bogale Township in November 2008. © IOM 2008

MSS0101

Distribution of Shelter and Non-Food Items (NFI) IOM is the lead of the Emergency Shelter and Non-Food Items (NFI) Cluster in South Sudan, coordinating the delivery of relief supplies across the country. Drawing on the organization’s extensive registration and distribution experience, IOM is able to rapidly deliver aid to vulnerable populations affected by conflict and natural disasters. © IOM 2012

IOM mobile medical staff interview cyclone survivors to determine the kind of treatments they need. © IOM

IOM medical staff distributes deworming tablets to children from Kyaung Su village school in Bogale Township in November 2008. © IOM 2008

 

Avery Lambrite and Scott Kruetzfeldt learn about the tools to set up equipment from Ryan Perkins (left to right) as students work on a collaborative project with professors from the Kinesiology and Psychology Departments to establish an innovative, sustainable framework for students to provide ongoing exercise and mental health assessments for Chico State students, staff, faculty, and Butte County residents on Friday, March 4, 2022 in Chico, Calif.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/Chico State)

Children happily show rain ponchos that were distributed by IOM. © IOM

IOM mobile medical teams have treated more thean 24,600 patients in 327 villages in the Delta township of Bogale, Pyapon and Mawlamyinegyun (as of 29 July 2008). © IOM

Brgy. San Fernando Village Health Station. © Blue Motus 2013

IOM mobile medical staff interview cyclone survivors to determine the kind of treatments they need. © IOM

Livestock grazing near the Power River in the BLM Vale District. Photo: Michael Campbell, BLM.

 

The BLM is responsible for administering nearly 14 million acres of rangelands in Oregon and Washington.

 

Rangeland Health Assessments conducted by BLM specialists on these lands are used to determine watershed functions, ecological processes, water quality and habitat for all species, including native, threatened, and endangered species.

 

Much of BLM-administered rangeland is grazed by livestock under a system of permits and leases in which ranchers pay grazing fees for the use of public land.

 

There are many different treatments used in maintaining rangeland health, including prescribed burns, rehabilitation of burned lands, fencing, water developments, and juniper management.

 

Additional information is available at: www.blm.gov/programs/natural-resources/rangelands-and-gra...

Sta Fe Barangay Health Station, Pilar for repair under IOM-AmeriCares project.

IOM mobile medical teams have treated more thean 24,600 patients in 327 villages in the Delta township of Bogale, Pyapon and Mawlamyinegyun (as of 29 July 2008)

An IOM medical staff applies medicines and bandages to the badly wounded legs of cyclone survivor in a village in the Delta. © IOM

An IOM staff prepares to check the blood pressure of a cyclone survivor in a village in the Delta. © IOM

Livestock grazing near the Power River in the BLM Vale District. Photo: Michael Campbell, BLM.

 

The BLM is responsible for administering nearly 14 million acres of rangelands in Oregon and Washington.

 

Rangeland Health Assessments conducted by BLM specialists on these lands are used to determine watershed functions, ecological processes, water quality and habitat for all species, including native, threatened, and endangered species.

 

Much of BLM-administered rangeland is grazed by livestock under a system of permits and leases in which ranchers pay grazing fees for the use of public land.

 

There are many different treatments used in maintaining rangeland health, including prescribed burns, rehabilitation of burned lands, fencing, water developments, and juniper management.

 

Additional information is available at: www.blm.gov/programs/natural-resources/rangelands-and-gra...

A mother watches as an IOM medical staff checks the heartbeat of her baby. © IOM

A darkly colored cow stands amongst dry grass and sagebrush near the Power River in the BLM Vale District. Photo: Michael Campbell, BLM.

 

The BLM is responsible for administering nearly 14 million acres of rangelands in Oregon and Washington.

 

Rangeland Health Assessments conducted by BLM specialists on these lands are used to determine watershed functions, ecological processes, water quality and habitat for all species, including native, threatened, and endangered species.

 

Much of BLM-administered rangeland is grazed by livestock under a system of permits and leases in which ranchers pay grazing fees for the use of public land.

 

There are many different treatments used in maintaining rangeland health, including prescribed burns, rehabilitation of burned lands, fencing, water developments, and juniper management.

 

Additional information is available at: www.blm.gov/programs/natural-resources/rangelands-and-gra...

An IOM nurse in Pontevedra, Capiz administers medicine to a wound (13 Jan). © IOM 2014 (Photo by Allan Motus)

Memunatu sustained shrapnel wounds. She's unable to do many physical tasks, has restricted movement in her upper right arm, suffers insomnia and is in constant pain. She cannot be operated upon because there is no working CT scan in Sierra Leone. Memunatu

Members of a mobile health team pose for a group photo. As part of the World Bank-funded ?Finca Sana? project, IOM works with Costa Rican health partners to improve the health of the Ngöbe-Buglé, an indigenous migrant population that travels from Panama to Costa Rica to work on coffee farms.

A family comes in for a medical consultation in an IOM fixed clinic at Nga Kwat village in Bogale Township. Aside from the one in Nga Kwat, other fixed clinics have been set up to support the primary health care services being provided in Kyun Thar Yar and Nga Kwat in Bogale, Seikma in Pyapon and Kyae Chan Chaung Pyar and Yuzana 2 in Mawlamyinegyun. © IOM

IOM nurse Im and her translator DeeDee, herself a refugee from Myanmar, providing directly observed therapy (DOT) for a TB patient at an IOM health post at Mae Lat camp, Northern Thailand.

An IOM medical staff interviews a patient as other cyclone survivors observe curiously. © IOM

IOM distributes aqua boxes in Brgy. Sublangon BHS in Capiz (13 Jan). © IOM 2014 (Photo by Allan Motus)

Livestock grazing near the Power River in the BLM Vale District. Photo: Michael Campbell, BLM.

 

The BLM is responsible for administering nearly 14 million acres of rangelands in Oregon and Washington.

 

Rangeland Health Assessments conducted by BLM specialists on these lands are used to determine watershed functions, ecological processes, water quality and habitat for all species, including native, threatened, and endangered species.

 

Much of BLM-administered rangeland is grazed by livestock under a system of permits and leases in which ranchers pay grazing fees for the use of public land.

 

There are many different treatments used in maintaining rangeland health, including prescribed burns, rehabilitation of burned lands, fencing, water developments, and juniper management.

 

Additional information is available at: www.blm.gov/programs/natural-resources/rangelands-and-gra...

Medical staff conducts consultations for survivors of Cyclone Nargis in an IOM Fixed Clinic in Kyae Chan Chaung Pyar village, Mawlamyinegyun Township in November 2008. Other fixed clinics have been set up to support the primary health care services being provided in Kyun Thar Yar and Nga Kwat in Bogale, Seikma in Pyapon and Yuzana 2 in Mawlamyinegyun. © IOM 2008

1 3 4 5 6 7