Irene Abdou Photography, LLC - Travel. Lifestyle. Documentary. NGOs, Development & Public Health.

Caption: A young woman in Kotobi, South Sudan, shields herself from the sun with an umbrella. The umbrella bears the message, "Abstain from sex," part of an HIV/AIDS prevention campaign by the international NGO, Population Services International.

Keywords: abstain, african, africans, babies, baby, brother, brothers, disease, diseases, east africa, equatoria, girl, girls, HIV/AIDS, hot, kotobi, life, mother, mothers, Mundri, north africa, poor, population services international, post-conflict, poverty, preve

Two girls in South Sudan attend a public health event about malaria in Rumbek's Freedom Square.  The event was organized by the international public health organization, Population Services International, in partnership with the South Sudan Ministry of He A child climbs out from under a mosquito net in Kano, Nigeria.  Pregnant women and children under five are most likely to die from malaria, which is transmitted through the bite of an infected mosquito. After generations of civil war, children play in the ruins of two crashed planes, which lie on the side of the main road through Rumbek, South Sudan. A group of young Dinka men stand atop a hill overlooking a large cattle camp near Rumbek, South Sudan. A blue dumuria mosquito net waves in the background. "Dumuria" means "cotton" and is a traditional mosquito net made by sewing together sheets of cloth. A Dinka boy in a cattle camp near Rumbek, South Sudan wears cow dung ash on his face, used by the Dinka as a cosmetic and insect repellent. A small child in a village in southwestern Niger eats "pot and sauce" with her hand in the traditional African manner. She sits atop a handmade millet stalk bed inside a mud hut. A contingent of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) marches with mosquito nets in hand to demonstrate to the public that, "We defended our country, now we will protect our families from malaria." Haoua Pendoru lives in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.  She is already a grandmother, yet, her youngest child is only a few years old.  Her husband - the product of an arranged marriage when she was fifteen years old -  abandonned her to go to the Ivory Coast. Women and children march with the Sudan People's Liberation Army in Juba on Africa Malaria Day.  The event was organized by the international NGO, Population Services International, in partnership with the South Sudan Ministry of Health. Two young children stand in front of a blue door in this small, rural village in southwestern Niger. A women's group in Rumbek, South Sudan parades on Africa Malaria Day 2006.  The women sport shirts that state, "Malaria is transmitted only through the bite of an infected mosquito."  Mother and children sit under a mosquito net in Kano, Nigeria.  Distributed by Nigeria's largest indigenous NGO, the Society for Family Health, long-lasting insecticide-treated mosquito nets prevent malaria. Children in Abuja, Nigeria hold Permanet long-lasting insecticide treated mosquito nets.  Permanet is manufactured by Vestergaard-Frandsen and distributed in Nigeria by the Society for Family Health (SFH), Nigeria's largest indigenous NGO. This photo depicts a typical South Sudanese family talking about how malaria can be easily prevented by sleeping under a long-lasting insecticide treated mosquito net every night. The photo was taken as part of an advertising campaign for the Serena brand In the town of Djibo in northern Burkina Faso, a Fulani child is sick with malaria.  After a visit to the public military health center, the child's parents feed him artesunate and amodiaquine, an artemisin-combination therapy for malaria treatment.  While easily prevented by sleeping under an insecticide-treated mosquito net every night, throughout Africa, malaria is a major killer of pregnant women and children under five. A young woman in Kotobi, South Sudan, shields herself from the sun with an umbrella.  The umbrella bears the message, "Abstain from sex," part of an HIV/AIDS prevention campaign by the international NGO, Population Services International. Trained by Nigeria's largest indigenous NGO, the Society for Family Health, a peer educator in Lagos talks to his out-of-school peers about HIV prevention, using pictorial guides designed for low-literacy audiences. An HIV/AIDS prevention volunteer talks to men in Yankaba market in Kano, Nigeria, about how partner reduction reduces chances of HIV/AIDS transmission.  He uses a pictoral flipchart designed for low-literacy audiences. In many developing countries, transport workers (e.g. long-distance drivers) are a high-risk group for HIV/AIDS because they spend a significant portion of time away from home.  Peer educators trained by PSI conduct an education session. A wholesaler in Conakry, Guinea, carries packages of Prudence Plus condoms on the shelves.  Prudence Plus is distributed by the international social marketing organization, Population Services International. An HIV/AIDS counseling & testing volunteer in Abuja, Nigeria talks about HIV/AIDS and gathers client information prior to performing an HIV test. A young man in Abuja, Nigeria holds a brochure about HIV/AIDS and sex while listening to a behavior change communication session about HIV/AIDS prevention and transmission. Left: A Fulani woman in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, walks past with her toddler on her back.  Right: A cabinet window in a shop in Obollo-Afor, Nigeria displays a sticker advertising Confidence, an oral contraceptive brand distributed by SFH. A community-based family planning volunteer speaks to women in the Tudun-Murtala area of Kano, Nigeria about the benefits of child spacing.  Left: A girl in the Bankilare region of Niger displays a cup of drinking water drawn from a seasonal pond.  Only 1 in 3 people in rural Niger have access to safe drinking water.  Right: Health official at the Bukavu Barracks public clinic in Kano, Nigeria Ramshackle houses line the coast of Benin near Cotonou.  Living next to the ocean, boats become a common means of transportation. A community-based volunteer in the Agboyi-Ketu section of Lagos, Nigeria leads a safe water education session.  She uses a pictorial flipchart designed for low-literacy audiences by Nigeria's largest indigenous NGO, the Society for Family Health. A shop in the Gyadi-Gyadi area of Kano, Nigeria prominently displays a Waterguard advertisement on the door.  Waterguard, a chlorine product that makes water safe to drink, protects against diarrheal diseases that are life-threatening to children under 5. A wholesaler in Conakry, Guinea logs in bottles/boxes of "Sur'Eau," a chlorine product that makes water safe to drink.  Sur'Eau is distributed by the international social marketing organization, Population Services International. A volunteer in the Durumi market area of Abuja, Nigeria leads a session on using Waterguard to make water safe to drink.  Waterguard is a chlorine product that is distributed by the Society for Family Health, Nigeria's largest indigenous NGO. A young girl in Ganvie sits in a boat, looking up at the camera.  Ganvie, Benin, with some 3,000 stilted buildings and a population of 20,000-30,000 people, may be the largest "lake vllage" in Africa.  In Ganvie, the population lives exclusively from fishing, building houses on stilts in and next to Lake Nokoue.  Because the Dan-Homey religion prohibited attacks on communities living in the water, the village of Ganvie dates back to the 16th or 17th century, when it was built to protect people from slavery.  Even Ganvie's fruit and vegetable market is on water!!! Children in Conakry, Guinea look up at a billboard advertising a safe water product called "Sur'Eau."  Sur'Eau is a chlorine product that prevents diarrheal diseases, which are life-threatening to children under 5, by making water safe to drink.