
Goats and Soda
STORIES OF LIFE IN A CHANGING WORLDInfectious Disease
Monday
Wednesday
Thursday
Health workers marched in Butembo on Wednesday to protest the violence they're facing. The demonstration comes in the wake of an attack last Friday in which an epidemiologist from Cameroon was shot and killed. Al-hadji Kudra Maliro/AP hide caption
Friday
The anti-HIV drug dolutegravir is effective — but may carry a risk for pregnant women. Science Source hide caption
Friday
Health workers inside the "red zone" of an Ebola treatment center in Butembo, which was attacked on March 9. John Wessels/Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Friday
A girl is treated for suspected cholera infection at a hospital in Sanaa, Yemen. There were more than 1 million cases of cholera in the country between April 2017 and April 2018. Hani Mohammed/AP hide caption
Friday
Freya, a springer spaniel, is in training to detect malaria parasites in sock samples taken from children in Gambia. Two canine cohorts were used in a study on malaria detection. Durham University/Medical Detection Dogs/London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine hide caption
Friday
A team of medical workers don protective equipment before entering an Ebola Treatment Center in Beni, the epicenter of the outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. John Wessels/Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Dr. Paul Farmer examines a tuberculosis patient in Monrovia, Liberia. Katherine Kralievits / PIH hide caption
Sunday
This did not really happen. Cows' heads did not emerge from the bodies of people newly inoculated against smallpox. But fear of the vaccine was so widespread that it prompted British satirist James Gillray to create this spoof in 1802. Institute of the History of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University hide caption
Saturday
Viruses thrive in the security lines at airports, according to several studies. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption
Where Are The Most Viruses In An Airport? Hint: It's Probably Not The Toilet
Thursday
These mosquitoes have been fed a new artificial blood called "SkitoSnack." Kristina Gonzales hide caption
Sunday
Thursday
A cluster of rotaviruses. The image is from a transmission electron micrograph and has been colored. Dr. Gopal Murti/Science Source hide caption