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ALBERTO CEOLONI PHOTOGRAPHER

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  • IMG_012 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009. A mother is looking after her child with flu in his bed. They moved in from the Kodori Gorge, in the Upper Abkhazia. She is unemployed and gets a benefit from the Georgian government of 22 lari per month, around 11 euro. Her husband has left his family looking for a job. The refugees fled from South Ossetia and Upper Abkhazia have a medical insurance that covers the costs for the admissions to hospitals.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_011.jpg
  • IMG 1987 GEORGIA. Tsqaltubo. 2007. Old man laying in bed.  Elderly people living alone are among the most vulnerable members of society, together with children. Poverty and malnutrition are common phenomena, as are psychological traumas resulting from the experience of armed conflict. Pensions amount to about 12 lari (6 euros) per month, which means they are living below the minimum poverty level.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_1987.jpg
  • IMG_6306 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. Besat clinic. Afghan woman laying down on a examination couch for a transfusion. The medical protocol provides with IDP (in Patient Department) for the bad cases: the patient may be recovered at hospital that has an agreement with MSF.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0003.jpg
  • Woman in her bed at the ward for homeless in the hospital n. 9. Caritas staff and social workers take care of them once a week. They provide sanitation items, medical treatment and used clothes to homeless too.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0046.jpg
  • IMG 0639 GEORGIA. Tskhneti. 2007. A sick man in bed.  Free health care extends only to diagnosis and visits to the area polyclinic, for the poorest refugees and children, medicines have to be bought. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25%, and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_0639.jpg