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ALBERTO CEOLONI PHOTOGRAPHER

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  • IMG_6593 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s Afghan doctors visiting patients in their house. A mobile team seeks out people who are newly arrived to provide them with aid, as they are more vulnerable on a medical, social and economic basis. The domiciliary visit tend to take place a couple days a week.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0009.jpg
  • IMG 2698 GEORGIA. Zugdidi. 2007. Ophthalmic consultation in a polyclinic, 75 doctors offer unpaid work in these structures for visits, diagnoses and vaccinations. Health care is free for the poorest refugees and children in a series of polyclinics but only as regards diagnosis, visits and vaccinations, 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_2698.jpg
  • IMG_6637 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF's Afghan visiting doctors coming back to their car after domiciliary visit at Afghan refugees family who lives in the poor neighbourhoods of Zahedan.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0011.jpg
  • IMG 2976 GEORGIA. Zugdidi. 2007. A mother attending vaccination for newborn infant, 30% of refugees are children who are entitled to free medical care.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_2976.jpg
  • IMG_7521 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting doctor explaining to refugee family how to prevent disease from polluted water during a domiciliary visit. Most of the houses do not have water or gas supply, some of them have electricity supply, outside the building may find a dwell for the water.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0019.jpg
  • IMG_6956 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting doctor taking a pressure of a young Afghan mother during a domiciliary visit. A team of social workers identify those in need of medical care and ensure they get access to consultations.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0014.jpg
  • IMG_6995 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting Afghan doctor holding a premature baby during a domiciliary visit. There are two Safe Delivery Center in Zahedan, where Afghan pregnant refugees women go for the delivery. If there were complications, the patient would admit into local hospitals, there are eight hospital in Zahedan, six of them have an agreement with MSF.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0015.jpg
  • IMG_7762 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting Afghan doctors taking a rest after a domiciliary visit, during the Summer the temperature in Sistan-Baluchistan may hit 45° C., the city of Zahedan is located near the Pakistan and Afghan border.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0027.jpg
  • IMG_7827 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. A couple day a week MSF’s Afghan visiting doctors delivering necessaries such as oil, pulses, carpets, lines to Afghan refugees families.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0025.jpg
  • IMG_7486 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting doctors talking to Afghan family in the their courtyard during a domiciliary visit. This Afghan family picks wasted plastic material up to earn a living.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0018.jpg
  • IMG_7460 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. Besat clinic. Afghan women waiting to come in. 70 people work for MSF in Zahedan, 50 of them are Iranians. Three general doctors, two nurses and one pharmacist work at Shir Abad and Besat clinics.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0017.jpg
  • IMG_7842 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. A couple days a week MSF's visiting doctors delivering necessaries such oil, pulses, carpets, lines to Afghan refugees families.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0026.jpg
  • IMG_7655 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. Afghan family during the domiciliary visit of visiting doctors. MSF looks after legally registered and without a legal status Afghan refugees. They are mostly  Pashtun, Tajiks, Uzbeks people coming from Kunduz, Nimruz, Badham afghan provinces. The most of Afghan refugees are Sunni.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0024.jpg
  • IMG_7587 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting Afghan doctors coming back to the their office after domiciliary visits. More than 30 Afghan families per week flee from their “watan” (country) for safety and economic reasons. In 2007, more than 350,000 illegal Afghan immigrants were forced to go back to their country, where the economic and security situation remains difficult.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0021.jpg
  • IMG_7886 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF's visiting doctors are going to domiciliary visit. To keep benefiting from their status, legal Afghan immigrants have to renew their residence permits and then move to other areas of the country, if they want, where there is no structure able to cater for them.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0028.jpg
  • IMG_6398 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. Karim Abad. Afghan woman arriving at clinic for a medical examination. Two general doctors, two nurses and one pharmacist work in this clinic. The clinic runs 6 days a week as the visit-time is from 07:30 a.m. to 01:30 p.m.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0006.jpg
  • IMG_8423 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. Afghan refugee family during the domiciliary visit of MSF's visiting doctors. The most of refugees are Sunni as Hazara people prefer to stay in Meshad, in the northern Iranian province of Khorasan because they are Shia as the Sistan-Balucistan is Sunni area.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0035.jpg