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DUKAS_187870436_NUR
Chinese Doctors' Day
A medical worker provides care for a newborn in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, China, on August 18, 2025. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187870435_NUR
Chinese Doctors' Day
A medical worker provides care for a newborn in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, China, on August 18, 2025. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187870420_NUR
Chinese Doctors' Day
A medical worker provides care for a newborn in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, China, on August 18, 2025. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187870419_NUR
Chinese Doctors' Day
A medical worker provides care for a newborn in Zaozhuang City, Shandong Province, China, on August 18, 2025. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186638243_NUR
Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
Medical staff at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City offer free consultations before the placement of a subdermal hormonal implant. This implant prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186638234_NUR
Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
Medical staff at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City offer free consultations before the placement of a subdermal hormonal implant. This implant prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186638097_NUR
Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
Medical staff at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City offer free consultations before the placement of a subdermal hormonal implant. This implant prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186638075_NUR
Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
Medical staff at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City offer free consultations before the placement of a subdermal hormonal implant. This implant prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_19416643_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (2nd L) talks to Chodrun in an obstetrics ward in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokung
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416638_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (R) looks at the one-week-old baby of Gesang in the young mother's home tent during a return visit in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arrived at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorted the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On January 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416637_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (R) looks at the one-week-old baby of Gesang in the young mother's home tent during a return visit in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women sel
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416636_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom looks at the one-week-old baby of Gesang in the young mother's home tent during a return visit in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416633_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom gives a check-up for a sick baby out of a home tent in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar People's H
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416595_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom holds a newborn baby in the delivery room in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar P
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416590_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (R) walks on her way to a health center for training doctors there in Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011,
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Ma
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416587_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (L) talks to pregnant woman Pema by the type-B ultrasonic room in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416586_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Gesang, 25, looks at her baby in the delivery room in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416578_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom wipes sweat away after assisting a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth in the delivery room of Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Sin
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416576_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom wraps up the newborn in the delivery room in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar P
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416575_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom shows the newborn baby to mother Gesang in the delivery room in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416574_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-NEWBORN-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (2nd L) looks at the one-week-old baby of Gesang in the young mother's home tent during a return visit in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local wome
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416570_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (1st R) shares her experience of taking care of newborn babies with young doctors in the health center of Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, loca
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416569_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom serves traditional cupping therapy to a woman who gave birth to a baby serveral days ago, in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416565_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (L), arranges the tools of traditional Tibetan medicine with her husband at home in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokungg
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416562_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom serves traditional Tibetan acupuncture to a woman in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhoku
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416561_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom (L), arranges the tools of traditional Tibetan medicine with her husband at home in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokungga
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416557_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom walks to the tent of Gesang, who gave birth to a baby a week ago in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416556_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom is seen offered a cup of Tibetan butter tea after checking up a sick baby out of a home tent in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arrived at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorted the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On January 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416552_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom checks obstetrics information online at home in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, June 24, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar People's Hospital.
"There
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_19416551_EYE
CHINA-TIBET-MAIZHOKUNGGAR-OBSTETRICS DOCTOR (CN)
(110706) -- LHASA, July 6, 2011 (Xinhua) -- Yangzom gives a check-up for a sick baby out of a home tent in Mamba Village of Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 1, 2011.
Yangzom, a 42-year-old obstetrics doctor in Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in Maizhokunggar County, had a busy day on June 24, 2011.
Arriving at the hospital around 8 o'clock, she went to the delivery room to assist a pregnant woman named Gesang in her childbirth. The baby was born two and a half hours later. After exhorting the midwives to take care of the mother and baby, she went to obstetrics wards one after another. At 11:30 a.m., she started pregnancy check-up at the outpatient treatment room. After lunch, she went to Nyimajangra Village of Maizhokunggar to give training to the doctors in the village's health center.
"It's normal for us to deliver one or two babies in the hospital per day, and once I delivered 6 babies in a day. Most pregnant women came from remote villages of Maizhokunggar." Yangzom said, "A total of 46 beds are offered in our hospital, among which 30 are for maternity department. Even though, it's not enough."
Yangzom began to serve as an obstetrics doctor at Maizhokunggar People's Hospital in 1993. She remembered that few women of rural village came to the hospital to give birth before 2000 in Maizhokunggar, a farming and pastoral area.
Traditionally babies were born at home, which caused high dystocia morbidity and infection rate owing to poor treatment and bad sanitation. Now more and more women came to give their childbirth at hospital. On Jan. 1, 2007, a new policy offered free treatment for to-be mothers in farming and pastoral areas. Pregnancy check-up and baby delivery is free of charge in county-level hospitals in Tibet. Considering their remote homes, free transportation from home to the village's health center is also free. Since then, local women seldom give birth out of Maizhokunggar People's H
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_32394006_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546i)
Model Released - the baby is held by medics
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_32394005_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546j)
Model Released - the baby with umbilical cord still attached
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32394004_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546h)
Model Released - the baby's head emerges
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32394001_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546e)
Model Released - the baby's head emerges
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32394000_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546g)
Model Released - the baby is held by medics
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32393999_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546f)
Model Released - the baby is held by medics
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32393995_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546d)
Model Released - the baby with umbilical cord still attached
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_32393994_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546c)
Model Released - the baby with umbilical cord still attached
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_32393990_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546b)
Model Released - the baby's head emerges
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_32393989_REX
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Model Released
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features (2641546a)
Model Released - the baby's head emerges
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London, Britain - 18 May 2010
Woman giving birth at St Mary's Hospital Paddington where Catherine Duchess of Cambridge will give birth later this month
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX