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Why India, The World s Largest Vaccine Maker, Has A 4% Rate Of COVID Vaccination : Goats and Soda : NPR

Why India, The World s Largest Vaccine Maker, Has A 4% Rate Of COVID Vaccination : Goats and Soda : NPR
npr.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from npr.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

A History Of Vaccine Rollouts, From Smallpox To COVID-19 : Goats and Soda : NPR

Suzette Lohmeyer On Jan. 8, 1929, Dr. L.E. Bensom of Los Angeles used his vacation to mush to native villages in Alaska. At the close of a particularly hard day on the trail, he found himself with 70 patients on his hands, all suffering from smallpox. There were 100 people in the village with no medical facilities. Bettmann/Getty Images toggle caption Bettmann/Getty Images Vaccines delivered by drones and by burros. People who shout about the danger of vaccines and refuse to get a jab. Public health campaigns to convince the vaccine hesitant. Public criticism of a failure to provide vaccines for lower-income countries and marginalized populations.

PHOTOS: Vaccine History Repeats Itself — Sometimes

On Jan. 8, 1929, Dr. L.E. Bensom of Los Angeles used his vacation to mush to native villages in Alaska. At the close of a particularly hard day on the trail, he found himself with 70 patients on his hands, all suffering from smallpox. There were 100 people in the village with no medical facilities. Vaccines delivered by drones and by burros. People who shout about the danger of vaccines and refuse to get a jab. Public health campaigns to convince the vaccine hesitant. Public criticism of a failure to provide vaccines for lower-income countries and marginalized populations. These are all part of the unprecedented world vaccination campaign now going on.

Will Vaccines Work On India s Coronavirus Variant? : Goats and Soda : NPR

A coronavirus variant is spreading quickly in India, causing a massive surge in cases. Scientists are rushing to see if vaccines will be effective against this variant. So far, the news is hopeful.

PHOTOS: Mumbai Falls In Love All Over Again With Its Forgotten Fountains

Originally published on April 11, 2021 8:47 am In a narrow lane near Mumbai s docks, commuters on bicycles weave through the crowd as workers push wooden carts loaded with heavy burlap sacks into warehouses. Thirty-eight-year-old laborer Mohammad Yaqoob unloads sacks full of marbles from a truck. When he gets tired and thirsty, he walks to an ornate stone structure in the middle of the bustling street. It s a drinking fountain, or pyau (sometimes spelled pyaav), as it s called in the local Hindi and Marathi languages. I have a sip of water, rest on the steps for a bit and then get back to work again, says Yaqoob. This free water is great.

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