Polio vaccinations in Afghanistan, and Zimbabwe's grandmas offer therapy

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2017/apr/18/polio-vaccinations-in-afghanistan-and-zimbabwes-grandmas-offer-therapy

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Health workers in Afghanistan have resumed a vaccination campaign against polio in northern Kunduz province, after 15 months of being denied access by the Taliban. Sune Engel Rasmussen reports on efforts to set up clinics to vaccinate about 170,000 children left without inoculation, in a climate of suspicion and fear.

In Harare, grandmothers are taking turns to sit on park benches and listen to people experiencing depression and other mental health problems. Ranga Mberi finds out more about a scheme that has helped around 27,000 people in Zimbabwe amid an acute shortage of psychiatrists, while our video reveals how the therapy sessions not only challenge stigma but provide company for the elderly women.

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Therapy on a bench: the grandmas beating mental illness in Harare – video

What you said

On our piece about aid staying in the wealthiest countries, strathcona3425 said:

It seems like the donor countries giving the financial aid do not have the ‘distribution’ systems to spread the aid money responsibly, or effectively, so they give billions to private companies whose CEOs and senior staff take obscene salaries/bonuses then distribute the remaining funds to their favourite causes.

Top tweet

#BeautifulThing #BestofHumanity #WinWin - Therapy on a bench: the grandmas beating mental illness in Harare https://t.co/hxceCvzcs7

And finally

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