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Bloodletting treatment

เผยแพร่:   โดย: MGR Online

New Delhi, INDIA: In this photograph taken on July 2, 2013 an Indian woman allows her blood to drain after Mohammed Iqbal (not pictured), son of elderly doctor Mohammed Gyas, applies cuts for bloodletting at their open air clinic outside the Jama Masjid in the old quarters of Delhi. Among a handful of poorer, and sometimes remote, communities in India, traditional practices like bloodletting are favoured. About 50 patients queue each day at the open-air clinic in the shadow of Indias largest mosque, the Jama Masjid, for the treatment which Gyas says can cure everything from paralysis to diabetes and even cervical cancer. AFP PHOTO/Manan Vatsyayana
About 50 people lined up everyday at the open-air clinic in the old quarters of Delhi where Mohammed Iqbal applied cuts for bloodletting to cure everything from paralysis to diabetes and even cervical cancer.
New Delhi, INDIA: In this photograph taken on July 2, 2013 Mohammed Iqbal, son of elderly doctor Mohammed Gyas, applies cuts to the arm of an Indian woman at their open air clinic outside the Jama Masjid in the old quarters of Delhi. Among a handful of poorer, and sometimes remote, communities in India, traditional practices like bloodletting are favoured. About 50 patients queue each day at the open-air clinic in the shadow of Indias largest mosque, the Jama Masjid, for the treatment which Gyas says can cure everything from paralysis to diabetes and even cervical cancer. AFP PHOTO/Manan Vatsyayana
New Delhi, INDIA: In this photograph taken on July 2, 2013 Mohammed Iqbal, son of elderly doctor Mohammed Gyas, applies cuts to the arm of an Indian woman at their open air clinic outside the Jama Masjid in the old quarters of Delhi. Among a handful of poorer, and sometimes remote, communities in India, traditional practices like bloodletting are favoured. About 50 patients queue each day at the open-air clinic in the shadow of Indias largest mosque, the Jama Masjid, for the treatment which Gyas says can cure everything from paralysis to diabetes and even cervical cancer. AFP PHOTO/Manan Vatsyayana
New Delhi, INDIA: In this photograph taken on July 2, 2013 patients line up after Mohammed Iqbal (not pictured), son of elderly doctor Mohammed Gyas, applies cuts at their open air clinic outside the Jama Masjid in the old quarters of Delhi. Among a handful of poorer, and sometimes remote, communities in India, traditional practices like bloodletting are favoured. About 50 patients queue each day at the open-air clinic in the shadow of Indias largest mosque, the Jama Masjid, for the treatment which Gyas says can cure everything from paralysis to diabetes and even cervical cancer. AFP PHOTO/Manan Vatsyayana
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