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151 results
  • ACT UP Paris : le SIDA en France en 2011 : 7000 personnes se sont contaminées : 40% des contaminations chez les hommes concernent des homosexuels : il y a 130000 séropositifVEs : www.actupparis.org / ACT UP  Paris.
  • ACT UP Paris : le SIDA en France en 2011 : 7000 personnes se sont contaminées : 40% des contaminations chez les hommes concernent des homosexuels : il y a 130000 séropositifVEs : www.actupparis.org / ACT UP  Paris.
  • Ne vous laissez pas contaminer par les conneries : rumeur n. 3 : sucer sans préservatif n'est pas risqué : arrêtez de croire que sucer sans préservatif n'est pas risqué / SNEG ... [and 3 others].
  • Ne vous laissez pas contaminer par les conneries : rumeur n. 3 : sucer sans préservatif n'est pas risqué : arrêtez de croire que sucer sans préservatif n'est pas risqué / SNEG ... [and 3 others].
  • The hand of a woman pointing to a blood bag that has been tested for HIV representing a warning about the dangers of donating contaminated blood and AIDS. Colour lithograph, ca. 1998.
  • Illustrated guidelines on the dangers of unprotected sex, sharing needles, donating contaminated blood and pregnancy when HIV positive; an AIDS prevention advertisement by the Department of Health, CTA (Central Tibetan Administration), Dharamsala. Colour lithograph, ca. 1997.
  • Fourteen illustrated precautions to be taken when handling blood or fluids contaminated with blood, in order to avoid transmitting HIV, hepatitis B and other related infections; an advertisement for AIDS prevention by the Eusko Jaurlaritza Gobierno Vasco. Colour lithograph, ca. 1996.
  • A syringe, the silhouette of a man injecting himself, a couple talking and a man receiving a blood transfusion in a bed; a warning about the risks of contracting AIDS through drug abuse and contaminated blood. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • Fourteen illustrated instructions in Basque on the necessity of taking precautions when handling blood or fluids contaminated with blood to avoid transmitting HIV, hepatitis B and other related infections; an advertisement for AIDS prevention by the Eusko Jaurlaritza Gobierno Vasco. Colour lithograph, ca. 1996.
  • A dentist and nurse tending a patient in a chair, a woman holding up a test tube filled with blood and three surgeons in green coats and face masks; a warning about the dangers of contaminated blood and transmission of the AIDS disease. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • Ways in which AIDS is spread including a couple representing unsafe sex, a person receiving infected blood from a donor, 3 people sharing contaminated needles and a pregnant woman infected with HIV lying in bed; an advertisement by the Directorate of Health Services in Manipur. Colour lithograph, ca. 1996.
  • Ways in which you get HIV/AIDS including an embracing couple representing unprotected sex, an infected pregnant woman; a man receiving infected blood through transfusion and sharing contaminated needles; an AIDS prevention advertisement by the CII, the Confederation of Indian Industry programme on HIV/AIDS prevention and care. Colour lithograph by Amita P. Gupta, ca. 1997.
  • Four illustrations showing the dangers of donating contaminated blood and transmitting AIDS through injecting, unsafe sex and pregnancy; a further 4 illustrations show ways in which AIDS is not transmitted from mosquito bites to sharing food; an AIDS prevention advertisement by the AIDS Control Project of the Goverment of Andhra Pradesh, Hyderabad. Colour lithograph, 1997?.
  • Lathyrus vernus (L.)Bernh. Papilionaceae previously Orobus vernus L. (Linnaeus, 1753) Spring vetchling. Distribution: Europe to Siberia. The seeds of several Lathyrus species are toxic, and when eaten cause a condition called lathyrism. The chemical diaminoproprionic acid in the seeds causes paralysis, spinal cord damage, aortic aneurysm, due to poisoning of mitochondria causing cell death. Occurs where food crops are contaminated by Lathyrus plants or where it is eaten as a 'famine food' when no other food is available. It is the Orobus sylvaticus purpureus vernus of Bauhin (1671) and Orobus sylvaticus angustifolius of Parkinson (1640) - who records that country folk had no uses for it. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
  • Lathyrus vernus (L.)Bernh. Papilionaceae previously Orobus vernus L. (Linnaeus, 1753) Spring vetchling. Distribution: Europe to Siberia. The seeds of several Lathyrus species are toxic, and when eaten cause a condition called lathyrism. The chemical diaminoproprionic acid in the seeds causes paralysis, spinal cord damage, aortic aneurysm, due to poisoning of mitochondria causing cell death. Occurs where food crops are contaminated by Lathyrus plants or where it is eaten as a 'famine food' when no other food is available. It is the Orobus sylvaticus purpureus vernus of Bauhin (1671) and Orobus sylvaticus angustifolius of Parkinson (1640) - who records that country folk had no uses for it. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
  • Food and its adulterations : comprising the reports of the Analytical sanitary commission of "The Lancet" for the years 1851 to 1854 inclusive, revised and extended being records of the results of some thousands of original microscopical and chemical analyses of the solids and fluids consumed by all classes of the public ... / by Arthur Hill Hassall.
  • Food and its adulterations : comprising the reports of the Analytical sanitary commission of "The Lancet" for the years 1851 to 1854 inclusive, revised and extended being records of the results of some thousands of original microscopical and chemical analyses of the solids and fluids consumed by all classes of the public ... / by Arthur Hill Hassall.
  • Pure fat v. butter / by W. Mathieu Williams.
  • Fruiting body of bread mould
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • How E. coli causes diarrhoea
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • E. & T. Pink : manufacturers of jams, jellies, marmalade, pickles & sauces, spices, chemicals, paper, rice, seeds ... Staple Street, Boro, London.
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli on human intestinal cells
  • Gross's pure baking powder : warranted free from alum and other injurious ingredients, for making unfermented bread so much recommended by medical men : also for making all kinds of puddings, pastry, tea cakes etc. ... / W.H. Gross.