Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 529 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' paint hoax 'Drug Dealers Only' road markings as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Drug dealers only' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Give way to oncoming drug dealers' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' paint hoax 'Drug Dealers Only' road markings as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Drug dealers only' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Give way to oncoming drug dealers' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Needle free zone' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Crack Pickup Point' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Needle free zone' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • Community activists from the ’Columbia Road Cartel' erect hoax 'Needle free zone' road signs as part of the anti drugs street art campaign in residential streets near Columbia Road in Shoreditch east London on September 16, 2018 to highlight high levels of drug dealing in this part of Tower Hamlets, where the cheapest heroin in Europe can allegedly be purchased. The road signs and markings were commissioned by residents from the Weavers Community Action Group who claim that the police and Tower Hamlets Council are failing to address the growing drugs problem in the area.  (photo by Vickie Flores / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20180916_Anti_Drugs_Hoax_Road_Sign_V...jpg
  • The box of drugs used by the Child Welfare Scheme, Nepal (CWSN) mobile clinic. A wide variety of drugs are available for the local communities in the Gagan Gauda, Kaski District Pokhara.
    09-cwsn-5045.jpg
  • A local newspaper headline with news of a drugs gang jailing verdict, appears in a Cheltenham toyshop window, Gloucestershire, England. The Gloucestershire Echo's poster that occupies the centre of the glass tells locals that the notorious gang are now behind bars. In the background are the toys and games of childrens' innocence, a contrast to a real, violent world of drugs and crime.
    cheltenham_toyshop02-24-08-2012_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6238_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6213_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6191_1.jpg
  • A selection of drugs available at Downview prisons pharmacy. HMP Downview in Surrey is women’s prison with a capacity of 358. It was originally part of Banstead hospital and was converted to male prison in 1989 before being made into a closed women’s prison in 2001.
    06-downview_9983_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6204_1.jpg
  • A patient’s daily drugs placed into a medicine pot to treat tuberculosis in a TB clinic in London, England, UK.  The patient attends the clinic everyday to receive their tablets as part of a Directly Observed Therapy medicine schedule.  The treatment comprises of a cocktail of antibiotics and taken for at least 6 months.
    UK-Health-TB-medication-8978.jpg
  • The elite police team "BOPE" in drug raid in Vigigal favela, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    cp_bra_0099_1.jpg
  • A street sign announces a Drug Free School Zone in Minot, North Dakota. In creasing drug use amongst minors calls for such measures.
    2007_10_18_North Dakota_K.jpg
  • The entrance to the Voluntary Drug Testing Unit. HMP Wandsworth, London, United Kingdom.
    HMPwandsworth-voluntary-testing-unit...jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A 'Drug dogs operate in this area' sign inside HMP/YOI Portland, a resettlement prison with a capacity for 530 prisoners. Dorset, United Kingdom.
    UK-Criminal-Justice-Prison-8934_1.jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A 'Drug dogs operate in this area' sign inside HMP/YOI Portland, a resettlement prison with a capacity for 530 prisoners. Dorset, United Kingdom.
    UK-Criminal-Justice-Prison-8932_1.jpg
  • A prisoner talking with the drug councellor at HMP Downview. HM Prison Downview is a women's closed category prison. Downview is located on the outskirts of Banstead in Surrey, England. The prison is operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service. Downview Prison holds adult Sentenced Female prisoners and convicted and remanded female juveniles. The prison holds approximately 50% foreign nationals. Downview is divided into 4 Wings, A,B,C,D (D wing is a resettlement Wing), and the Juvenile Unit. All wings have single cell accommodation with in-cell electricity. The prison offers vocational training courses and NVQs for inmates. The resettlement wing provides opportunities for inmates to work and receive education outside the prison.
    06-downview_0043_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival 2014.<br />
4am drug fueled dancers in the hub of Shangri La<br />
Shangri-La is the after-hours epicentre of Glastonbury Festival, a largely indescribable, ephemeral and interactive world that really comes to life after dark.<br />
Unique among festivals, Shangri-la has a central narrative that pins it all together,  it evolves year by year (a bit like Star Wars). All contributors respond to this narrative, and add to it via their installations, venues and performances. When it all comes together on site the audience have a wholly immersive world to become lost in with a myriad of places to explore.<br />
Exploration and discovery is an important aspect of  Shangri-la. A maze of covered alleys is riddled with nano-venues, performers and installations, artworks and hidden doors.<br />
 In 2014 Shangri-La explored the way we create heavens and hells for ourselves.
    _F3A1686_1.jpg
  • A patient swallows Tuberculosis (TB) medication in Delhi, India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4657_1.jpg
  • A patient swallows Tuberculosis (TB) medication in Delhi, India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4642_1.jpg
  • An Indian patient holds their daily Tuberculosis (TB) medication in the palm of their hand in a slum in Delhi, India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4636_1.jpg
  • A young Indian child taking her daily medication tablets for Tuberculosis (TB) which are being dispensed by a Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) worker.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.  Health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4359_1.jpg
  • A young Indian child is given daily medication tablets for Tuberculosis (TB) which are being dispensed by a Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) worker.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.  Health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4342_1.jpg
  • An 8 year old Indian boy is given his daily medication tablets for Tuberculosis (TB) which are being dispensed to him by a Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) worker.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.  Health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4262_1.jpg
  • An 8 year old Indian boy is given his daily medication tablets for Tuberculosis (TB) which are being dispensed to him by a Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) worker.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.  Health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4246_1.jpg
  • A patient holds their daily Tuberculosis (TB) medication in the palm of their hand in a slum in Delhi , India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4234_1.jpg
  • Patients wait outside  a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.<br />
Operation Asha works to eliminate Tuberculosis (TB) in India.  They aim to improve patients’ adherence to long and difficult drug treatment programs by introducing eDOTs, a low-cost biometric system that requires only a basic laptop and mobile phone.  Internet access is not required and the system has been designed to be easily used by people with little education. DOTs refers to Directly Observed Therapy.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4077_1.jpg
  • Women walking past  a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.<br />
Operation Asha works to eliminate Tuberculosis (TB) in India.  They aim to improve patients’ adherence to long and difficult drug treatment programs by introducing eDOTs, a low-cost biometric system that requires only a basic laptop and mobile phone.  Internet access is not required and the system has been designed to be easily used by people with little education. DOTs refers to Directly Observed Therapy.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4026_1.jpg
  • Empty blister-packs of patients Tuberculosis (TB) daily medication in a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4014_1.jpg
  • Empty blister-packs of patients Tuberculosis (TB) daily medication in a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-3997_1.jpg
  • Empty blister-packs of patients Tuberculosis (TB) daily medication in a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-3992_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival 2014.<br />
4am drug fueled dancers in the hub of Shangri La<br />
Shangri-La is the after-hours epicentre of Glastonbury Festival, a largely indescribable, ephemeral and interactive world that really comes to life after dark.<br />
Unique among festivals, Shangri-la has a central narrative that pins it all together,  it evolves year by year (a bit like Star Wars). All contributors respond to this narrative, and add to it via their installations, venues and performances. When it all comes together on site the audience have a wholly immersive world to become lost in with a myriad of places to explore.<br />
Exploration and discovery is an important aspect of  Shangri-la. A maze of covered alleys is riddled with nano-venues, performers and installations, artworks and hidden doors.<br />
 In 2014 Shangri-La explored the way we create heavens and hells for ourselves.
    _F3A3015_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival 2014.<br />
4am drug fueled dancers in the hub of Shangri La<br />
Shangri-La is the after-hours epicentre of Glastonbury Festival, a largely indescribable, ephemeral and interactive world that really comes to life after dark.<br />
Unique among festivals, Shangri-la has a central narrative that pins it all together,  it evolves year by year (a bit like Star Wars). All contributors respond to this narrative, and add to it via their installations, venues and performances. When it all comes together on site the audience have a wholly immersive world to become lost in with a myriad of places to explore.<br />
Exploration and discovery is an important aspect of  Shangri-la. A maze of covered alleys is riddled with nano-venues, performers and installations, artworks and hidden doors.<br />
 In 2014 Shangri-La explored the way we create heavens and hells for ourselves.
    _F3A1635_1.jpg
  • Medication tablets for tuberculosis in a TB clinic in London, England, UK. The red and grey tablets are Rifampicin and white tablets are Pyrazinamide.  They have to be taken together to treat the bacterial infection and prevent drug resistance.
    UK-Health-TB-medication-8979.jpg
  • A patient swallows Tuberculosis (TB) medication in Delhi, India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4655_1.jpg
  • A young Indian child taking her daily medication tablets for Tuberculosis (TB) which are being dispensed by a Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) worker.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.  Health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4354_1.jpg
  • A young pediatric patient holds their daily Tuberculosis (TB) medication in the palm of their hand in a slum in Delhi , India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4347_1.jpg
  • A young patient holds their daily Tuberculosis (TB) medication in the palm of their hand in a slum in Delhi , India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4343_1.jpg
  • A patient holds their daily Tuberculosis (TB) medication in the palm of their hand in a slum in Delhi , India. The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4204_1.jpg
  • A biometric patient record computer system in a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.<br />
Operation Asha works to eliminate Tuberculosis (TB) in India.  They aim to improve patients’ adherence to long and difficult drug treatment programs by introducing eDOTs, a low-cost biometric system that requires only a basic laptop and mobile phone.  A patient is identified by their scanned finger print.  It has been designed so that people with little education can use the system.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-4084_1.jpg
  • A blister-pack of a patient’s Tuberculosis (TB) daily medication in a health clinic in Tehkhand Slum, Delhi, India.  The treatment for TB is a minimum 6 month course of combination antibiotics that must been taken everyday, otherwise fatal drug resistance can develop.  The medication is free and provided by the government. TB is an infectious disease and a huge public health issue often associated with poverty.  TB is completely curable, however TB rates are increasing and India suffers from the highest burden of TB in the world.
    India-TB-Health-Clinic-3974_1.jpg
  • Managing the drug store in a converted shipping container at the Bwindi Community Hospital in the village of Buhoma, Uganda.  The Bwindi Community Hospital is in Buhoma Village on the edge of the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest in Western Uganda. It serves around 60 000 people from the surrounding area.
    11-bwindi-2044.jpg
  • Empty cannisters of laughing gas lying on the street. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common 'legal high' used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as "laughing gas parties".
    20150120_laughing gas_B_1.jpg
  • Empty cannisters of laughing gas lying on the street in East London, United Kingdom. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common legal high used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as laughing gas parties.
    20180822_laughing gas_002_1.jpg
  • Empty cannisters of laughing gas lying on the street in East London, United Kingdom. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common legal high used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as laughing gas parties.
    20180822_laughing gas_003_1.jpg
  • Empty cannisters of laughing gas lying on the street in East London, United Kingdom. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common 'legal high' used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as 'laughing gas parties'.
    20180822_laughing gas_001_1.jpg
  • Empty cannisters of laughing gas lying on the street. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common 'legal high' used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as "laughing gas parties".
    20150120_laughing gas_A_1.jpg
  • Small empty cannister of laughing gas lying on the street. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, nitrous, nitro, or NOS is now a very common 'legal high' used by young people. Nitrous oxide can cause analgesia, depersonalisation, derealisation, dizziness, euphoria, and some sound distortion. Inhalation of nitrous oxide for recreational use, with the purpose of causing euphoria and/or slight hallucinations, began as a phenomenon for the British upper class in 1799, known as "laughing gas parties".
    20141019_laughing gas cannister_A.jpg
  • A discarded insulin syringe lies on the ground near a drain in a residential alleyway, on 25th November 2020, in London,England. Accorind to the NHS (National Health Service, syringes should be disposed of in a sharps bin - a specially designed box with a lid that can be obtained on prescription (FP10 prescription form) from a GP or pharmacist. When full, the box may be collected for disposal by a local council.
    alley_syringe01-25-11-2020.jpg
  • A bag of khat being traded in the port of Obock. Chewing khat is common amongst people in the region. Users claim it is a stimulant giving a sense of well being, allertnes sand excitement.  Republic of Djibouti
    10095023_1.jpg
  • Special police squadron known as UMOPAR stop and search cars and buses in the hope of catching small time traffickers of coca leaf paste in the Chaparé jungle region, Bolivia
    cp_bol_0049_1.jpg
  • Special police squadron known as UMOPAR discover and destroy a Coca leaf processing lab deep in the Bolivian Chaparé region. Bolivia.
    cp_bol_0046_1.jpg
  • A discarded insulin syringe lies on the ground near a drain in a residential alleyway, on 25th November 2020, in London,England. Accorind to the NHS (National Health Service, syringes should be disposed of in a sharps bin - a specially designed box with a lid that can be obtained on prescription (FP10 prescription form) from a GP or pharmacist. When full, the box may be collected for disposal by a local council.
    alley_syringe03-25-11-2020.jpg
  • Coca leaf farmers and local residents are imprisoned by UMOPAR (special police unit) in the Chaparé region for smuggling coca paste. Bolivia.
    cp_bol_0050_1.jpg
  • Special police squadron known as UMOPAR arrest a group of coca leaf farmers which are caught processing coca paste deep in the Chaparé jungle to supplement their meagre incomes. Bolivia.
    cp_bol_0047_1.jpg
  • Inside a police unit a display shows how the local farmers and smugglers conceal coca paste inside a false bottomed gasoline tank to traffick it out of the Chaparé region, Bolivia.
    cp_bol_0051_1.jpg
  • Special police squadron known as UMOPAR arrest a group of coca leaf farmers which are caught processing coca paste deep in the Chaparé jungle to supplement their meagre incomes. Bolivia.
    cp_bol_0048_1.jpg
  • The head of an opium poppies oozing sap in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    DSCF4746cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing pauses whilst scoring illegally grown opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029088cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing pauses whilst scoring illegally grown opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029078cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing scores illegally grown opium poppies using a 4 bladed tool in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029077cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing scores illegally grown opium poppies using a 4 bladed tool in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029056cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scrapes resin from an illegally grown opium poppy head into a metal container in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0028987cc_1.jpg
  • Two Hmong ethnic minority men smoke opium at home in Lao PDR. Opium addicts are usually adult males. By taking opium, they lose the energy to work hard which leaves heavy tasks to women and children which then impoverishes the entire household. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2012 the area under opium poppy cultivation has more than tripled. Although in 2013 the area of poppy fields in the country has again fallen, the number of regular opium users was still estimated at between 14,000 to 15,000 in the 10 northern provinces.
    A0009855cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scores opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016463cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scores opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016460cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scores opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.  After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016455cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scores opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016447cc_1.jpg
  • An upland field of opium poppies ready for harvesting in remote Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016420cc_1.jpg
  • As each child arrives a number is written on their arm to determine their place in the queue. To begin with the volunteer health worker takes their temperature and writes it on the child’s forearm.  The children are at a mobile health clinic in the Gagan Gauda, Kaski District Pokhara, Nepal, that is run by the Child Welfare Scheme, Nepal (CWSN).
    09-cwsn-5064.jpg
  • Coloured glass bongs for sale on stall at the 2005 Glastonbury festival.
    05-glasto_0754.jpg
  • The heads of opium poppies oozing sap in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    DSCF4747cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing scores illegally grown opium poppies using a 4 bladed tool in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029090cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing scores illegally grown opium poppies using a 4 bladed tool in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029080cc_1.jpg
  • The heads of opium poppies oozing sap in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0029073cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha Nuquie subsistence farmer wearing her traditional clothing scores illegally grown opium poppies using a 4 bladed tool in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0029038cc_1.jpg
  • The son of an Akha subsistence farmer plays in an illegal opium poppy field in Phongsaly province, Lao PDR.
    A0028979cc_1.jpg
  • Two Hmong ethnic minority men smoke opium at home in Lao PDR. Opium addicts are usually adult males. By taking opium, they lose the energy to work hard which leaves heavy tasks to women and children which then impoverishes the entire household. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2012 the area under opium poppy cultivation has more than tripled. Although in 2013 the area of poppy fields in the country has again fallen, the number of regular opium users was still estimated at between 14,000 to 15,000 in the 10 northern provinces.
    A0009860cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority man smokes opium at home in Lao PDR. Opium addicts are usually adult males. By taking opium, they lose the energy to work hard which leaves heavy tasks to women and children which then impoverishes the entire household. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2012 the area under opium poppy cultivation has more than tripled. Although in 2013 the area of poppy fields in the country has again fallen, the number of regular opium users was still estimated at between 14,000 to 15,000 in the 10 northern provinces.
    A0009854cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority man smokes opium at home in Lao PDR. Opium addicts are usually adult males. By taking opium, they lose the energy to work hard which leaves heavy tasks to women and children which then impoverishes the entire household. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2012 the area under opium poppy cultivation has more than tripled. Although in 2013 the area of poppy fields in the country has again fallen, the number of regular opium users was still estimated at between 14,000 to 15,000 in the 10 northern provinces.
    A0009853cc_1.jpg
  • An Akha subsistence farmer scores opium poppies in an upland field in remote Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. After the petals fall from the opium poppy, the heads are incised with a 4 bladed tool; the tool is used to score the skin lightly from top to bottom. During the day, the sap oozes out of the cuts and hangs in tears on the poppy head. The next day the sap is then scraped into a metal container. As recently as 1998, Lao PDR was the third largest illicit opium poppy producer in the world.  From 1998 to 2005, opium poppy cultivation in Lao PDR was reduced by 93 per cent.  In more remote areas where cash crops are not viable, surveys from UNODC have shown that between 2008 and 2011 the area under opium poppy cultivation has doubled and continues to rise.
    A0016484cc_1.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

  • About
  • Contact
  • Join In Pictures
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area