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On a hot day, a priest leads a goat to the shade of a tree at a Hindu temple in Colombo, Sri Lanka.Dinuka Liyanawatte /Reuters/Corbishide caption
On a hot day, a priest leads a goat to the shade of a tree at a Hindu temple in Colombo, Sri Lanka.Dinuka Liyanawatte /Reuters/Corbishide caption
This year, Lynsey Addario photographed 13-year-old Rahaf Yousef, a Syrian refugee, at her engagement party at a camp in Jordan. "Syrian refugees typically marry young," says Addario. "It's been exacerbated by the war. Families are scared something might happen to their daughter. They prefer to marry them earlier so they're under the protection of a husband."Lynsey Addario/Reportage by Getty Imageshide caption
Dr. Gabriel Logan is one of two doctors at the Bomi county hospital, which serves a county of 85,000 people. In a desperate attempt to save Ebola patients, he started experimenting with an HIV drug to treat them.John W. Poole/NPRhide caption
Researchers download images after a drone flight in Sabah, Malaysia. Courtesy of Trends in Parasitology, Fornace et al hide caption
Thai surrogate mother Pattaramon Chanbua with her baby Gammy, born with Down Syndrome — and rejected by the Australian couple who'd arranged for her to serve as their surrogate. Nicolas Asfouri/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
TB patients in India embroider curtains while they undergo treatment. India saw 1.2 million new cases of the infectious disease last year. Mukhtar Khan/AP hide caption
After losing most of his family to Ebola, health worker Alexander Kollie (right) is building a new life with son Kollie James, the 1,000th survivor of the disease to be cared for by Doctors Without Borders. Katy Athersuch/Courtesty of Doctors Without Borders hide caption
Angie Gardea depends on her job at a hair salon to put food on the table. But because of the Ebola outbreak, business has been slow. Customers are afraid to come in. Michaeleen Doucleff/NPR hide caption
The Daulatdia brothel is the largest in Bangladesh, with more 2,000 prostitutes. Many arrived here after being kidnapped by gangs, sold by family members or lured with promises of good jobs. Lisa Wiltse/Corbis hide caption
Robert Snyder takes a break at Baia de Guanabara, Brazil's second largest bay. Courtesy of Robert Snyder hide caption
Yes, visitors are still coming — and they want to help fight the virus. John Moore/Getty Images hide caption
The Rev. Herman Browne voluntarily quarantined himself for 21 days after his wife's friend tested positive for Ebola. On Sunday, he returned to his church, Trinity Cathedral, to preach to his congregation about Ebola prevention. Jon Hamilton/NPR hide caption
Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S., at a wedding in Ghana. Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, where Duncan was being treated for the disease, on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014 said Duncan has died. Wilmot Chayee/AP hide caption
Kitibe, 26, has recovered from Ebola and was ready to go home. Then the hospital told him he might have TB. Anders Kelto/NPR hide caption
Senegalese fencer Abdoulaye Thiam (left) competed against Jason Rogers of the U.S. during the 2008 Olympics. Due to Ebola fears, a World Cup fencing event set for Senegal this month has been canceled. Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
After beating Ebola, young Ibrahim celebrated by proposing to his nurse. Anders Kelto/NPR hide caption
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim wants the international community to step up its response to Ebola. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption
An Indian groundnut vendor waits for customers. Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
At a CDC training session for clinicians headed to West Africa, a medical worker practices sanitizing hands after drawing blood from a mannequin portraying an Ebola patient. Brynn Anderson/AP hide caption
American USAID chief Rajiv Shah meets with Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in Monrovia. John Moore/Getty Images hide caption
When a high-risk patient is evacuated, strict precautions are followed. Above, aid workers and doctors in protective gear transfer Manuel Garcia Viejo, a Spanish priest diagnosed with Ebola, to a waiting ambulance at a Madrid airport. Spanish Defense Ministry/AP hide caption
Afghan schoolgirls take lessons outdoors at a refugee camp near Jalalabad. Noorullah Shirzada/AFP/Getty Images hide caption