Poet Cameron Conaway (left, in gray cap) visits malaria-hit areas in the Chittagong Tract Hills, Bangladesh, in June 2012.
Courtesy of Cameron Conaway
hide caption
Go Big Green! Dartmouth is testing the VGo robot to help diagnose concussions when neurologists aren't at the game.
Mark Washburn/Courtesy of Dartmouth-Hitchcock
hide caption
itoggle caption
Mark Washburn/Courtesy of Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Health workers sit at the emergency entrance of a Doctors Without Borders clinic in Monrovia. New data seem to show a decline in Ebola cases in Liberia, WHO says.
Zoom Dosso/AFP/Getty Images
hide caption
Berkeley's efforts to pass a penny-per-ounce tax on sugary drinks faced opposition with deep pockets — but it also got sizable cash infusions from some big-name donors.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
hide caption
Air Force personnel put up tents to house a 25-bed, U.S.-built hospital for Liberian health workers sick with Ebola in Monrovia, Liberia's capital. The hospital is scheduled to open this weekend.
John Moore/Getty Images
hide caption
In 49 U.S. states, spotting the squished disc in this spinal MRI is still much easier than learning the price of the MRI in advance.
AWelshLad/iStockphoto
hide caption
Students taking part in Columbia University's Ebola design challenge demonstrated for judges how to use a special chamber for decontaminating small items.
Courtesy of Columbia Engineering
hide caption
The majority of voters in San Francisco and Berkeley, Calif., voted in favor of a soda tax, but the measure didn't gain the required two-thirds majority required in San Francisco.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
hide caption
A young boy suspected of having Ebola lies in a back alley of the West Point slum in Liberia. Research suggests that the story of one needy individual motivates charitable donors more than statistics about millions of sufferers.
John Moore/Getty Images
hide caption
Wilson Kipsang of Kenya hoisted his country's flag after winning the New York City Marathon on Sunday. Kipsang won in an unofficial time of 2 hours, 10 minutes, 59 seconds.
Craig Ruttle/AP
hide caption
The scariest part of the holiday comes in the days that follow, as parents fight and negotiate to limit how much candy their kids eat. NPR's Gisele Grayson decided to pay her kids off to give up their loot.
iStockphoto
hide caption
A child receives a polio vaccine during National Immunization Days in the Nigerian city of Kano.
Diego Ibarra Sanchez /Courtesy of Rotary Foundation
hide caption
itoggle caption
Diego Ibarra Sanchez /Courtesy of Rotary Foundation