
This is an image of a little boy from India and it is showing percentages of hand washing practices by people in India. In India only 53% of people wash their hands with soap after defecation, 38% before eating and 30% before preparing food. 1,000 children die every day in India from having diarrhea. The diarrhea and respiratory infections are the number one cause for child deaths.


This chart describes and depicts the statistics of hand washing in the country of India as well as its impact on the health of the people that live there.


This is a series of statistics and charts depicting the lack of the widespread usage of hand-washing throughout the country India and the adverse health effects of this fact.


The shows information about how the practice of hand washing with soap in India is not widespread. Diarrhea and respiratory infections are the number 1 cause of death in children in India.


This chart describes that the practice of hand washing with soap in India is not wide spread. categories on the chart include people washing their hands with soap.


The image depicts the facts about hand washing with soap in India. Diarrhoea and respiratory infection is the number one cause for child deaths in India. Statistics of people washing hand with soap after using the bathroom, before eating, before preparing food are included in percentages. Stats about 1,000 children dying daily from diarrhoea is cited. Source of image is UNICEF. Picture of a young child is provided alongside statistics.


The image is titled "The Practice of Handwashing with Soap in India is not widespread." The picture is of an older person, with darker skin, and white paint of their body. There are smaller pictures symbolic of a toilet, food, and a pot, with percentages of people who wash their hands in relation to these activities. Also, the statistic that 100 people per day die from diarrhea. This picture is from Unicef.


Appears to be a photo fact poster by Unicef. Picture of a child bathing with soap bubbles all over his body with facts about handwashing and diarrhea in India. It seems as though a correlation between lack of hand washing and diarrhea. Percentages are shown like only 53% of people wash their hands with soap and water after defecation, 38% before eating, and 30% before preparing food. Information given about diarrhea and respiratory infections are the #1 cause for child deaths in India. It goes on to show 1,000 children die a day from diarrhea.


This image is informational and is of the topic of children deaths in India. The main focus is that hand washing with soap is not a common practice and this creates a problem. There are as much as 1000 preventable deaths from proper hand washing. There are striking statistics about how 53 percent of people wash their hands after defecating and 38 percent wash before eating and a staggering 30 percent of people wash hands before preparing food.


This chart displays the practice of hand-washing with soap in India is not widespread. Diarrhea respiratory infections are the number one cause for child deaths in India.


Diarrhea is the number one cause of infant deaths in the country of India. Over 1000 die a day because of this. Only 50% of the population washes their hands after defecating. Only 33% wash their hands before eating and only 30% wash their hands before preparing a meal.


There's a photograph of a young boy smiling and lathered up with soap from the torso up. Besides him is a caption that reads, "The practice of hand washing with soap in India is not widespread". To the right of the boy is another caption, "Diarrhoea, and respiratory infections are the number one cause for child deaths in India".


Diarrhoea is a terrible affliction that claims many children around the world every day. This picture instructs how it can be combated with proper hygiene.

