National
Patients wait to receive care at an HIV clinic in Nyagasambu, Rwanda. The clinic was built with money from President Bush's $15 billion global anti-AIDS program known as PEPFAR.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
The government health clinic in Nyagasambu, Rwanda, caters to 30,000 people living in the surrounding hills.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
A nurse prepares a dosage of antiretroviral drugs at an HIV clinic. The clinic was funded in part by President Bush's $15 billion global anti-AIDS program, which has helped put 50,000 Rwandans on AIDS medication.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
A doctor meets with an HIV-positive patient at a clinic in Nyagasambu.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
A mother and child wait to receive treatment. The HIV clinic was built by the Washington-based Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation with a grant from President Bush's anti-AIDS program known as PEPFAR.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
Jeanne Aribatuka, an HIV-positive 19-year-old, waits with her daughter to receive antiretroviral drugs. Thanks to the drugs -- financed in part by President Bush's anti-AIDS program known as PEPFAR -- Aribatuka has gained 7 lbs. in eight months, and her child is HIV-negative.
Shashank Bengali / MCT
of 6
i