Patients Treated Onboard Medical Train

A conductor talks to local residents from the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train, which serves as a free consultative and diagnostic medical center, at a railway station of Divnogorsk, outside Russia's Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk May 26, 2014. The train transports well-qualified medical personnel and equipment to assist about 200 patients a day and has been traveling annually from the main regional center Krasnoyarsk to distant settlements of Krasnoyarsk and Khakassia Regions, where hospitals and clinics are scarce, for the last seven years. The train also has a carriage which operates as a mobile Orthodox church. The train was named after an outstanding Russian surgeon, an Orthodox bishop and GULAG prisoner Valentin Voino-Yasenetsky.
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An Orthodox priest rings bells outside a carriage serving as a church, after he baptized a family, inside the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train.
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People stand in line to enter the Doctor Voino-Yasenecky Saint Luka train.
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A doctor assists a patient inside the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train.
Ilya Naymushin / Reuters

A doctor assists a patient inside the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train.
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A dentist assists a patient inside the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train.
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An Orthodox priest baptizes a baby at a church inside the Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train.
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The Doctor Voino-Yasenetsky Saint Luka train moves along a bridge across the Mana River in the Taiga district near the Ust-Mana village outside Russia's Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk.
Ilya Naymushin / Reuters