Poster divided on sixteen pictures: restroom, soft drink and a glass, two men shaking hands, pack of cigarettes and a pipe, woman breast-feeding a baby, sick person in bed with infusion, mosquito and adhesive tape, man in dentist’s chair, bowl with fork, knife and chop-sticks, woman kissing a baby, teacher and three kids near the table, two tooth-brushes and toothpaste in a glass, party dressed woman, needles, syringe, scissors and blade, kissing man and woman, and a man tattooing the other man. Poster is drawn black and white.
Two naked babies sit side by side, one black and one white, with their backs facing us. The poster implies that the black baby did not get HIV drugs, but the white baby did, and that Aids Fonds is trying to make the drugs available to all.
A woman sits on the floor on a mat, holding an infant in her lap. She faces a window with partially drawn curtains. The room is dark, lit only by a lantern in the corner and dim light from the window. Poster suggests the mother's moment of realization that, not only is she infected, she has also passed the virus on to her infant.
Poster depicts a happy family together. A baby held by its mother is receiving a shot from a health care worker, a member of the "ministry of health," as indicated on label on medical bag. Health care worker is using sterile medical supplies.
Poster presents 8 different pictures in a circle related to hygienes, sanitation, and medical injections for adults and children. The message of pictures is teaching people to prevent communicable diseases.
Booklet-advertisement including directions for use, descriptions of the remedy's effectiveness, and a color illustration of a doctor leaving the 19th century premises of a family no longer in need of his services. The family is shown using the product and an African servant is opening the door for the departing doctor.