Photojournalism Naythons' arrived in
Prague in August 1968, two weeks ahead of the Soviet army, which he photographed during the
Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. After graduating from medical school in 1972 he went to California where he completed a rotating internship at
Highland Hospital in
Oakland. At the end of his internship, he took six months off and moved to
Amsterdam. In October 1973, with help from a Dutch publisher and a friendly press-card carrying photographer, he was able to get on an El Al flight from Amsterdam for journalists covering the
Yom Kippur War. In 1975, Naythons arrived in
Saigon three weeks before it fell, photographing for
Time and evacuating during the
Fall of Saigon in a
United States Marine Corps helicopter. Naythons was one of the first on the scene of the massacre in
Jonestown, 1978; he had originally been scheduled to travel with Congressman
Leo Ryan, who was murdered there by members of the
Peoples Temple. While covering the Nicaraguan Revolution, he was struck but unharmed by a government soldier's rifle in
Managua, Nicaragua, in 1979.
NGO work Naythons' profession as a photographer led him to become active in the places he visited. In response to the Cambodian refugee crisis he witnessed first-hand in 1979, Naythons founded and led International Medical Teams (IMT), a mobile team of physicians, nurses and paramedics that brought health care across the Thai border into Cambodia from 1979 to 1981. ==Publishing career==