In the DRC, many parents worry about their children contracting measles—but find themselves powerless to protect them, with vaccines and treatment options all too often out of reach.
Relentless threat: 311,000+ cases and 6,000 deaths were reported in the DRC last year. This year, ~97,000 cases have been logged; but the disease has become more lethal, killing 2,100+.
- For ~4.5 million malnourished Congolese children, measles can be even more dangerous.
Key obstacles: Logistics and infrastructure. Vaccines are difficult to distribute in the DRC due to the country’s vast size, poor roads, and unreliable refrigeration.
Future solutions: Rapid diagnostic tests and vaccine patches may improve prevention efforts in the future.
Bigger picture: Measles cases globally rose by 20% in 2023, reaching 10.3 million cases and 107,000+ deaths, according to .
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES EDITOR’S NOTE See You Next Year!
This is the last GHN of 2024.
Thanks to all our readers who support our work in so many ways—from opening the newsletter each morning to reading our exclusive reporting, sending tips and feedback, and contributing to our crowdfunding campaign. We appreciate you!
We’ll be back on Monday, January 6, with more news! — Annalies The Latest One-Liners
A viral illness dubbed "Dinga Dinga" is affecting women and girls in Uganda's Bundibugyo district; there have been reports of ~300 cases of the mysterious illness, which causes shaking, fever, and weakness.
Microplastics in the air could be linked to colon and lung cancer, and may be contributing to infertility, finds a of published research in Environmental Science & Technology.
U.S. life expectancy has risen closer to pre-pandemic levels as deaths from COVID-19 and drug overdoses decline, per new from the CDC; life expectancy increased ~1 year to 78.4 years in 2023.
A state of emergency for bird flu has been by California Governor Gavin Newsom, as 300+ herds in the state have tested positive for the virus in the last 30 days alone; meanwhile, the first severe case of human bird flu has been reported in Louisiana. GHN’s BEST OF 2024: STAFF PICKS A man takes rest from selling water bottles on a hot afternoon near India Gate in Delhi. Cheena Kapoor Jackie's Picks
I’m a contributing editor with GHN, reviewing stories and summaries in the morning production process to include in the newsletter. I wrote some of the very first summaries for GHN way back in 2014. What a difference ten years—and 50,000+ subscribers—makes! —Jackie Powder, contributing editor
Best GHN Exclusive India roasted in spring and summer as record-breaking temperatures soared to 126°F, forcing impoverished residents into heat poverty. Independent journalist Cheena Kapoor describes a Delhi family of five who took on debt to buy an air conditioner so the children wouldn’t miss school because of heat-related sicknesses. Meanwhile, outside, air conditioners expelled hot air, exacerbating the “urban heat island” effect in Delhi, which is dominated by concrete, steel, and asphalt.
Best News Article ProPublica reporters Annie Waldman, Maya Miller, Duaa Eldeib, and Max Blau interviewed more than 500 therapists to explore an aspect of the U.S. mental health crisis: therapists opting out of health insurance networks in droves. The providers described insurers urging them to reduce treatment for high-risk—and more costly—patients, and withholding reimbursements. The result is a severe shortage of therapists who accept insurance and a lack of access to care for people with mental illness—even if they are insured.
Best Commentary POLIO Persistent Threats to Pakistan’s Vaccination Efforts
The bombing attack in northwest Pakistan that killed three police officers assigned to protect polio vaccine workers was just the latest in a long history of violence seeking to undermine the country’s vaccination efforts, .
- The bombing came a day after gunmen opened fire on police escorting polio workers in the city of Karak, killing one police officer and injuring a health worker.
Adding to obstacles: Health officials have postponed the vaccination drive in the country’s southwest Balochistan province after health workers there boycotted participation to oppose hospital privatization, .
Ongoing hostility: 200+ polio workers and police assigned to protect them have been killed since the 1990s, as militants claim the campaigns are a Western conspiracy.
- Other subversion tactics include falsifying vaccination records, explained WHO epidemiologist Zubair Mufti Wadood in a .
People who need surgery in Sierra Leone, which has one of the world’s least developed health care systems, often must seek treatment abroad, with NGOs helping to cover costs.
But now, a new state-of-the art hospital has opened in Freetown, with support from Japan, offering surgical procedures and specialty care.
- The hospital is also training local medical personnel. “Every operation that takes place is another chance to train and maintain surgical knowledge within Sierra Leone,” writes Jody Ray.
ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION Norbert, the beloved cat of GHN staffer Morgan Coulson, representing his species well. Driven to Distraction
Some say you are what you eat, but at GHN, we are what diverts us.
Weekly diversions are perhaps the clearest lens onto what makes us click, other than global health news. And after an audit of the year, it’s clear: We can’t resist an animal story.
So much so that at one point, it was suggested that we—gasp!—put a moratorium on cat content. Norbert (pictured) has thoughts. Readers: What do you all think?
Our animal instinct led us to:
- A prize-winning bear “”—and also robbing cars.
- This champion poodle styled as a came to much acclaim (“perfection!”)—and this dog that had his record-breaking age (We blame the owners.)
- Moo Deng (duh) and the nemesis that came for her crown.
- Our favorite cat-egory: Felines. We learned about the , were horrified by , and had FOMO on a parade that tore through Minneapolis .
Syphilis microbe circulated in the Americas thousands of years before European contact –
Unified approach could improve nature, climate and health all at once – Thanks for the tip, Cecilia Meisner!
Cheap, smart and efficient: how giant rats are transforming the fight against TB – Issue No. 2833
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
An alarming illness circulating in a remote area of the DRC has been confirmed to be an acute form of malaria, exacerbated by malnutrition, .
- ~600 people have been sickened in the outbreak, and 143 have died—mostly children under 5.
- Difficult terrain and communication problems further hampered efforts to manage the outbreak.
What’s next: WHO-provided antimalarial drugs and health kits are being distributed throughout the region. New malaria vaccines have been rolled out in some African countries, but they have not reached the Panzi region, .
Big picture: Malaria still kills ~600,000 people a year globally—and 12% of those deaths occur in the DRC, where it is a leading cause of death. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES EDITOR’S NOTE Small Contributions Make a Big Difference While big-ticket donations are always welcome, it is our readers’ strength in numbers that has gotten us where we are today. Thank you to all of you who have donated so far!
Your donations have powered GHN’s Local Reporting Initiative. Knowing that stories are better told by people who know their communities, we’ve published dozens of articles by journalists around the world who’ve illuminated topics including tiger attacks in the Sundarbans, barriers to health care for Amsterdam’s sex workers, and climate change’s threat to Pakistan’s transgender community.
We’re excited to bring you more unique global health stories like these—but we need your help to do it. .
Thank you for joining us! —Morgan The Latest One-Liners The notorious 2020 paper that popularized hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment due to ethical concerns and methodological problems; the move follows years of campaigning by scientists who said the study contained major flaws.
As U.S. pertussis cases surge 6X from last year, public knowledge of the contagious disease remains low, finds a new from the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania.
Long-term exposure to air pollution can lead to increased risks of hospitalization for mental health conditions as well as physical ailments, per from the University of St Andrews published in BMJ Open.
Most U.S. teens are not drinking, smoking tobacco, or using marijuana, per the annual Monitoring the Future of 24,000 students released yesterday; it is the largest proportion abstaining from those substances since the survey started in 2017. GHN’s BEST OF 2024: STAFF PICKS Eliud Wekesa speaks to visitors at his home and church compound in Tongaren, Bungoma County, Kenya, on February 29. Dominic Kirui Annalies’ Picks
Since starting as a freelancer in 2017 to becoming GHN’s associate editor—with two children in between—time with GHN has flown by. I’m up at dawn most Thursdays serving as GHN’s lead editor—a gigantic mug of English breakfast tea in one hand, the other scrolling for the top global health stories so our readers don’t have to. When I’m not doing that, I am researching GHN stories on everything from to . And most weeks, I get to cross over to the light side, bringing you our weekly diversions and, hopefully, a smile! —Annalies Winny, GHN associate editor
Best GHN Exclusive Eliud Wekesa is just one of many religious and cult leaders across Kenya blamed for encouraging followers to shun medicine, undermining health efforts. Journalist Dominic Kirui shows how health officials are involving religious leaders in government health strategies to help dispel these messages. Wekesa has publicly modeled acceptance of medical care, participating in a mass drug administration campaign to combat bilharzia and intestinal parasitic worms.
Best News Article Reporters Nick Thieme, Alissa Zhu, and Jessica Gallagher unveiled a tragic trend among Black men born from 1951 to 1970: The group makes up 7% of Baltimore’s population, but accounts for ~30% of drug fatalities. It’s a generation whose lives have been “shaped by forces that have animated the city’s drug crisis for decades.”
Best Commentary HEALTH SYSTEMS Optum Takes Aim at ABA
Leaked internal documents reveal that Optum, a UnitedHealth subsidiary, is aggressively targeting applied behavior analysis (ABA) therapy—which the company acknowledges is the “evidence-based gold standard treatment for those with medically necessary needs”—to cut costs.
- Optum is scrutinizing providers who exceed certain cost thresholds, questioning the necessity of treatments, and denying coverage even for medically recommended ABA.
- Inadequate early intervention may result in more severe challenges and long-term harm for children with autism, ultimately costing insurers more.
Thousands of people in Gaza are facing devastating disabilities, with few resources or care to navigate their new reality.
- 106,000+ people have been injured since the war began, and ~25% of those injured require long-term rehabilitation, per the WHO.
Psychological scars: Those injured are also coping with trauma, an inability to work, and societal rejection.
DROWNING Who is Most at Risk?
The global drowning death rate has dropped 38% since 2000—“a significant health achievement,” per the on drowning prevention.
- 300,000+ people drowned in 2021, and 7.2 million+ may die due to drowning by 2050.
- People under age 29 account for nearly half of all drowning deaths; a quarter involve children under 5—and 9 in 10 drowning deaths take place in LMICs.
Related: How to prevent drowning: a ground-breaking report that's startling yet hopeful – QUICK HITS ‘I want help’: Behind bars, pleas for addiction medications often go nowhere –
Tracing fentanyl’s path into the US starts at this port. It doesn’t end there. –
Cheap, smart and efficient: how giant rats are transforming the fight against TB –
Health workers think COVID, flu vaccines safe and effective, but many remain hesitant, global survey shows –
'Cancer ghosting' can be more painful than treatment, survivors say –
Why cats are the new pigs – and could spark the next pandemic –
‘Silly and pompous’: Official new names for viruses rile up researchers – Issue No. 2832
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
In 2018, the Syrian air force dropped two yellow cylinders on the town of Douma, releasing a deadly chlorine gas that suffocated at least 43 people to death, reports.
“ …Their bodies turned to black, their clothes went green and were burnt, they crumbled and stuck to their bodies,” reports survivor Abdulhadi Sariel. “We threw out all of our clothes but [you can still see the effect] on the curtains.
- Syrian police later warned survivors to tell international investigators that smoke and dust inhalation, not chemicals, caused the deaths.
‘Dire Conditions’ for Syria’s Displaced: 100,000+ people have been displaced from northern Aleppo to areas in northeast Syria, a region already facing an “acute and longstanding” humanitarian crisis. Many face wintry conditions without shelter, water, and basic health care, .
Related: Former Syrian prisoners detail horrific conditions – GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners The vaccination gap is widening for children in England, per a that shows waning uptake of five key childhood vaccines among low-income children, leaving children in the poorest areas 20X more vulnerable to measles.
More than one-third of the world’s countries fail to monitor air quality, per an Open AQ assessment that found significant gaps in government tracking and sharing of air quality data, particularly for low- and middle-income countries.
The Italian government decided to scrap fines for refusing compulsory COVID-19 vaccines, drawing criticism from the medical community and opposition parties that accused the government of “rewarding lawbreakers” and ignoring health system needs.
After the Affordable Care Act was signed into law in the U.S., the number of uninsured Latinos fell from 33% to 18%—but more than half (55%) of Hispanic/Latino adults in the U.S. are inadequately insured, , compared with ~ 42% of the non-Hispanic/Latino population. GHN EXCLUSIVE Michelle Morse’s global health experience has strongly influenced her work as NYC’s acting health commissioner. Courtesy: New York City Health Dept. Michelle Morse: How to Protect the Health of 8 Million New Yorkers
After arriving in Haiti in 2009 to work with Partners in Health, Michelle Morse went on home visits with community health workers (CHWs) as they distributed medications, food, and other essentials.
- “Seeing that model in action—not waiting in our Ivory Tower for people to come in and see us, but actually bringing the lifesaving health interventions that people needed to where they were through community health workers—was a massive frame shift for me,” says Morse, the acting health commissioner for New York City.
In an interview with GHN earlier this month in the department’s Long Island City office, Morse shared insights on:
- The city’s efforts to recover from the nearly five-year drop in life expectancy during COVID-19.
- The department’s work to reduce Black maternal mortality.
- Her preparations for changes coming from the new presidential administration.
- The data she looks at daily.
In my role, I read and break down key points of articles for story summaries. I’m fascinated by how things work—whether it’s a policy, a health care system, or the components of a vaccine. I have a special interest in women’s and reproductive health, and as the articles below show, I have a soft spot for stories that explain the “whys” behind health actions. –-Rin Swann
Best GHN Exclusive Have you ever wondered why prescription drugs have baffling names? In this story, GHN's associate editor Annalies Winny explains why brand-name drugs need to meet strict naming requirements for patient safety.
Best News Article Despite multiple lawsuits and protests from therapists, the biggest insurance conglomerate in the U.S., UnitedHealth Group, has utilized algorithms to identify and revoke coverage to increase profits. Those most at risk include patients seeking mental health resources, Annie Waldman’s investigation reveals.
Best Commentary TUBERCULOSIS Seeking Screening for Pakistan’s Miners
Pakistan already has a high tuberculosis burden, but the disease is especially prevalent among the ~100,000 miners who labor in the country's coal pits.
- Prevalence of tuberculosis is 10.3% higher among miners than the general population.
Adding to the strain: Miners have limited access to health care, so often TB isn’t detected until the disease has progressed.
Improving awareness: New battery-powered, AI-driven x-ray technology is being used to improve TB diagnosis in remote mining areas, allowing miners to seek treatment earlier than what has been typical.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES QUICK HITS
Positive avian flu bulk-tank tests prompt another raw-milk recall in California –
Trump says there are 'problems' with vaccines, rejects mandates –
Trump's pick for health secretary, RFK Jr, supports polio vaccination, US senator says –
Missing and dismissing the impact of periods: Outcomes of focus groups of teens with period concerns –
Doctors seethe over insurance companies' ‘out of control’ tactics –
Should pharmacists be moral gatekeepers? –
A strange alliance: Oxygen companies and their Medicare patients want Congress to pay the companies more –
New insights into the vast diversity of nature's most abundant viruses –
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Public health experts are increasingly worried about the threat to vaccination programs under a second Trump administration, as Department of Health and Human Services secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. surrounds himself with anti-vaccine advocates—including one who has fought the polio vaccine, .
To help vet candidates for key jobs in the department, Kennedy has turned to attorney Aaron Siri—who petitioned the FDA in 2022 to revoke approval of the polio vaccine, .
- Siri, known for challenging COVID vaccine mandates and questioning vaccine safety, works with the Informed Consent Action Network, a group critical of vaccines.
- “There is much more behind this than just rhetoric,” said Michael Osterholm, director of CIDRAP.
A parvovirus B19 outbreak is spreading in Japan, bringing heightened risk to pregnant women, who face increased risk of miscarriage or complications in newborns from the respiratory disease.
RSV vaccine trials for children have been halted after two experimental RSV vaccines for babies failed to protect them—and actually made some of the babies sicker, per researchers’ findings.
Expanding Canada’s needle exchange programs to cover 50% of people who inject drugs in the country’s prisons would prevent 15% of new hepatitis C cases and 8% of injection-related infections, per in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. GHN’s BEST of 2024: STAFF PICKS View of Freetown, Sierra Leone. Blessed Sheriff Dayna’s Picks
As GHN’s resident morning lark, my main responsibilities include curating the news, planning production and matching assignments to writers, and editing exclusives. My favorite part of the job is getting to know our writers and readers and seeing how engaged and passionate they are about various global health priorities, which helps shape our coverage—though there is never enough space to highlight everything that deserves a spotlight. —Dayna Kerecman Myers, GHN Managing Editor
Best Exclusive Sierra Leone’s only psychiatric hospital has just 10 psychiatrists tasked with the daunting challenge of providing mental health care for a country of 8 million people. Blessed Sheriff, a Johns Hopkins-Pulitzer Global Health Reporting Fellow, traveled to Freetown to report on efforts to transform mental health care in the country, interviewing the first class of psychiatry residents trained there and learning how they are helping to melt societal stigma and change the narrative around mental health.
Best News Article Dakar-based reporter Elian Peltier exposed how Kremlin-paid African influencers, news outlets, and Russian state-controlled media amplify each other in efforts to undermine Western-funded health care programs in Africa, spreading disinformation about scientists fighting malaria and other infectious diseases on the continent. It’s a chilling example of how pro-Russian propaganda capitalizes on weakened trust in the West while silencing independent journalists. – The New York Times (gift article)
Best Commentary GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MPOX Mysteries at the Epicenter
It has been 15 months since a new strain of mpox surfaced in the mining town of Kamituga in Eastern DRC.
While the response now includes intensive interventions including vaccines, much remains unknown about the strain, clade Ib, and its origin, reports Stephanie Nolen in a deep dive from Kamituga.
Unanswered questions include:
- How is clade Ib transmitted? Is it truly sexually transmissible, or can it spread through close physical contact?
- Why are children disproportionately affected? Is it because the virus has already infected so many adults, or because children are so malnourished—or another reason?
- And how did the virus come to Kamituga? Has a precursor been circulating in animals for years?
Portugal has a life expectancy nearly four years longer than the U.S.—despite spending just 20% of what the U.S. spends on health care per person. And the small country ranks third of 195 countries for access to affordable health care—while the U.S. ranks 183rd.
The focus of its national health system? Not cutting-edge technology or expensive medical facilities but rather “old fashioned primary care and public health.”
Some key features:
- Free or low-cost health care for every resident
- A network of “family health units,” or clinics embedded in neighborhoods
- Robust electronic health records that allow doctors to track individual and population health in real time.
Texas’ abortion pill lawsuit against New York doctor marks new challenge to interstate telemedicine –
Outgoing CDC director girds against an overhaul, and tries to calm staff nerves –
Fired Baltimore health commissioner speaks out –
Will the FDA finally ban Red No. 3? A decision could come soon –
Egypt’s Hepatitis Programme Becomes a Model for African Countries –
Migrant children struggle to express themselves in words. Enter art and play. – Issue No. 2830
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Lifespans are increasing worldwide, but those extra years are not necessarily healthier, finds a large new study published in .
The health span-lifespan gap—the difference between how long people live and how long they live in good health—has widened over the past two decades among 183 WHO member states, .
- On average, people live 9.6 fewer healthy years than their total lifespan, with a larger gap for women. In the U.S., the gap is 12+ years.
- The health span deficit is linked to the cumulative effects of aging itself, researchers say—but also the uptick in chronic diseases like heart disease and diabetes, and mental health issues.
We hear all the time from readers who say they love reading GHN with their morning coffee.
Today, we present a challenge: ? Whether it’s an at-home filter coffee, a classic cuppa, a pricey pumpkin spice caramel latte ... we’ll take it!
And here’s your sweetener: Donations of any amount will help us unlock a special $2,000 challenge gift from longtime GHN supporter Ana Rita Gonzalez.
So far, 72 readers have contributed. 28 more are needed to unlock the gift. Any amount is welcome!
Your contributions remind us of the global mission at the heart of our work, and our responsibility to use your donations wisely—to strengthen GHN and expand our global coverage. —AԲԲ GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
Colorectal cancer is on the rise among people under 50 worldwide, published in the Lancet Oncology finds, with the greatest annual increases being seen in New Zealand, Chile, Puerto Rico, and England.
Health investigators in California have sent samples to the CDC to try to determine whether a toddler who’d consumed raw milk was infected with H5N1, but much about the case remains unclear.
Gender-affirming care in Montana will remain legal for minors after the state’s supreme court upheld a lower court ruling that blocked a new law banning care.
17 children in Mexico have died from bacterial infections related to contaminated IV feeding bags; 16 of the children were infants, and one was 14 years old. GHN'S BEST OF 2024: STAFF PICKS Zhou Pengcheng provides music therapy for a child with autism in Tianjin, north China, March 23, 2021. Zhao Zishuo/Xinhua via Getty Melissa’s Picks
As a morning editor on GHN, I review our summaries and analyses, trying to correct any ambiguities, errors, or typos before they land in your inbox. It’s intense work—racing against the clock while our small team smooths out the day’s edition—but energizing, too. And, like our readers, I reap the benefit of GHN’s content as I start my workday, which for me includes editing and writing for our School’s magazine and website. —Melissa Hartman, GHN contributing editor
Best GHN Exclusive Researchers were stunned by the results of a survey they conducted to learn about suicidal thoughts among young people with autism: Of nearly 400 autistic children who reported wanting to die over their lifetime, 35% experienced onset at 8 years old or younger. GHN’s Kate Harrison Belz spoke to the study’s lead author about the findings and what caregivers can do to help children at risk. Best News Article Native Americans have the highest rate of death from liver disease in the U.S.—but are less likely than other racial groups to secure a spot on the national liver transplant list. Journalist Annie Gilbertson and data scientist Ben Tanen shed light on causes that range from scarce IHS funding to federal agencies’ delays in collecting data on who receives transplants. Best Commentary GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES HUMAN RIGHTS Afghanistan to Ban Women From Nursing, Midwifery
The Taliban is poised to ban women from training as nurses and midwives in a move that “will have a devastating long-term impact on the lives of millions of Afghans, especially women and girls,” said Afghan activist Samira Hamidi.
- The order was announced at a meeting of the Taliban public health ministry on Monday and relayed to training institutes soon after.
- Afghanistan needs an additional 18,000 skilled midwives for Afghan women to get adequate care, .
Forget The Nutcracker. In the U.K., ’tis the season for code crackers.
Each year, Britain’s cyber-intelligence agency gift wraps “a riddle wrapped in an enigma inside a mystery” for the nation’s puzzle-hungry public, .
Hark! The Herald Agents Sing: The annual Christmas Challenge was introduced by the “in-house puzzlers” at the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in 2015 and has since become a beloved, brain-boggling tradition.
O Come, All Ye Playful: The festive quest is designed for young people ages 11–18, with the subversive hope they will discover a passion for puzzles—and potentially “consider what a career in cybersecurity and intelligence might have to offer,” said GCHQ Director Anne Keast-Butler.
- A third of British secondary schools had downloaded the puzzle the morning of its release, .
Data shows global conflict surged in 2024 –
An opioid settlement ruling could have far-reaching implications for other lawsuits –
Poliovirus keeps popping up in European wastewater, perplexing and worrying scientists – Issue No. 2829
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
LUSAKA—Mary Kapaipi suspected that her husband might be suffering from cholera last January, amid a deadly outbreak in their neighborhood outside Zambia’s capital. But he insisted it was just a sore throat. By the time his symptoms worsened and she sent for help, it was too late to save his life.
Kapaipi later discovered signs of his illness—soiled underwear and patches of white vomit—hidden around their house. If he hadn’t concealed his symptoms, he might have lived, she says.
This pattern of secrecy and shame is common among cholera patients, Kennedy Phiri and Freddie Clayton learned while reporting for this exclusive series that spotlights not only the need to improve water and sanitation infrastructure in the area, but the equally urgent need to address the stigma surrounding the disease.
Read their story to learn who is most affected by stigma and why—and why some community members feel better prepared to face another potential outbreak as this year’s rainy season gets underway (hint: they are not relying on government interventions).
Ed. Note: This article is the second in a two-part series; read Part I,. The series is part of , made possible through the generous support of loyal GHN readers. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Dengue fever cases have tripled to a record high in Central and South America this year, with 12.6 million+ cases and 7,700 deaths; Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico were hit especially hard.
Women in Iran could face execution, long jail times, or flogging for defying new morality laws effective this week that seek to penalize women for “promoting nudity, indecency, unveiling or improper dressing.”
Human trafficking cases spiked 25% between 2019 and 2022, from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime; more children are being exploited, and forced labor cases have surged amidst conflict, poverty, and effects of the climate crisis.
Ultraprocessed foods account for more than half of calories consumed at home by U.S. adults, per a published in the Journal of Nutrition; the report highlights the “proliferation and ubiquity of ultraprocessed foods on grocery store shelves,” said lead author Julia Wolfson. GHN’S BEST OF 2024: STAFF PICKS A sex worker waits for clients behind her window in the red-light district of Amsterdam, on December 8, 2008. Anoek De Groot/AFP via Getty Morgan’s Picks
You might call me GHN’s “jack of all trades.” I write summaries for our newsletter and articles for our website, create our social media content, build web pages, collect metrics—you name it. I am lucky enough to get to work on a publication that includes news as diverse as my skill set, and, in the face of a very uncertain future, I’m glad I’m helping get the health news that matters out there, to those who need it. —Morgan Coulson, GHN Editorial Associate
Best GHN Exclusive Amsterdam is famous for its red-light districts, but many of the city’s thousands of sex workers lack access to health care. In this exclusive, journalist Gabriela Galvin investigates the web of immigration and labor policies, logistical hurdles, and stigma that obstructs workers’ pathway to care.
Best News Article Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are making many foods—including global staples like rice and wheat—less nutritious by reducing protein, vitamins, and critical micronutrients like zinc and iron. Writer Kellie Schmitt shows how these eroding nutritional values threaten millions with hidden hunger.
Best Commentary GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MALARIA New Threats Hamper Game-Changing Gains
The global fight against malaria remains stalled as new threats emerge and under-resourced regions fall behind, per the new .
- Progress is being undermined by severe funding shortfalls, rising drug and insecticide resistance, and humanitarian disasters—leading to cases rising for the fifth consecutive year, .
- The overwhelming majority of fatalities occurred among children under age 5 in Africa, . Overall, ~95% of deaths occurred in the WHO African Region.
- “No one should die of malaria; yet the disease continues to disproportionately harm people living in the African region, especially young children and pregnant women,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
- 17 countries have introduced malaria vaccines, and new-generation nets are more widely available.
When epidemiologist Kristen Aiemjoy’s son came down with a strange illness that turned out to be scrub typhus, she identified it before doctors did.
How? Scrub typhus happens to be Aiemjoy’s research focus, and she recognized the scab where the infected insect had bitten her son.
- That scab, or eschar, appears on only 40%–60% of those infected, so many are not diagnosed.
Aiemjoy hopes her research will help to develop a low-cost test to improve early diagnosis and care.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Africa: Decade-Long Study Reveals Key Drivers of Global Health Success –
Medical misogyny leaves women in pain for years, say MPs –
Genetic analysis finds H5N1 in California child most similar to cattle genotype –
The Ten Americas: How Geography, Race, and Income Shape U.S. Life Expectancy –
U.S. health panel draft recommendations would allow a self-testing option for cervical cancer –
Coronavirus FAQ: I didn't get the latest COVID vaccine. Should I? And if so ... when? –
A public health game plan grounded in the Golden Rule –
Tokyo government gives workers 4-day workweek to boost fertility, family time – Issue No. 2828
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Pranab Basak, Courtesy of Photoshare Dear GHN Reader,
Thank you for the many ways you support us every day—inspiring us, sharing stories and new perspectives, and spreading the word about GHN.
Over the last few years, many of you have also supported our mission in a new way—by making a gift. And this week, we’re asking you to consider .
Donations of any amount are welcome and will help us unlock a special $2,000 challenge gift from longtime GHN reader and supporter Ana Rita Gonzalez, ScD, CPA.
You can also help us by advocating for the campaign:
- within your social networks.
- Inspire others with a or gift.
With sincere thanks,
Dayna Kerecman Myers Managing Editor Global Health NOW HELP US MEET THE CHALLENGE
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
- Some 50,000 people live without clean water or toilets—forcing many to share makeshift latrines overflowing with human waste or defecate in the open.
- When the water levels rise, human feces pour into the neighborhood, contaminating the shallow wells people depend on for water.
Lessons learned from the last cholera outbreak have led to some improvements by the government and NGOs—but it’s hard to see that progress on the ground; massive water tanks haven’t been filled and few public toilets have been built.
Meanwhile, many of the largest investments focus on cholera treatment and research, rather than prevention. In the first part of a 2-part series, Phiri and Clayton delve into the reasons why—landing on the key missing ingredient that could determine whether this year’s rainy season will bring another outbreak.
Ed. Note: This article is part of , made possible through the generous support of loyal GHN readers. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners The EPA banned two known carcinogens yesterday: trichloroethylene (TCE), used in degreasing agents, furniture care, and auto repair products, and tetrachloroethylene (PERC), used in dry cleaning and auto repair, following decades of advocacy.
Alcohol-related e-scooter and e-bike injuries among U.S. adolescents tripled between 2019 and 2022, from ~23,000 to ~66,000, according to that points to a need for better enforcement of underage drinking laws.
Pediatricians in Pakistan report high knowledge related to antibiotic usage, but limited training in antibiotic stewardship, ; only 15% reported receiving training on antibiotic usage and AMR, and only 25.3% confirmed awareness of antimicrobial stewardship.
Few adults without biological children who underwent permanent contraception procedures reported regret in a ; additionally, 47% of respondents reported difficulty finding a physician willing to perform the procedure. GHN’s Best of 2024: Staff Picks A woman molds bricks for a kiln in Rajasthan’s Ajmer district on March 26, 2023. Shreya Raman Brian’s Picks My name may come first in the newsletter’s staff list, but in truth it’s my colleagues who take on the impossible daily task of finding and distilling global health’s essential news. They succeed because of their smarts, their commitment, and the help of loyal GHN readers like you.—Brian Simpson, GHN Editor-in-Chief Best GHN Exclusive The thousands of women who work in India’s brick kilns migrate from state to state to find work and often face massive barriers to health care. A lack of state health documents and paid sick time make it difficult for them to get care they need. Journalist Shreya Raman introduces us to kiln workers like Nirmala, who was forced to return to work 15 days after giving birth by cesarean section.
Best News Article The U.S. FDA has a tough challenge: Regulate nicotine products while facing nearly two dozen former FDA lawyers now working for Big Tobacco. Their inside knowledge gives the industry a big advantage. Reporter Kathryn Kranhold illuminates this dark corner of regulation.
Best Commentary HEALTH SYSTEMS American ‘Rage’ over Health Insurance
The man arrested in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s chief executive was found carrying a manifesto “decrying the health care industry,” .
The killing has sparked a swell of public anger—not at the shooting, but at the American health insurance industry.
- The reaction reflects “both the coarsening of public discourse and the degree of rage many Americans feel over the deficiencies of the U.S. health care system,” writes Nicholas Florko for .
- Gallup polling shows that just 31% of Americans have a positive view of the health care industry.
- Costs, delays, payment denials, and prior authorization usage have all continued to rise, —leading to delayed care and patients abandoning treatment, per the American Medical Association.
More than 250 murders of elderly women in Kenya between 2020 and 2022 have been linked to the increased use of “anti-witchcraft” laws.
The laws, which allow murder in “self-defense” from witchcraft, primarily affect elderly widows, who are frequently accused by their late husbands’ families of trying to gain property. The women are then shunned and lynched.
However, behavior attributed to witchcraft may actually be symptoms of dementia—and increased life expectancy has led to a rise in female-headed households and dementia cases.
Compounding factors: Kenya’s booming population and high unemployment rates often make elderly women targets for those seeking resources. Cultural beliefs about the evils of witchcraft mean that violators are rarely prosecuted.
QUICK HITS UN refugee chief urges patience as Syrian refugees weigh options –
Lonely graves, scattered bones: the stark reality of one of the most overlooked and fastest-growing migration routes –
Arizona confirms 2 avian flu infections as California probes second potential case in a child –
Can Congo contain its exploding mpox epidemic—and curtail its international spread? –
Spying on Student Devices, Schools Aim to Intercept Self-Harm Before It Happens –
Why India Must Keep Covid-Era Oxygen Plants Running –
Safety Concerns Plague Humanitarian Aid Work –
On the Frontline with Lebanese Midwives – Issue No. 2827
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
The WHO has dispatched rapid response teams to the DRC’s remote Panzi region to investigate and respond to an undiagnosed illness with a worryingly high mortality rate, as epidemiologists worldwide eye the outbreak with concern.
Despite fears of a novel illness, suggests that the culprit is likely an “unknown known” like pneumonia, influenza, COVID-19, malaria, or measles—or some combination of illnesses—exacerbated by severe malnutrition, .
Outbreak details: 406 cases of an undiagnosed illness with 31 deaths—a 7.6% fatality rate—were reported between Oct. 24 and Dec. 5.
- The illness primarily affects children under age 5, and symptoms include fever, headache, cough, runny nose, and body aches.
- The WHO convoy includes doctors, epidemiologists, lab technicians, and infection control experts to treat patients and collect data.
Hey Readers,
Last week, we quietly launched our third crowdfunding campaign in our 10-year history.
Today, we have an exciting announcement:
- Longtime GHN reader and supporter Ana Rita Gonzalez, ScD, CPA, is challenging us all: When another 100 subscribers make a gift, she will give $2,000 to support GHN!
.
I hope you’ll join me in contributing to GHN so we can continue to deliver essential global health news.
All best,
Brian GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners U.S. agriculture officials have issued a federal order requiring the testing of the nation's milk supply in an effort to increase surveillance of bird flu.
A single mutation in the protein found on the surface of the H5N1 influenza strain circulating in U.S. dairy cows could enable “easier transmission among humans,” per published in Science.
Morocco is producing mpox tests for the first time—another step in Africa’s quest for independence when it comes to sourcing medical supplies.
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield has reversed a policy that would have tied reimbursements for anesthesia to time limits, after widespread outcry from anesthesiologists. GHN’S BEST OF 2024: STAFF PICKS For our annual “Best of” series running daily for the next couple weeks, GHN team members share their picks for 2024's most memorable work. GHN’s ace morning writer and trusted news adviser Kate Harrison Belz kicks off our series. A child at Nduru camp, Kisumu City, Kenya. August 16, 2024. Scovian Lillian Kate’s Picks I distill articles for GHN's newsletter summaries, which involves a lot of caffeine and curiosity. I have long been intrigued by the ways public health, environment, and infrastructure intersect—an interest that has intensified after living through the devastation of Hurricane Helene in Asheville, N.C., where I live. As we begin recovery here, I find myself often mulling over articles like the ones below. How can we better steward our natural and built environments to strengthen our shared health? —Kate Harrison Belz, GHN writer Best GHN Exclusive: Deadly floods in Kenya this spring left behind a wake of cholera and other infectious diseases. In this exclusive, reporter Scovian Lillian explores how weather surveillance and disease surveillance can be more closely linked—and potentially save lives. Best Must-Read: Planting trees in urban areas has well-established climate benefits: cooling, pollution control, and stormwater absorption. But trees’ impact on human health is becoming more clear, thanks to the University of Louisville’s Green Heart Louisville project: “a clinical trial where trees are the medicine.” —Bloomberg CityLab Best Commentary: NEGLECTED DISEASES Women on the Front Lines of Lymphatic Filariasis
The mosquito-borne disease lymphatic filariasis—commonly known as elephantiasis for the severe swelling it causes—takes an especially heavy toll on women in India, where the disease is endemic.
More vulnerable: Women, especially in poor, rural regions, are more vulnerable due to daily outdoor chores.
Bigger barriers: Women have less access to health care, with 15.5% of rural women in India reporting that they struggle to get permission for medical treatment, and 24.7% struggling to obtain money for treatment.
- While annual mass drug administration campaigns aim to reduce transmission, mistrust and lack of awareness keep the preventive ۲ݮƵ out of women’s reach.
Formaldehyde is a ubiquitous chemical in the U.S.—a “workhorse” of commercial enterprises ranging from making furniture to sterilizing food.
But it is incredibly toxic:
- Formaldehyde causes more cancer than any other chemical air pollutant, and can increase risk of miscarriages, fertility problems, and asthma.
- It pollutes air even inside homes as it leaks from household products.
- The EPA was poised to make some initial reforms this year—but those efforts will likely be suspended under the new presidential administration.
Hundreds more migrants have died in Rio Grande crossings than U.S., Mexico reported –
‘My right side was paralysed, I was so sick’: the pesticide poisonings in Brazil that lead back to the UK –
Increases in U.S. life expectancy forecasted to stall by 2050, poorer health expected to cause nation’s global ranking to drop–
CTE Evident in Brains of Deceased Ice Hockey Players – Thanks for the tip, Chiara Jaffe
How the Messy Process of Milking Cows Can Spread Bird Flu –
Latin American journals are open-access pioneers. Now, they need an audience – Issue No. 2826
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
To prevent mass starvation in any country, alarms must be sounded early about food crises, and on-the-ground famine conditions monitored closely.
That’s the work of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)—an independent global partnership designed to issue warnings of impending food crises and activate interventions.
But increasingly, the effectiveness of this warning system is obstructed and undermined, finds an .
Obstacles include:
Conflict: Long and brutal fighting in places like Gaza and Sudan blocks the collection of critical malnutrition and mortality data.
- “The single largest driver of hunger in the world is conflict. This means that people who are most desperately in need are in the hardest-to-reach areas,” said Deepmala Mahla, chief humanitarian officer for CARE.
Childhood exposure to lead in gasoline has been linked to 150 million+ excess psychiatric disorder cases over the last 75 years, estimates a published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, which analyzed childhood blood lead levels from 1940 to 2015.
Chikungunya outbreaks have become "explosive” and “unpredictable" as climate change and urbanization enable its spread into new regions—disabling millions and costing billions, per a new in BMJ Global Health.
An Ebola vaccination campaign is launching in Sierra Leone, with 20,000 frontline health workers receiving a preventive vaccine a decade after the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history.
Daytime TV ads for junk food and sugary snacks will be banned from daytime television in the UK, as the government tries to battle high rates of obesity and tooth decay among children. LGBTQ RIGHTS In SCOTUS Case, ‘Major Implications’ for Transgender Care
A case argued yesterday before the U.S. Supreme Court could shape the future of transition care for minors in the U.S.—and shape other areas of health care policy across the country.
Background: The case, U.S. v. Skrmetti, challenges a 2023 Tennessee law that prohibits medical providers from prescribing puberty blockers, starting hormone therapy, or performing gender-affirming surgery for patients under 18, .
- But those same treatments are permitted for minors for other conditions. So the question at the core of the case is whether Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for youth unconstitutionally discriminates against people on the basis of sex.
Wider ramifications: The Court’s decision could have “major implications” for transgender people of all ages in terms of states’ attempts to restrict other areas of health care, particularly reproductive health,
What’s next: The justices are expected to rule in the case next spring.
Related: For Families of Transgender Children, Tennessee’s Ban Forces Hard Choices GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RIGHTS New Protections for Sex Workers in Belgium
Sex workers in Belgium will have new labor protections and rights under a law that goes into effect this week. The rules, which advocates described as a “revolution,” follow the country’s 2022 decision to decriminalize sex work.
New protections include:
- Formal employment contracts.
- Regulated pay and hours.
- Health insurance, paid leave, maternity benefits, and pensions.
- The right to refuse clients and stop activities at any point.
- Background checks for human trafficking and sex assault convictions.
- Strict safety protocols including emergency buttons in workspaces and provision of hygiene products.
Low-stakes debates are a balm in unsettling times.
Today, it’s an onslaught of lookalike contests for Hollywood “it” boys like Timothée Chalamet—who showed up to his own lookalike contest, but somehow didn’t win.
Paltry prizes: Paul Mescal’s Dublin double raked in €20, “or three pints”; Jeremy Allen White’s lookalike got $50 and a pack of Marlboro Reds, the .
But lookalike life is a lucrative gig for some. This rakes in £30,000 a year when his doppelganger has an album out—and much less when he doesn’t.
The trend has inspired many a think piece about the contests’ genderedness, their value to society… and who gets to participate. It’s all fun and games for cheek-boney A-listers, but “Where are the celebrity lookalike competitions for bald middle-aged men like me?” one . QUICK HITS Report highlights danger of splash pads for waterborne diseases –
The quest for a longer-lasting whooping cough vaccine –
Middle-school student scientists discover cancer-fighting compound in goose poop –
Tuberculosis Bacteria Vulnerable to Substances from Peat Bog Fungi –
Britain drug-cost watchdog says it will recommend Lilly obesity drug –
A few bursts of vigorous movement a day may cut women's heart risks, study says –
Ancient Germanic Warriors Took Drugs When Preparing for Battle, Study Suggests – Issue No. 2825
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
As global crises compound and aid funding shrinks, a “ruthless” reallocation of funds will be required to meet the most dire needs, warns the UN’s new humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher, .
- The humanitarian sector “is overstretched, it’s underfunded and it’s literally under attack,” Fletcher said, .
- But realistically, just ~190 million people can be reached with the $47.4 billion it is seeking.
- The UN’s funding appeal for 2024 was only 43% fulfilled.
Shifting political landscape: Fletcher acknowledged the need to win over the incoming Trump administration in the U.S.—the UN’s biggest single donor—along with a “number of governments who will be more questioning” of the UN.
Meanwhile: ~281 humanitarian workers have been killed in 2024, —more than in any other year.
Related: Live updates: Global Humanitarian Overview launch – GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Children seen playing in hazardous floodwaters in Malaysia raised concerns that waterborne illnesses could spread following torrential floods that killed dozens and displaced thousands last week; relief centers have reported nearly 5,000 cases of infectious diseases so far.
Ambassador John Nkengasong, head of the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, said that as a political appointee, he will be obliged to offer his resignation when President-elect Donald Trump is inaugurated in January—but he expressed hope that PEPFAR, a bipartisan program since its launch in 2003, will be reauthorized.
A U.S. House COVID-19 panel has released its final report on the pandemic, criticizing the public health response and common mitigation efforts, and concluding that the virus most likely emerged from a laboratory—a theory disputed by federal agencies.
Animals at a Wuhan market were infected with a virus around the time COVID-19 emerged, per a new analysis of genomic data collected from the market that has not yet been peer reviewed. DATA POINT INFECTIOUS DISEASES Valley Fever on the Rise
As more cases of the fungal infection Valley fever are being reported across the Southwest, researchers are looking at two key risk factors—both impacted by climate change and land development.
- Environment: With ramped-up development and increased drought from a rapidly warming climate, dust storms have intensified. Spores that lead to Valley fever can be inhaled with the dust, with construction and agriculture workers especially vulnerable.
- Animal hosts: As small mammals see their habitats disrupted and move into areas closer to humans, they could carry Valley fever—increasing the risk of zoonotic disease.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Pork Pollution Poisoning Mexican Villages
Yucatán residents say hundreds of pig “mega-farms”—holding up to 50,000 pigs each—pollute the local water supply with waste, hormones, and antibiotics, contaminating drinking water and spreading harmful bacteria like E. coli.
- Many of these farms operate without environmental permits and have caused significant deforestation and destruction of ecosystems important for local communities, particularly Maya villages.
ICYMI: The Many Costs of Cheap Chicken – OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS ‘My screams went unheard’: Women and girls suffer in Kenya’s worst drought in 40 years –
Beatriz v El Salvador: the abortion case that could set a precedent across Latin America –
How Soweto is fighting ill health from gold mine dumps –
Ferret study suggests connection between H5N1 shedding in air and transmissibility –
Burning old TVs to survive: The toxic trade in electrical waste –
Trump's immigration crackdown could reduce caregiving workforce –
How a scandal over sanitary pads is shaping feminist activism in China –
I got malaria on purpose and so can you – Issue No. 2824
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
The U.S. government’s approach to public health seems certain to change when the second Trump administration begins on January 20, 2025. But what powers do states have to act on their own public health priorities?
Reporter Joanne Silberner investigates the complicated, constantly evolving public health powers of states and the U.S. government, detailing:
- The USG’s immense power of the purse.
- The legal mandates and Congressional appropriations that could make it harder to cut CDC funding for state and local vaccination programs.
- States’ abilities to counterpunch against federal requirements with lawsuits.
EDITOR’S NOTE Celebrate 10 Years of GHN With a Gift Today
Hey Readers,
Today, we’re celebrating Giving Tuesday by announcing our . Your generosity in previous campaigns—the last was two years ago—has fueled incredible achievements: publishing 2,823 newsletter issues and launching the Local Reporting Initiative, which has delivered dozens of exclusive stories from around the globe.
Today, please help us launch the next decade of our newsletter and independent reporting on critical global public health challenges and solutions.
Please join me in supporting GHN.
All best,
Brian GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners A mystery illness with flu-like symptoms killed 143 people in southwest DRC in November, and infections are still rising; the country’s public health ministry is investigating with WHO support.
Injections of benralizumab, a monoclonal antibody treatment for asthma and COPD patients, proved more effective than steroid tablets in a , cutting the need for further treatment by 30%—and introducing the first asthma treatment breakthrough in 50 years.
Intra-abdominal fat in midlife can predict risk for Alzheimer’s disease in later years, per Washington University School of Medicine-led research that assessed the impact of different types of fat on amyloid levels in the brain (an early indicator of risk).
Depression significantly affects period pain, or dysmenorrhea, that also identified key genes and proteins involved, underlining the need for depression screening for women presenting with period pain. SUBSTANCE USE Cartels Recruiting Chemistry Students
As Mexican cartels seek to dominate the fentanyl market, they are increasingly turning to a new source for recruits: university chemistry labs.
The goal: Cartels are awarding chemistry students high salaries and other incentives in hopes of building a motivated workforce that can help make fentanyl more potent.
The bigger ambition: Cartels are trying to synthesize chemical compounds known as “precursors” that are key to making fentanyl, which would free them from being dependent on China for production.
If they succeed: Mexico could control the fentanyl supply chain—making it more difficult for law enforcement in both Mexico and the U.S. to stop the flow of the deadly drug.
- “It would make us the kings of Mexico,” said one chemistry student turned cook.
British lawmakers have advanced legislation that gives some terminally ill patients a pathway to end their lives—a major shift in a years-long cultural debate, .
Details: In a 330 to 275 vote last Friday, the House of Commons approved a bill that would grant the option of assisted dying to people over 18 in England and Wales with a terminal diagnosis and a life expectancy of six months or less.
Background: The bill signals “one of the most profound social changes in the country in decades,” . The last time an assisted dying bill came before the House in 2015, it was defeated 330 to 118.
Concerns: Bill opponents are worried that the legislation will lead to coercion of vulnerable people such as older people or people with disabilities.
What’s next: The measure goes to parliamentary committees before returning to the House of Commons for another vote.
Related:
How assisted dying has spread across the world and how laws differ –
What It Means to Legalize Assisted Death – QUICK HITS Malaria vaccine rolled out in world's worst-affected country –
Supreme Court justices question block on flavored vapes, but don’t appear convinced FDA was unfair –
New Report: Life Expectancy Years Shorter in the United States Compared to the United Kingdom –
En route to a “functional cure” for HIV –
Eliminating Rabies in Africa Must Begin with Quality Data –
Why every medic needs to know basic sign language –
Disability rights: UN chief calls for amplified leadership roles to shape more inclusive future –
How a middle schooler found a new compound in a piece of goose poop – Issue No. 2823
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
The AIDS epidemic is at a “historic crossroads.”
The end of AIDS as a pandemic is in sight, with effective treatments and a revolutionary new vaccine on deck. Yet discrimination keeps lifesaving treatment out of reach for too many, and critical gains remain under threat.
Those are findings of the new released for World AIDS Day, which called for a “rights-based approach” to fighting the epidemic, .
Key points of the report:
- One-quarter of people living with HIV—9 million+ people—lack access to lifesaving treatment.
- LGBTQ+ people are underserved in 63 countries that still criminalize them.
- Women and girls are especially vulnerable, accounting for 62% of new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa last year.
- Children remain unreached, with just 57% of children with HIV and 65% of adolescents having access to antiretroviral therapy.
- The shot, lenacapavir, is already sold under the brand name Sunlenca to treat HIV infections, but Gilead is now seeking authorization to use it for prevention.
- And in the U.S., fear is especially acute that the incoming Trump administration will sow AIDS disinformation and denialism, writes Jason Rosenberg in a .
COVID-19 pneumonia is more likely to develop in men than women, per a new in Scientific Reports that found that 12% of men in Mexico were likely to develop the condition during the early days of the pandemic, compared with 7% of women.
Trump’s pick for NIH head is health economist Jay Bhattacharya, who criticized pandemic lockdowns and vaccine mandates and promoted “herd immunity,” the idea that people at low risk should live normally while building up immunity to COVID-19 through infection.
Indigenous groups are among the speakers at global negotiations to curb plastic pollution, saying the entire life cycle of plastic—from oil production to pollution to microplastics in water—poses health threats to Indigenous communities worldwide. NOVEMBER’S MUST-READS Fading Fear of HIV Tied to Rise in STIs
In South Africa’s wealthy Gauteng province, HIV infections are falling—with condoms, PrEP, PEP, and antiretroviral drugs credited for slashing new infections. But other sexually transmitted infections, including syphilis and gonorrhea, are on the rise amid an apparent false sense of security—with sex workers reporting that younger clients in particular resist condoms, arguing they are safe because of anti-HIV treatments.
Superbugs Thriving in War
A “growing and dire” crisis of antimicrobial resistance is taking hold in Gaza, as attacks on hospitals and blockades leave doctors with few tools to fight infections. Critical antibiotics remain unavailable, and many infections are unresponsive to the limited antibiotics at hand—resulting in amputations and death. With so few drugs, “nurses have a bottle of vinegar on the wound-dressing shelf” to treat infections, said Gaza physician Khaled al Shawwa.
LGBTQ Afghans Targeted by the Taliban
Since the Taliban regained power in Afghanistan in 2021, LGBTQ citizens have endured “widespread” physical and sexual violence in detention centers, human rights groups report. One group, Roshaniya, has documented 825 instances of violence against LGBTQ people in Afghanistan, including beatings, arrests, and detention—and emphasized the number was likely an undercount.
How ‘Click’ Cigarettes Hook Latin American Teens
A dizzying array of cigarette flavors—lemonade, apple, lollipop, strawberry—are enticing young people across Latin America to try smoking, and keeping them hooked. Despite promises to phase out traditional tobacco products, Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco have made these “flavor capsule” or “click” cigarettes a staple in countries including Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Bolivia while fighting regional efforts to ban the products, a joint investigation by The Examination, Perú’s Salud con lupa, and Chile’s LaBot news outlets reveals.
UnitedHealth’s Punishing Playbook
UnitedHealth Group, the U.S.’s biggest insurance conglomerate, has deployed algorithms and other strategies to identify those “overusing” mental health services—and then limited or revoked coverage for some of the nation’s most vulnerable patients. This investigative story details the company’s playbook for coverage denials—despite a series of lawsuits, and regardless, therapists say, of the severity of their patients’ issues. NOVEMBER’S EXCLUSIVES An NG Biotech employee manufactures "Carba" tests, an antibiotic resistance test in Guipry, western France. April 6, 2020. Damien Meyer / AFP via Getty Report:
- By Annalies Winny
- By Brian W. Simpson
- By Brian W. Simpson
- By Dayna Kerecman Myers
- Walter Orenstein:
- Kristi Saporito:
Rwanda’s rapid-fire efforts to contain its first-ever Marburg outbreak won praise as “unprecedented.”
Key success factors:
- Extensive testing and contact tracing.
- Solid and well-connected health infrastructure and well-trained health professionals.
- Experimental vaccines and treatments.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CLIMATE CRISIS Foodborne Pathogens Flourishing
Higher temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns are creating prime conditions for foodborne illnesses to proliferate, researchers are warning.
- For every 1°C rise in temperature, the risk of bacterial infection from Salmonella and Campylobacter increases by 5%, published in October in eBiomedicine.
- Extreme heat makes food supplies vulnerable to pathogens including Salmonella spp., E. coli, and Campylobacter jejuni, per a review published in June in Climatic Change.
- Meanwhile, runoff from more frequent flooding is contaminating agricultural produce meant to be consumed raw.
RESOURCES QUICK HITS Africa CDC launches continental blueprint to combat endemic, neglected tropical diseases –
Long a ‘Crown Jewel’ of Government, N.I.H. Is Now a Target –
Why Fluoride Is Necessary for Public Health –
Starlink roll-out across Africa could transform digital health services –
Dengue: a hidden threat in blood transfusions amidst Brazil's largest outbreak? –
Measuring the Impact of Training the Trainers: Lessons From Pilots and Plastic Surgeons –
What’s the secret to living to 100? Centenarian stem cells could offer clues –
Ed Sheeran and Fuse ODG rebuke Band Aid charity song. We ask Kenyans to weigh in –
Libraries are offering free health and wellness classes across the US – November 2024
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
As one of our most loyal Global Health NOW subscribers and a valued donor, we want you to be among the first to know about this year’s fundraising campaign celebrating our 10th anniversary.
Tomorrow, we'll ask our readers to make a gift to support Global Health NOW.
Your generosity in Global Health NOW’s previous campaigns—the last was two years ago—has helped us to publish 2,822 newsletter issues and launch the Local Reporting Initiative, which has published dozens of exclusive articles from all over the world. Please give today to support our next decade of important, independent reporting. We’re committed to keeping GHN free to all. With your support, we will embark on another 10 years of sharing critical, timely knowledge on a global scale and publishing articles and commentaries available nowhere else. I hope you’ll in giving to Global Health NOW. With gratitude, Brian Brian W. Simpson, MPH Editor-in-Chief Global Health NOW bsimpso1@jhu.edu
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, and Jackie Powder. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
The AIDS epidemic is at a “historic crossroads.”
The end of AIDS as a pandemic is in sight, with effective treatments and a revolutionary new vaccine on deck. Yet discrimination keeps lifesaving treatment out of reach for too many, and critical gains remain under threat.
Those are findings of the new released for World AIDS Day, which called for a “rights-based approach” to fighting the epidemic, .
Key points of the report:
- One-quarter of people living with HIV—9 million+ people—lack access to lifesaving treatment.
- LGBTQ+ people are underserved in 63 countries that still criminalize them.
- Women and girls are especially vulnerable, accounting for 62% of new HIV infections in sub-Saharan Africa last year.
- Children remain unreached, with just 57% of children with HIV and 65% of adolescents having access to antiretroviral therapy.
- The shot, lenacapavir, is already sold under the brand name Sunlenca to treat HIV infections, but Gilead is now seeking authorization to use it for prevention.
- And in the U.S., fear is especially acute that the incoming Trump administration will sow AIDS disinformation and denialism, writes Jason Rosenberg in a .
COVID-19 pneumonia is more likely to develop in men than women, per a new in Scientific Reports that found that 12% of men in Mexico were likely to develop the condition during the early days of the pandemic, compared with 7% of women.
Trump’s pick for NIH head is health economist Jay Bhattacharya, who criticized pandemic lockdowns and vaccine mandates and promoted “herd immunity,” the idea that people at low risk should live normally while building up immunity to COVID-19 through infection.
Indigenous groups are among the speakers at global negotiations to curb plastic pollution, saying the entire life cycle of plastic—from oil production to pollution to microplastics in water—poses health threats to Indigenous communities worldwide. NOVEMBER’S MUST-READS Fading Fear of HIV Tied to Rise in STIs
In South Africa’s wealthy Gauteng province, HIV infections are falling—with condoms, PrEP, PEP, and antiretroviral drugs credited for slashing new infections. But other sexually transmitted infections, including syphilis and gonorrhea, are on the rise amid an apparent false sense of security—with sex workers reporting that younger clients in particular resist condoms, arguing they are safe because of anti-HIV treatments.
Superbugs Thriving in War
A “growing and dire” crisis of antimicrobial resistance is taking hold in Gaza, as attacks on hospitals and blockades leave doctors with few tools to fight infections. Critical antibiotics remain unavailable, and many infections are unresponsive to the limited antibiotics at hand—resulting in amputations and death. With so few drugs, “nurses have a bottle of vinegar on the wound-dressing shelf” to treat infections, said Gaza physician Khaled al Shawwa.
LGBTQ Afghans Targeted by the Taliban
Since the Taliban regained power in Afghanistan in 2021, LGBTQ citizens have endured “widespread” physical and sexual violence in detention centers, human rights groups report. One group, Roshaniya, has documented 825 instances of violence against LGBTQ people in Afghanistan, including beatings, arrests, and detention—and emphasized the number was likely an undercount.
How ‘Click’ Cigarettes Hook Latin American Teens
A dizzying array of cigarette flavors—lemonade, apple, lollipop, strawberry—are enticing young people across Latin America to try smoking, and keeping them hooked. Despite promises to phase out traditional tobacco products, Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco have made these “flavor capsule” or “click” cigarettes a staple in countries including Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Bolivia while fighting regional efforts to ban the products, a joint investigation by The Examination, Perú’s Salud con lupa, and Chile’s LaBot news outlets reveals.
UnitedHealth’s Punishing Playbook
UnitedHealth Group, the U.S.’s biggest insurance conglomerate, has deployed algorithms and other strategies to identify those “overusing” mental health services—and then limited or revoked coverage for some of the nation’s most vulnerable patients. This investigative story details the company’s playbook for coverage denials—despite a series of lawsuits, and regardless, therapists say, of the severity of their patients’ issues. NOVEMBER’S EXCLUSIVES An NG Biotech employee manufactures "Carba" tests, an antibiotic resistance test in Guipry, western France. April 6, 2020. Damien Meyer / AFP via Getty Report:
- By Annalies Winny
- By Brian W. Simpson
- By Brian W. Simpson
- By Dayna Kerecman Myers
- Walter Orenstein:
- Kristi Saporito:
Rwanda’s rapid-fire efforts to contain its first-ever Marburg outbreak won praise as “unprecedented.”
Key success factors:
- Extensive testing and contact tracing.
- Solid and well-connected health infrastructure and well-trained health professionals.
- Experimental vaccines and treatments.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CLIMATE CRISIS Foodborne Pathogens Flourishing
Higher temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns are creating prime conditions for foodborne illnesses to proliferate, researchers are warning.
- For every 1°C rise in temperature, the risk of bacterial infection from Salmonella and Campylobacter increases by 5%, published in October in eBiomedicine.
- Extreme heat makes food supplies vulnerable to pathogens including Salmonella spp., E. coli, and Campylobacter jejuni, per a review published in June in Climatic Change.
- Meanwhile, runoff from more frequent flooding is contaminating agricultural produce meant to be consumed raw.
RESOURCES QUICK HITS Africa CDC launches continental blueprint to combat endemic, neglected tropical diseases –
Long a ‘Crown Jewel’ of Government, N.I.H. Is Now a Target –
Why Fluoride Is Necessary for Public Health –
Starlink roll-out across Africa could transform digital health services –
Dengue: a hidden threat in blood transfusions amidst Brazil's largest outbreak? –
Measuring the Impact of Training the Trainers: Lessons From Pilots and Plastic Surgeons –
What’s the secret to living to 100? Centenarian stem cells could offer clues –
Ed Sheeran and Fuse ODG rebuke Band Aid charity song. We ask Kenyans to weigh in –
Libraries are offering free health and wellness classes across the US – Issue No. 2822
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Fire raced through a crowded, informal settlement in Manila, Philippines, on Sunday, leaving up to 10,000 people homeless, .
- News reports estimate 1,000 to 2,000 families are now homeless.
- Manila’s Mayor Honey Lacuna said the city would provide evacuees with “cash aid, food, and materials for rebuilding their homes.”
Drone video shared by shows a wall of flame engulfing a large portion of the neighborhood and later, twisted black tin sheets and ash.
The Quote: “I feel bad because we have no livelihood and no home. We don’t know how we can eat,” resident Elvira Valdemoro told a reporter in the video.
No deaths have been reported from the fire, and the cause hasn’t been determined. EDITORS’ NOTE Thanksgiving Break
GHN will not be published from tomorrow, Wednesday, November 27, through Friday, November 29, for the observance of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.
On the topic of thanks: We’re very thankful for all of our readers and the many ways you strengthen GHN. Special shout-out to all of you who submitted ideas for our Untold Stories contest; we hope to announce the winners within a couple of weeks.
We’ll be back on Monday, December 2, with more news! —The Editors DATA POINT The Latest One-Liners Pesticide-tainted food in small convenience shops in South Africa may be to blame for a spate of food poisoning deaths in recent months, including at least 23 children; the country has declared a national disaster to address the crisis.
Queensland, Australia is in the throes of its worst recorded whooping cough outbreak, with the death of one baby, 23X as many cases as this point last year, and rising hospital admissions—particularly among infants; vaccination rates among pregnant women plunged 6.5% between 2020 and 2023.
The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday declined to hear a challenge by major tobacco sellers to an FDA rule mandating the inclusion of graphic anti-smoking images on cigarette packs and ads.
Drugmaker Cassava Sciences halted all ongoing studies of its controversial Alzheimer’s drug, simufilam, after it showed no signs of working in a phase 3 clinical trial. The Latest: US Trump Transition Health News
‘We learned the hard way’: Samoa remembers a deadly measles outbreak and a visit from RFK Jr –
How RFK Jr. could use levers of HHS to shape vaccine and drug outcomes –
In the MAHA-verse, ex-Bernie die-hards and conservative moms find a political home –
CDC chief urges focus on health threats as agency confronts political changes –
Trump's Medical 'Contrarians' Herald New Era of Vaccine Scrutiny – GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES TOBACCO How ‘Click’ Cigarettes Hook Latin American Teens
A dizzying array of cigarette flavors—lemonade, apple, lollipop, strawberry—are enticing young people across Latin America to try smoking, and keeping them hooked.
Despite promises to phase out traditional tobacco products, Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco have made these “flavor capsule” or “click” cigarettes a staple.
Crawford Moodie, a researcher with the University of Stirling in Scotland who studies flavored cigarettes, calls them “a huge, global public health threat.”
- In Chile, flavored brands like Lucky Strike Fresh Wild account for 42% of cigarette sales.
- In Peru, flavored cigarettes make up more than half of sales.
- In Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and México, more than a fifth of cigarettes sold contain flavor capsules.
Related: The huge stakes in a Supreme Court case about vaping – CHILD AND ADOLESCENT HEALTH Behind the Child Mortality Reversal
Child death rates in the U.S. dropped for decades due to medical advances and public health policies. But a sharp reversal occurred from 2019 to 2021, with the mortality rate surging more than 10%.
The driver: Injuries. Gun violence—now the leading cause of death among children—accounted for nearly half of the increase. Overdoses more than doubled, and fatal car accidents spiked 16%
Disproportionately affected: Black and Native American children, who have been dying at much higher rates than white children.
Behind the data: Studies into gun violence have stalled for years due to political interference. While congressional funding in 2019 brought about a resurgence of research, a shifting political climate could jeopardize that work.
THANKSGIVING DIVERSION (Mostly) Defying Gravity
This Thursday, 60-foot giants will once again stalk the streets of Manhattan—and crowds of adoring fans will cheer them on.
The balloons of the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade seem to amble through New York City without a care in the world. But walking on air takes tremendous groundwork, :
Floating numbers: Bringing the 17 “character balloons,” 15 “heritage and novelty balloons,” and 22 parade floats to life requires 18 months of prep and 60 artisans working thousands of hours.
- Each new balloon creation takes about six months, and balloons are tested in New Jersey at the in the weeks before the parade.
Related: Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade Boss Takes Us Behind the Scenes of This Year's Spectacle - QUICK HITS A triple emergency in Kenya amid malaria and measles outbreaks –
It's a virus you may not have heard of. Here's why scientists are worried about it –
In search of a vaccine for leishmaniasis –
America's Alarming Bird-Flu Strategy: Hope for the Best –
Drugs like Wegovy, Ozempic would be covered by Medicare, Medicaid under Biden proposal –
A pathway for skin NTD diagnostic development –
Could games help people stick to HIV treatment? –
The disappearance of empathetic touch in medicine –
Do not wash your turkey and other Thanksgiving tips to keep your food safe – Issue No. 2821
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Mpox is still a public health emergency of international concern, a WHO committee decided Friday, due to rising cases, continued geographic spread, and “ongoing challenges in the field,” .
Vaccine impact emerging: The decision comes as the agency confirmed that new cases appear to be “plateauing” in the epicenter DRC since the first batch of vaccinations was rolled out—but officials cautioned that the disease is still spreading across the continent, and that it remains too early to ascertain the vaccine’s overall impact, .
- The WHO will publish the emergency committee’s full report this week, along with its updated recommendations, .
- That could be ۲ݮƵ, as a DRC immunization official said a vaccination plan for children has been drafted.
Fatal attacks on health workers in Lebanon have reached a “higher percentage than in any active conflict today across the globe,” —with 47% of all attacks on health facilities causing the death of a health worker.
Médecins Sans Frontières has in Port-au-Prince for the first time in 30+ years after repeated attacks and violent threats against staff by the national police and armed vigilantes; the charity was one of the last health providers in the besieged city.
Scientists are bracing for the impact of president-elect Trump’s promised travel bans, which stand to stress an already shrinking academic workforce, stymie collaborations, and stall progress on research; at least two U.S. universities have advised international students to return to campus before Jan. 20, when Trump will be able to issue executive orders.
Smoking could cause ~300,000 cancer cases in the UK over the next five years, per a new analysis from Cancer Research UK, which said the “magnitude of damage” from smoking warrants further government intervention. GHN EXCLUSIVE Monique Wasunna delivering a keynote address at the ASTMH annual meeting in New Orleans, November 13. Brian W. Simpson Neglected Diseases Are Fierce, But So Is Monique Wasunna
NEW ORLEANS—Monique Wasunna’s dramatic efforts as a young doctor in Kenya to save an 11-year-old boy with visceral leishmaniasis—racing him in her own car to a referral hospital—shaped her career.
“I said to myself … I will do anything in my power to help other patients. I will be their advocate. My mind was made up. Leishmaniasis it was, NTDs it was,” the DNDi Africa Ambassador told GHN in a . She reflected on her efforts to fight visceral leishmaniasis and other neglected diseases and shared insights on the work ahead, touching on:
- The NTD most likely to hit the global elimination milestone next (hint: the earlier treatment was an arsenic compound that patients said feels like “fire in the veins”).
- Critical obstacles that donors are neglecting.
- The little-discussed ingredient needed to combat brain drain.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MALARIA A Multipronged Assault on Mosquitoes
At Ifakara Health Institute in Tanzania, researchers know there is no silver bullet for malaria.
That’s why scientists and engineers there are busy crafting an arsenal against the disease and the mosquitoes that carry it—all from a network of labs that would “make James Bond’s Q green with envy.”
The inventory of interventions—from the simple to highly sophisticated—includes:
- Mosquito-proof sandals: Simple leather sandals fitted with a woven strap treated with insecticide, which reduced mosquito landings by 48%.
- Eaves ribbons: Strips of insecticide-treated fabric created to hang at ventilation gaps in mud and brick housing.
- Genetic modification: Ifakara has launched an effort to modify mosquito genes so that the insects cannot transmit the malaria parasite.
UnitedHealth Group, the U.S.’s biggest insurance conglomerate, has deployed algorithms and other strategies to identify those “overusing” mental health services.
- It then limits or revokes coverage for some of the nation’s most vulnerable patients.
- Federal law blocks companies from making mental health care coverage harder to obtain than physical health coverage, but a regulatory patchwork allows UnitedHealth and other insurance companies to skirt scrutiny—forcing regulators into a “Whac-A-Mole” scenario.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS CDC confirms H5N1 in California child as Hawaii details testing results –
How recent flooding crisis could fuel neglected topical diseases in Kenya –
Moscow bans adoption of Russian children to countries that allow gender transition –
It took years for my Black son to be diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. Then it happened to my family again –
Fold paper. Insert lens. This $2 microscope changes how kids see the world –
‘A place of joy’: why scientists are joining the rush to Bluesky – Issue No. 2820
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Since the Taliban regained power in Afghanistan in 2021, LGBTQ citizens have endured “widespread” physical and sexual violence in detention centers, human rights groups report.
One group, Roshaniya, has documented 825 instances of violence against LGBTQ people in Afghanistan, including beatings, arrests, and detention—and emphasized the number was likely an undercount.
- And transgender and gender non-conforming people are being “consistently” targeted at Taliban checkpoints.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
60% of Americans say they will “probably not” get an updated COVID-19 vaccine, ; reasons given include concerns of potential side effects and belief that the booster is not necessary.
Poliovirus detected in Warsaw wastewater is prompting Poland’s health authorities to urge that children be vaccinated; about 86% of the country’s 3-year-olds have been vaccinated against the virus.
Women with endometriosis or growths in their uterus have a slightly higher risk of dying before age 70, .
A new malaria vaccination strategy involves boosting immunity via genetically engineered parasites, ; the strategy protected ~90% of study participants from “contracting the disease after being bitten by malaria mosquitoes.” GHN EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY Police in Bogota conduct speeding checkpoints a key part of a comprehensive road safety strategy in 2022. Bogota Secretariat of Mobility Language Reform Drives Change in Road Safety Journalism
With a staggering global toll of deaths per year, road crashes are the leading cause of death for people age —and they are almost always preventable.
Yet many people consider road traffic crashes happenstances––and media messaging reinforces that narrative, often depicting them as “accidents,” “bad luck,” and or the victim’s fault, writes Vital Strategies’ Kristi Saporito.
Framing crashes as isolated and inevitable “accidents” beyond our control implies that they’re inevitable—but solutions, including protective policies, exist.
Words matter: By communicating that road safety is a public health issue and that crashes are largely preventable, the media has the power to shift attitudes, Saporito writes.
- Journalism trainings in Colombia, supported by and the , advised reporters on neutral road-incident vocabulary and placing traffic crashes in the context of broader road safety issues—and led to measurable improvements in reporting language.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES U.S. ELECTION What Does Dr. Oz’s Appointment Mean for Medicare?
Dr. Oz—the heart surgeon, turned TV star, turned Trump appointee to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services—is a familiar face for his daytime television persona as “America’s Doctor.”
Less familiar? His policy positions regarding the federal agency that oversees coverage for 145 million Americans, its $1 trillion budget, and what kind of influence he could bring to coverage decisions, drug price negotiations, and the Affordable Care Act, .
Puzzling positions:
- Oz has championed healthy lifestyle habits and criticized Big Pharma—and he has also spread misinformation about Covid-19, promoted unproven supplements, and profited from the pharmaceutical industry he’s criticized.
- He has previously expressed support for Medicare privatization. He has not revealed his views on Medicaid—though some Republicans in Congress have called for changes that shrink the program’s budget, .
It’s hard to be funny. But you know what’s even harder? Taking something objectively hilarious and pretending it isn’t. So, a big GHN kudos to whoever does the press releases for the California Department of Insurance.
The staffer : Four suspects were arrested on charges of insurance fraud after claiming their luxury vehicles were vandalized by bears—“but it was actually a person in a bear costume.”
It bears (ahem) mentioning: Video footage effortlessly opening car doors and rifling about in a suspiciously sapiens manner.
Still, investigators needed to be sure, so they enlisted a biologist who “opined it was clearly a human in a bear suit.”
Further confirming the obvious: A was found in a suspect’s home. QUICK HITS US CDC expects COVID and RSV levels to increase in coming weeks –
New study finds climate change is increasing the power of hurricanes –
‘Increasing risk’ of tropical infections as new blood donor monitoring launched –
Less-potent fentanyl pills may be playing a role in decrease of US overdose deaths, DEA says –
Scientists taught rats to drive – now they love getting behind the wheel – Issue No. 2819
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
A “growing and dire” crisis of antimicrobial resistance is taking hold in Gaza, as attacks on hospitals and blockades leave doctors with few tools to fight infections, .
Open wounds: Amid a constant backlog of patient care, many patients’ wounds are left open for long periods of time, leading to acute infections, say researchers with Médecins Sans Frontières.
- Critical antibiotics remain unavailable, and many infections are unresponsive to the limited antibiotics at hand—resulting in amputations and death.
- With so few drugs, “nurses have a bottle of vinegar on the wound-dressing shelf” to treat infections, said Gaza physician Khaled al Shawwa.
Meanwhile, an overconsumption crisis: Global antibiotic usage has climbed 20%+ globally since 2016—despite a pandemic-era disruption, a new of pharmaceutical sales published in PNAS finds, .
- Higher consumption levels are largely being driven by LMICs, where weak health care and hygiene systems have exacerbated illnesses and “indiscriminate” antibiotic use.
A second mpox vaccine has been granted emergency use designation ; Japan’s stockpiled doses of its LC16m8 mpox vaccine will be sent to the DRC and Burundi, and will be the first mpox vaccine available for children.
53 days post-Hurricane Helene, potable water has been restored in Asheville, North Carolina, after storm damage required extensive repair of the city’s water treatment and distribution system.
A new nasal vaccine to prevent whooping cough could help slow the disease’s spread; the vaccine, developed by Tulane University, works to clear bacteria from the upper respiratory tract, limiting contagion. WORLD CHILDREN'S DAY DATA POINT AGING Growing Older Solo—With Support
As more Americans face aging alone and far from family, support networks are being redefined as neighbors, friends, and fellow “solo agers” step in to help with daily care needs.
- In 2015, 15 million Americans ages 50+ had no nearby family; this number is expected to rise to 21 million by 2060.
Still a challenge: A 2022 AARP survey showed only 25% of solo agers had help with household tasks, and just 38% had support for ongoing care needs.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Envisioning Greener Health Care in SA
The environmental impact of South Africa’s health care system is massive—but so are the opportunities for change.
Reconsidering single-use: Although manufacturers and regulators typically designate medical devices for single use, research shows that some could be safely sterilized and reused.
Smaller carbon footprints: Some new hospitals in SA have been designed with energy-efficient features like solar power, and energy-saving measures in Western Cape pilot projects have eliminated thousands of tons of CO2.
Big opportunity: South Africa could join the WHO’s Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate and Health, which aims to help countries make health care greener.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Amid record year for dengue infections, study finds climate change responsible for 19% of rising dengue burden –
Nationwide IV fluid shortage ۲ݮƵ how hospitals manage patient hydration –
California child tests positive for bird flu with no known exposure to infected animals –
Djibouti experiments with GM mosquito against malaria –
60% of Americans say they probably won't get an updated COVID-19 vaccine –
New FDA rules for TV drug ads: Simpler language and no distractions –
Elon Musk Asked People to Upload Their Health Data. X Users Obliged. – Issue No. 2818
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Antimicrobial resistance is already a leading cause of death worldwide—but as AMR deaths spiral, the pipeline for new antibiotics is drying up, not ramping up. As WHO marks , leading researchers explain why:
- For one, small antibiotic makers can’t stay in business. Governments and public health programs closely guard novel antibiotics, deploying them as little as possible to avoid resistance, says Kevin Outterson, executive director of CARB-X, a nonprofit that supports antibiotics R&D.
What’s the Solution?
- Invest in incentives: Countries are starting to get behind “push” incentives that fund antibiotics R&D, and “pull” incentives designed to keep the makers of novel antibiotics afloat.
- Antibiotics for all: It’s key that these incentives be designed to ensure that research and new drugs reach high-risk populations in LMICs.
- Not just new drugs: Improving diagnostics and basic hospital hygiene are indispensable tools to protect antibiotics from resistance, says AMR researcher Caline Mattar.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Approximately 1 in 6 war-wounded trauma patients treated at Bashair Teaching Hospital in south Khartoum, Sudan, so far in 2024 are children under 15; many arrive with wounds from gunshots, blasts, or shrapnel, x-rays show.
Genetic sequencing of the H5N1 bird flu virus that infected a British Columbia teenager reveals that the virus underwent mutational changes that would make it easier to infect humans; there’s no evidence the teen infected anyone else, but the source of infection is unclear.
President Putin signed a decree today to allow for Russia’s use of nuclear weapons in response to an attack by a nonnuclear actor backed by a nuclear power, days after U.S. President Biden reportedly gave Ukraine permission to use U.S.-supplied long-range missiles on targets deep inside Russia.
A state judge struck down Wyoming's overall abortion ban, including an explicit ban (the nation’s first) on the use of pregnancy-ending medication. VIOLENCE Leading Cause of Maternal Deaths: Homicide
More pregnant women and new mothers in the U.S. die at the hands of intimate partners than from medical causes, published in in JAMA Network Open.
Going deeper: The study, which analyzed CDC data from 2018 to 2021, found that laws that restrict access to divorce and abortion during pregnancy can raise the risk of intimate partner violence.
- Researchers also emphasized a vital need for safe housing, protective orders, and additional resources for pregnant women in abusive relationships.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES TECH & INNOVATION Dr. ChatBot Is In—and Often Right
ChatGPT outperformed human physicians in assessing a series of medical case histories, a published in JAMA Network Open found—demonstrating the power of A.I. systems to be “doctor extenders,” providing niche insights or second opinions.
The study: 50 doctors and ChatGPT—and some doctors equipped with ChatGPT— were all fed the same medical case details and asked to provide a diagnosis. Each was graded on their ability to diagnose correctly, and on their ability to explain why they landed on potential diagnoses.
The results: The doctors operating alone had an average score of 74%. ChatGPT scored an average of 90%. Doctors using the chatbot got an average score of 76%—underscoring how doctors are often wedded to their own conclusions, despite the chatbot’s suggestions.
CORRECTION The ‘Never-Before-Seen Virus’ … Except in 2019
We'd received a Google Alert about the MSN story that we shared in a one-liner yesterday, about a mysterious malaria-like illness in Peru caused by a previously unknown phlebovirus; the case, however, was detected in 2019 and reported in 2023. We aim to limit one-liners to news stories that are not more than a day or two old, so that definitely did not meet our editorial guidelines—and we apologize for the oversight. Thanks to GHN reader Rebecca Wurtz for flagging our error! QUICK HITS
They fled war in Sudan. Now, women in refugee camps say they’re being forced to have sex to survive –
Urban mosquito sparks malaria surge in East Africa –
Abortion pills may be FDA's first test under Trump –
How Trump's reelection could impact reproductive health in low income countries –
Effect of health education on knowledge, perception, and intended contraceptive use for family planning among university students in Pakistan –
Falls, assaults, accidental poisoning among leading causes of injury hospitalisations and deaths in Australia –
Biden administration backs away from plastic production limits in UN treaty –
Over 4 tonnes of batteries collected to reduce environmental, health impacts –
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .