Argentina鈥檚 president Javier Milei has announced the country will leave the WHO, following U.S. President Donald Trump鈥檚 lead, .
Rationale: Milei attributed his decision to the WHO鈥檚 management of the COVID-19 pandemic, calling the lockdowns a 鈥渃aveman quarantine鈥 and 鈥渙ne of the most outlandish crimes against humanity in history.鈥
- Milei鈥檚 actions have echoed other Trump policies, including a new crackdown on transgender care for minors.
鈥淲HO flu鈥: The bigger concern, health advocates say, is a growing trend CIDRAP鈥檚 director 鈥淲HO flu鈥濃攊n which countries pull out of the global health organization for political reasons.
Reaction: The announcement sparked immediate criticism from health organizations who say the move reduces Argentina鈥檚 access to health funding and resources. Opposition leaders said the decision would need to be approved by the country鈥檚 congress.
Meanwhile: The Trump administration has been considering plans for WHO reform鈥攊ncluding putting an American in charge of the agency in order for it to remain a member of the global body, . GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
A newer strain of bird flu has been detected in six dairy herds in Nevada; the strain, D1.1, is different from the one that has already been circulating in U.S. dairy herds, and that has been associated with severe infections in birds and humans.
Patients using diabetes apps can potentially miss critical blood glucose level alerts due to improper settings especially after software and hardware updates, per a new and recommendations.
Travelers to Uganda are being urged to take 鈥渆nhanced precautions鈥 because of the Ebola outbreak there, per alerts put out by , , and the .; recommendations include avoiding health care centers.
A kidney cancer vaccine is showing early promise, as Phase I trial results showed that nine patients at high risk for cancer recurrence remained cancer-free after three years; results suggest that the vaccines could someday be used for a wider variety of cancers. NEGLECTED DISEASES Niger鈥檚 Historic Victory Over River Blindness
Niger鈥檚 elimination of 鈥攁 parasitic disease more commonly known as river blindness鈥攊s being lauded as a 鈥渂eacon of hope鈥 in the quest to end NTDs.
Niger is the first country in the African continent to eliminate the disease, which can cause severe vision problems and blindness, plunging families into poverty.
What it took: The effort was 45 years in the making, and required extensive tracking, vector control, medication distribution鈥攁nd partnering with the global Onchocerciasis Elimination Committee, a global network of NGOs and disease experts.
Building on momentum: Eliminating river blindness in Niger alone is estimated to have added $2.3 billion USD to the country鈥檚 economy between 1976 and 2019 as prevention programs accelerated.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES PHARMACEUTICALS A Potent New Way to Treat Pain
The last week to greenlight a non-opioid pain medication鈥攖he first in 20+ years鈥攊s being heralded as 鈥済roundbreaking鈥 and a 鈥減ublic health milestone,鈥 .
The basics: The new analgesic drug, suzetrigine, will be sold under the brand name Journavx and used to treat moderate to severe acute pain, .
How it works: Whereas opioids bind to receptors in the brain, the new drug targets a pain-signaling pathway in the peripheral nervous system before pain signals reach the brain.
- 鈥淎s a result, you shouldn鈥檛 get euphoria,鈥 explained neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta in a this week.
For one 525-pound California black bear, the Los Angeles wildfires weren始t a compelling enough reason to leave a cozy basement in Altadena.
After evacuating, Samy Arbid returned home to find his tubby tenant had doubled down(stairs), waiting out the emergency in the basement. Beary, aka Victor, was 鈥減robably trying to lay low, conserve energy and sleep for a while,鈥 according to Kevin Howells, an environmental scientist who helped lure Beary from his lair, the .
We始d have made a case here for ursine eminent domain, but animal control had other ideas. A tranquilizer wasn始t gonna cut it on this majestic creature, so they lured him鈥攙ery slowly and adorably鈥攚ith a buffet of rotisserie chicken, sardines, tomato sauce, peanut butter, and promise of a new life in Angeles National Forest, .
But will forest cuisine suit this urbanite始s palate? As one neighbor explained to : 鈥淗e just wants some good trash, like we all like some good trash.鈥 (Wait ... do we, though!?) QUICK HITS Sudanese relief workers in the capital fear reprisals from army 鈥
Sweden searches for answers after country's deadliest shooting 鈥
Public health group alarmed by online 鈥楧EI Watchlist鈥 targeting federal staff 鈥
Spinal cord electrical stimulation restores neural function in clinical trial 鈥
Time blindness is a psychological phenomenon. Here are steps to combat it. 鈥 Issue No. 2671
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 .
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Copyright 2025 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.
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Extreme violence in the eastern DRC over the last two weeks has left 900+ dead, ~2,880 injured, and a displaced population facing heightened risk of sexual violence and disease outbreaks, .
Background: , rebels with the Rwandan-backed M83 militia have seized large areas of Goma, the regional capital of North Kivu, severely restricting humanitarian access to a region that is already home to 696,000+ internally displaced people.
The latest: A ceasefire allowed residents to assess the devastation and to hurriedly bury ~2,000 bodies amid feared spread of disease, .
- The Goma airport remains closed, paralyzing relief operations. 鈥淓very hour lost puts more lives at risk. This is an absolute emergency,鈥 said Bruno Lemarquis, the UN鈥檚 top humanitarian official in the DRC.
Risk of outbreaks: The WHO is of heightened disease risk, including cholera, mpox, and measles, .
Exacerbating the crisis: A 90-day suspension of U.S. humanitarian funding is 鈥渟everely impacting鈥 relief efforts, says the UN. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Inadequate breast cancer screening and care systems could lead to the deaths of an estimated 135,000 women in sub-Saharan Africa by 2040, a new finds; in 2022, half of the women diagnosed with breast cancer in the region died from the disease.
Trans health and research programs are being halted by the Trump administration, with notices sent in recent days that terminate funding and block ongoing research鈥攍eaving many researchers, medical organizations, and advocates in limbo.
Flies in hospital wards may be carrying drug-resistant bacteria between patients, Nigerian researchers have found in a published in Environment International, which found that some flies were carrying bacteria most common in hospital-acquired infections.
Health care affordability and access were ranked by Americans as the highest public health priority for government leaders to address, per a new public health by Emory University鈥檚 Rollins School of Public Health and Gallup. Trump Transition News Public Health Journal Won't Be Complicit in Trump Admin's Censorship 鈥
Medical journal editors must resist CDC order and anti-gender ideology 鈥
Exclusive: how NSF is scouring research grants for violations of Trump鈥檚 orders 鈥
Senate committee advances RFK Jr.'s nomination for HHS secretary in party-line vote 鈥
Federal health workers terrified after 'DEI' website publishes list of 'targets' 鈥
America Can鈥檛 Just Unpause USAID 鈥 VIOLENCE Female 鈥楬onor鈥 Killings on the Rise in Iran
At least 133 women and girls鈥攁bout one every two days鈥攚ere killed in 2024 by male family members, with most of the deaths identified as 鈥渉onor鈥 killings, according to an analysis by RFE/RL's Radio Farda.
- Most femicide cases in Iran are excused as family disputes in which a female member is targeted for allegedly violating societal or religious traditions, per human rights advocates.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH India Grapples with the Future of Gas Stoves
In an effort to curb air pollution in India鈥攅specially inside homes鈥攈ealth advocates have long pushed for a transition from cooking with stoves that burn wood or dung to stoves that use liquefied petroleum gas.
However: A recent multicenter study found no statistically significant health benefits for children in homes with gas stoves鈥攄espite a marked improvement in the homes鈥 air quality.
Current debate:- Critics are calling for a pivot to alternatives like electricity, which could provide broader environmental and health benefits.
- But proponents say India鈥檚 grid is not ready for such expansion鈥攁nd argue that the air quality improvement is reason enough to invest in the expansion of gas stoves.
10 Things to Know About U.S. Funding for Global Health 鈥
Syria landmine crisis spirals as millions begin to return home 鈥
鈥業 could feel the worms鈥: Neglected victims of Loiasis find hope in a remote research station 鈥
How Sudan virus binds to human cells 鈥
This program in Nigeria sends children from the streets into the classroom 鈥
BMJ study calls for maximisation of women鈥檚 potential in healthcare 鈥 Issue No. 2670
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 .
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Copyright 2025 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.
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In north Darfur, indiscriminate violence and continuous shelling鈥攊ncluding attacks on hospitals鈥攈ave devastated the health care infrastructure, forcing the area鈥檚 last standing hospital, the Al-Saudi Maternal Teaching Hospital, to perform surgeries in underground bunkers, .
- The hospital, in the besieged town of Al-Fasher, has been attacked 15 times, including a drone attack on the hospital that killed 70+ people on January 24.
- Medics perform up to 12 surgeries a day by flashlight in nearby shelters built out of abandoned UN shipping containers and buried under sandbags.
鈥淭he failure to act is a choice, and it鈥檚 killing people,鈥 says Marcella Kraay, MSF鈥檚 emergency coordinator.
Impact of Trump orders: Sudden stop-work orders from the Trump administration last week came at a devastating time for Sudan, interrupting vital aid operations for severely malnourished children at a half dozen U.S.-funded medical facilities in Sudan, in an article detailing the impact of the interruptions鈥攄espite the Trump administration鈥檚 follow-up announcements ostensibly allowing lifesaving operations to proceed.
- Aid workers鈥攔ealizing that compliance with the stop-work order would mean that up to 100 babies and toddlers would die鈥斺渃hose the children,鈥 and continued to do their job.
U.S. CDC webpages that include data on gender identity and LGBTQ issues remain inaccessible, following an executive order by President Trump targeting the topics; public health and medical experts have decried the disappearance of information needed to protect the health of marginalized populations.
People who have microplastics or nanoplastics embedded in fatty plaques in their blood vessels had a 4.5X greater risk of heart attacks, strokes, or death over a three-year period than patients who were plastic-free, according to a small study published in today.
Lung cancer in people who have never smoked is now believed to be the fifth highest cause of global cancer deaths; adenocarcinoma is the main cancer among never-smokers, and ~200,000 adenocarcinoma cases were linked to air pollution in 2022, per the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Trump Transition News Senate committee to vote today on RFK Jr.'s nomination 鈥
RFK Jr. misled the US Senate on measles deaths, Samoa鈥檚 health chief says 鈥
The Status of President Trump鈥檚 Pause of Foreign Aid and Implications for PEPFAR and other Global Health Programs -
USAID may be reorganized, absorbed by the State Department, Rubio says 鈥
Removal of DEI content from a microbiology group鈥檚 website shows reach of Trump executive orders 鈥 HIV/AIDS Truck Stop Education
India鈥檚 truck drivers are a high-risk group for HIV, with a 7X times higher than .
In an effort to bring down rates, a foundation set up by the country鈥檚 largest tire manufacturer has enlisted commercial sex workers at truck stops to help with HIV prevention efforts鈥攚ith the workers educating drivers about risks, symptoms, and treatment.
- Since 2022, the foundation has focused on recruiting 100+ transgender sex workers as part of its efforts, allowing it to reach 100,000+ truck drivers.
- Both the sex workers and the truckers are marginalized groups, which fosters mutual trust, say advocates.
Incarcerated trans people are facing a 鈥減recarious鈥 future following the White House that directs the Bureau of Prisons to ensure 鈥渢hat males are not detained in women鈥檚 prisons.鈥
- The order also prohibits inmates from receiving gender-affirming health care using federal funds.
Risks: The Bureau of Prisons鈥 2022 manual on trans inmates stated that trans women living in men鈥檚 prisons face a disproportionate risk of violence and sexual assault.
- That previously-public manual has from the bureau鈥檚 website.
ZIKA Mosquito Magnetism
While Zika has gained powerful traction over the last decade, scientists are just beginning to understand why it鈥檚 so transmissible. One big reason: It changes human skin to become more mosquito-friendly.
- 鈥淶ika virus isn鈥檛 just passively transmitted, but it actively manipulates human biology to ensure its survival,鈥 said the study鈥檚 co-lead author Noushin Emami.
Implications: The insights could help scientists 鈥渦nlock new strategies鈥 like genetic interventions to disrupt mosquito-attracting signals.
QUICK HITS Conflict in eastern DRC hampers fight against mpox 鈥 Africa CDC 鈥
Bird flu crisis enters new phase 鈥
Here is how we know that vaccines do not cause autism 鈥
Study Finds More Than 300 Juveniles Were Shot by Police Between 2015 and 2020, One-Third of Them Fatally 鈥
Five ways to bridge the 'know鈥揹o' continuum in global health 鈥
The long quest for artificial blood 鈥
Families buy more sugary cereal if advertising targets kids, not adults 鈥 Issue No. 2669
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:
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Copyright 2025 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.
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The fate of the U.S. Agency for International Development is tenuous following a turbulent weekend for the agency, .
- Already, hundreds of workers for the humanitarian agency have been laid off, and its work has been almost totally suspended, .
- Elon Musk, who leads the new Department of Government Efficiency, repeatedly denigrated the agency and said that it was 鈥渢ime for it to die.鈥
- DOGE workers demanded access to USAID restricted spaces鈥攁nd put on leave the two USAID security officials who refused to grant it.
- The agency鈥檚 , along with its social media accounts.
- USAID is 鈥渆nduring an unlawful shutdown, purge, and dismantling,鈥 Atul Gawande, former global health lead at USAID.
Immediate impact: Meanwhile, lifesaving health programs and research have already been shut down worldwide in response to the 90-day freeze on foreign aid, 鈥攚ith grave consequences for efforts like malaria prevention, .
Data disappearing: An increasing number of federal health datasets including standard surveillance reports have been taken offline or appear to have been modified, .
Related:
WHO proposes budget cut after US exit, defends its work 鈥
Too little, too late: What a Pepfar waiver can鈥檛 do 鈥
National Science Foundation suspends salary payments, leaving researchers unable to pay their bills 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners An Ebola vaccine trial is poised to begin in Uganda in an effort to stem an outbreak that has killed a nurse in Kampala, a top health official said yesterday; the vaccine maker was not announced.
Black lupus patients in England are 8X more likely to be hospitalized for the condition, NHS figures show鈥攚ith health advocates saying the 鈥渟tark鈥 disparity could be because of delayed diagnoses.
Four cases of measles鈥攊ncluding two affecting school-aged children鈥攈ave been reported in Texas in less than two weeks, per an from the state鈥檚 health agency; none of the patients had received measles vaccinations.
The link between autism and maternal health during pregnancy may be largely attributable to inherited genetic variants鈥攙ersus a direct cause-and-effect relationship between certain health conditions and autism鈥攁 large new of 1 million+ Danish children and families has found. JANUARY MUST-READS The Global Repercussions of Burma鈥檚 Crisis
Years of conflict and instability have devastated Burma鈥檚 (Myanmar鈥檚) disease prevention efforts鈥攁nd the consequences could transcend borders, write Maw Lay and Khin, journalists with Delta News Agency.
- Medical resources have been depleted, monitoring programs have been dismantled, and health workers have been attacked. Malaria and tuberculosis cases have increased 7X; HIV cases are up 10%.
- If drug-resistant malaria spreads from Burma, it could reverse global malaria progress, potentially setting back efforts by 10鈥15 years.
Indigenous Panamanians Face an 鈥楿ncontrolled Epidemic鈥
An 鈥渦ncontrolled epidemic鈥 of untreated HIV threatens the young people of Panama鈥檚 Ng盲be-Bugl茅 Indigenous territory.
- ~2,500 people of the ~225,000 in the region live with HIV; it was the leading cause of death in the region in 2022, and in 2024, the area reported new infections at nearly 4X the national rate.
Overlooked Agony
Misbah Khan鈥檚 reporting surfaces the neglected issue of UTIs and the acute pain they cause鈥攚ith no targeted treatments beyond antibiotics, and scant research into why they occur鈥攄espite afflicting over 400 million people, primarily women, a year.
- 鈥淚t鈥檚 a public health problem and it takes people away from their lives and nobody cares,鈥 said Elizabeth Kavaler, a New York-based urologist.
A Window Into Russia鈥檚 鈥榊ear of the Family鈥 Restrictions
Staring down a decades-long demographic crisis鈥攅xacerbated by losses in the Ukraine war鈥擱ussia鈥檚 president Vladimir Putin is pushing 鈥減ro-family鈥 policies.
- Doctors and employers who advise women to get abortions face fines; couples seeking divorce must undergo psychological consultations and a waiting period; and a new law punishes 鈥渃hildfree propaganda鈥 with heavy fines.
- New 鈥渇amily studies鈥 classes in schools emphasize family as the state's foundation.
MUMBAI, India鈥擜s recent summer temperatures in the city topped 39掳C (102掳F), the nearby playground was often empty.
12-year-old Sandesh Gholap tended to stay indoors. He gained 10 kilograms (22 pounds) in the past year, has experienced bullying, and stopped participating in social activities.
- A 1掳C rise in temperature in low-resource countries has been associated with a 4% rise in children鈥檚 BMI and a 2% increase in women鈥檚, according to . Rising temperatures can also lead to changes in diet, reduced nutritional value in plants, and other impacts that influence people鈥檚 weight.
More January exclusives:
Over the course of our lives, every one of us will experience a decline in hearing.
Less common: getting regular hearing tests to understand how our hearing changes over time.
- Now, with free smartphone apps, anyone can learn their 鈥溾濃攖he measure in decibels of the softest speech sound a person can hear.
- Why it matters: More accessible tools to identify hearing changes鈥攃ombined with new interventions, such as over-the-counter hearing aids鈥攃ould help more people optimize their hearing and potentially stave off cognitive decline linked to hearing loss.
In Mozambique, many children suffer from easily treatable eye problems simply because vision screening programs are so limited and providers are so few:
- There are just three pediatric ophthalmologists for a population of 30 million.
- Traveling clinics to teach medical workers about screening and interventions like glasses and simple surgeries.
- Educational outreach for teachers, traditional healers, and community health workers on how to spot vision problems.
QUICK HITS WHO chief asks for help pushing US to reconsider its withdrawal from health agency 鈥
On the frontline against bird flu, egg farmers fear they're losing the battle 鈥
New York Doctor Indicted in Louisiana for Sending Abortion Pills There 鈥
GAO: Public-health workforce shortage undermines ability to respond to outbreaks, other emergencies 鈥
What to know about polio vaccines, in 4 charts 鈥
Alcohol-related deaths and hospitalizations spiked during the pandemic. Could policy have made a difference? 鈥
They help seniors push back against a deluge of health misinformation 鈥 Issue No. M-Feb. 2025
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 2025 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 fate of the U.S. Agency for International Development is tenuous following a turbulent weekend for the agency, .
- Already, hundreds of workers for the humanitarian agency have been laid off, and its work has been almost totally suspended, .
- Elon Musk, who leads the new Department of Government Efficiency, repeatedly denigrated the agency and said that it was 鈥渢ime for it to die.鈥
- DOGE workers demanded access to USAID restricted spaces鈥攁nd put on leave the two USAID security officials who refused to grant it.
- The agency鈥檚 , along with its social media accounts.
- USAID is 鈥渆nduring an unlawful shutdown, purge, and dismantling,鈥 Atul Gawande, former global health lead at USAID.
Immediate impact: Meanwhile, lifesaving health programs and research have already been shut down worldwide in response to the 90-day freeze on foreign aid, 鈥攚ith grave consequences for efforts like malaria prevention, .
Data disappearing: An increasing number of federal health datasets including standard surveillance reports have been taken offline or appear to have been modified, .
Related:
WHO proposes budget cut after US exit, defends its work 鈥
Too little, too late: What a Pepfar waiver can鈥檛 do 鈥
National Science Foundation suspends salary payments, leaving researchers unable to pay their bills 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners An Ebola vaccine trial is poised to begin in Uganda in an effort to stem an outbreak that has killed a nurse in Kampala, a top health official said yesterday; the vaccine maker was not announced.
Black lupus patients in England are 8X more likely to be hospitalized for the condition, NHS figures show鈥攚ith health advocates saying the 鈥渟tark鈥 disparity could be because of delayed diagnoses.
Four cases of measles鈥攊ncluding two affecting school-aged children鈥攈ave been reported in Texas in less than two weeks, per an from the state鈥檚 health agency; none of the patients had received measles vaccinations.
The link between autism and maternal health during pregnancy may be largely attributable to inherited genetic variants鈥攙ersus a direct cause-and-effect relationship between certain health conditions and autism鈥攁 large new of 1 million+ Danish children and families has found. JANUARY MUST-READS The Global Repercussions of Burma鈥檚 Crisis
Years of conflict and instability have devastated Burma鈥檚 (Myanmar鈥檚) disease prevention efforts鈥攁nd the consequences could transcend borders, write Maw Lay and Khin, journalists with Delta News Agency.
- Medical resources have been depleted, monitoring programs have been dismantled, and health workers have been attacked. Malaria and tuberculosis cases have increased 7X; HIV cases are up 10%.
- If drug-resistant malaria spreads from Burma, it could reverse global malaria progress, potentially setting back efforts by 10鈥15 years.
Indigenous Panamanians Face an 鈥楿ncontrolled Epidemic鈥
An 鈥渦ncontrolled epidemic鈥 of untreated HIV threatens the young people of Panama鈥檚 Ng盲be-Bugl茅 Indigenous territory.
- ~2,500 people of the ~225,000 in the region live with HIV; it was the leading cause of death in the region in 2022, and in 2024, the area reported new infections at nearly 4X the national rate.
Overlooked Agony
Misbah Khan鈥檚 reporting surfaces the neglected issue of UTIs and the acute pain they cause鈥攚ith no targeted treatments beyond antibiotics, and scant research into why they occur鈥攄espite afflicting over 400 million people, primarily women, a year.
- 鈥淚t鈥檚 a public health problem and it takes people away from their lives and nobody cares,鈥 said Elizabeth Kavaler, a New York-based urologist.
A Window Into Russia鈥檚 鈥榊ear of the Family鈥 Restrictions
Staring down a decades-long demographic crisis鈥攅xacerbated by losses in the Ukraine war鈥擱ussia鈥檚 president Vladimir Putin is pushing 鈥減ro-family鈥 policies.
- Doctors and employers who advise women to get abortions face fines; couples seeking divorce must undergo psychological consultations and a waiting period; and a new law punishes 鈥渃hildfree propaganda鈥 with heavy fines.
- New 鈥渇amily studies鈥 classes in schools emphasize family as the state's foundation.
MUMBAI, India鈥擜s recent summer temperatures in the city topped 39掳C (102掳F), the nearby playground was often empty.
12-year-old Sandesh Gholap tended to stay indoors. He gained 10 kilograms (22 pounds) in the past year, has experienced bullying, and stopped participating in social activities.
- A 1掳C rise in temperature in low-resource countries has been associated with a 4% rise in children鈥檚 BMI and a 2% increase in women鈥檚, according to . Rising temperatures can also lead to changes in diet, reduced nutritional value in plants, and other impacts that influence people鈥檚 weight.
More January exclusives:
Over the course of our lives, every one of us will experience a decline in hearing.
Less common: getting regular hearing tests to understand how our hearing changes over time.
- Now, with free smartphone apps, anyone can learn their 鈥溾濃攖he measure in decibels of the softest speech sound a person can hear.
- Why it matters: More accessible tools to identify hearing changes鈥攃ombined with new interventions, such as over-the-counter hearing aids鈥攃ould help more people optimize their hearing and potentially stave off cognitive decline linked to hearing loss.
In Mozambique, many children suffer from easily treatable eye problems simply because vision screening programs are so limited and providers are so few:
- There are just three pediatric ophthalmologists for a population of 30 million.
- Traveling clinics to teach medical workers about screening and interventions like glasses and simple surgeries.
- Educational outreach for teachers, traditional healers, and community health workers on how to spot vision problems.
QUICK HITS WHO chief asks for help pushing US to reconsider its withdrawal from health agency 鈥
On the frontline against bird flu, egg farmers fear they're losing the battle 鈥
New York Doctor Indicted in Louisiana for Sending Abortion Pills There 鈥
GAO: Public-health workforce shortage undermines ability to respond to outbreaks, other emergencies 鈥
What to know about polio vaccines, in 4 charts 鈥
Alcohol-related deaths and hospitalizations spiked during the pandemic. Could policy have made a difference? 鈥
They help seniors push back against a deluge of health misinformation 鈥 Issue No. 2668
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 2025 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 .
Major battles are being won in the global fight against neglected tropical diseases, but on health advocates are also raising concerns about changing dynamics that could threaten progress鈥攆rom new political paradigms to dwindling funding.
Background: NTDs affect ~1 billion people worldwide鈥攐ften the world鈥檚 most marginalized communities. There is a and treatments to combat them.
Gains: 54 countries have eliminated an NTD as of 2024. This week, the WHO announced two major successes:
- human African trypanosomiasis.
- transmission of the parasite Onchocerca volvulus.
Fading funding: A decline in research and development funding for NTDs could mean lost traction unless new sources are tapped, .
Political upheaval: The global health landscape is being reshaped, with the Trump administration announcing an exit from WHO, a freeze to foreign aid, and an effort to make vaccine critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. head of HHS鈥攚hich has 鈥渧ast global reach,鈥 .
- Kennedy was questioned in confirmation hearings yesterday about misleading statements around vaccines and infectious diseases, .
The White House rescinded a memo that aimed to freeze spending on federal loans and grants after it sparked widespread confusion and legal challenges, ; meanwhile, the Trump administration has issued guidance on how federal agencies should immediately eliminate transgender initiatives and protections, .
Plain water and milk are the recommended drinks for youth, per new guidelines from major U.S. health organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics; the guidelines recommended that sweetened beverages and drinks with caffeine should be avoided entirely.
Avian flu has struck the second largest U.S. egg producer, Indiana鈥檚 Rose Acre Farms鈥攚hich could further impact the nation鈥檚 egg supply; meanwhile, the USDA has reported more H5N1 detections in mammals, poultry, dairy cows, and wild birds.
A measles outbreak in Ontario and Quebec is spreading, warned Canada鈥檚 chief public health officer鈥攚ho said that a growing number of cases have been locally acquired, and that the majority of cases have been among unvaccinated people鈥攊ncluding children and infants. MPOX Investigating a Viral Inflection Point
In September 2023 epidemiologist Leandre Murhula Masirika was in the eastern jungles of the DRC, looking for the mpox virus in bushmeat hunters and wild animals to assess the threat of a spillover to humans.
But when he got a message about a patient in the eastern DRC mining town of Kamituga covered in worrisome sores, he was stunned: Mpox appeared to be on the move. After traveling to the town to investigate, he was one of the first to raise the alarm of a new strain.
A year and a half later, Masirika has stayed on the front lines of the Kamituga outbreak, seeking to control the spread of the new strain, clade 1b鈥攂ut he has also continued to investigate how that very first case emerged.
His main concern: The point of animal-to-human spillover. 鈥淯ntil we find the virus in an animal, I think it will be difficult to answer this question,鈥 he said.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CERVICAL CANCER Disparities in the Mississippi Delta
Black women in the U.S. face starkly higher mortality rates from cervical cancer: ~65% higher than white women.
And in the Mississippi Delta, the rates are among the nation鈥檚 worst, per new research from Human Rights Watch.
- Black women living in the Delta were about 1.4X more likely to die of cervical cancer compared to white women living in the same region from 2017 to 2021.
- 10.8% of Mississippi鈥檚 population is uninsured, and the state has not expanded Medicaid.
- The state鈥檚 strict abortion laws have hampered access to gynecological care.
- Black women report higher levels of distrust in health providers.
鈥嬧婰ounging around in bed in the morning would be so much better without the inner voice that says 鈥済et up, you lazy [insert insult of choice here].鈥
It turns out all this time, we haven始t been lazy sloths. We始ve been hurkle durkling!
Official meaning: 鈥渢o lie in bed or lounge about when one should be up and about,鈥 , who coined the term some 200 years ago, but lately it始s gone global thanks to deeming it the word of the day, .
鈥淚 do be hurkling and I do be durkling,鈥 Kosarin beamed.
One Scottish woman credited the term with reframing the idea of laziness. I始m not 鈥渨asting my life. I鈥檓 practicing an ancestral right (sic) of passage.鈥
If a cute moniker is the fast track to empowered lounging, let始s use them to normalize more guilty pleasures! Like spending way too long in a store, or not keeping your phone fully charged because you kind of want it to turn off.
And if they already exist, please let us know. QUICK HITS Myanmar on the brink as conflict fuels hunger 鈥
Myanmar refugees face sudden discharge from Thai hospitals shuttered by US aid freeze 鈥
Queensland鈥檚 puberty blockers ban has potential to cause harm, sex discrimination commissioner says 鈥
Citizen Scientists Reclaim Japan鈥檚 Nuclear Disaster Zone 鈥
Cities, health, and the big data revolution 鈥 Issue No. 2647
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 .
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Widespread confusion and chaos roiled states, schools, and nonprofits across the U.S. yesterday after the Trump administration announced an abrupt halt in federal funding and grants鈥攁 lifeline for thousands of vital programs, .
The latest: A federal judge temporarily blocked the suspension yesterday, allowing funding to continue through Monday, . Other legal challenges have been filed, which could lead to a constitutional showdown over who controls federal spending.
Details of the freeze: The calls for a pause in funding while the Trump administration conducts an across-the-board ideological review to uproot initiatives the administration opposes, like DEI initiatives and abortion.
What鈥檚 affected: The scope of the freeze is still unclear, , despite White House to clarify what鈥檚 impacted. Advocates and agencies fear the order could potentially impact a wide range of programs: disaster relief efforts, community health, cancer research and opioid treatment, daily food programs, and more.
- 鈥淭he lack of clarity and uncertainty right now is creating chaos,鈥 said Meals on Wheels spokeswoman Jenny Young.
- While the Trump administration has said Medicaid will not be affected by the suspension, Medicaid鈥檚 payment portal stopped working yesterday, .
Related:
Researchers are terrified of Trump鈥檚 freeze on science. The rest of us should be, too. 鈥
Trump executive order puts STEM diversity efforts on hold 鈥
Higher Ed Alarmed by Trump鈥檚 Plan to Freeze Federal Grants 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners ~40 people were killed and dozens injured in a crowd crush after barriers broke at the Hindu festival Kumbh Mela, which has drawn tens of millions to Uttar Pradesh in northern India.
An International Criminal Court prosecutor has announced plans to seek arrest warrants for people linked to alleged war crimes in Darfur, Sudan, calling the escalating conflict a "tailspin into deeper suffering.鈥
Puberty blockers, hormones, and surgeries for people under age 19 are among the medical gender-affirming practices President Trump seeks to end with an executive order signed yesterday; among other restrictions in the order, Medicaid, Medicare, and federal benefits packages will exclude some coverage for pediatric gender-affirming care.
PEPFAR can resume distributing HIV medications for now, after the U.S. State Department issued a reprieve following this week鈥檚 freeze on foreign aid; but whether the waiver extends to preventive drugs or other services remains unclear, and the future of the program still hangs in the balance. RADAR Potential Ebola Outbreak Reported in DRC
A potential Ebola outbreak has been reported in western DRC at a particularly challenging time, STAT reports鈥攁mid an escalation in fighting and fraught U.S.-WHO relations.
- 12 suspected Ebola cases, including eight deaths between January 10 and 22, have been recorded in the Boyenge area, per the WHO; samples have been sent for testing in Kinshasa.
- Typically, the U.S. CDC coordinates closely with the WHO and provides expertise and support during outbreaks, but on Monday, CDC staff were directed to cease communications with the WHO following the Trump administration鈥檚 order to withdraw the U.S. from the WHO.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES AVIAN FLU The Evolving H5N1 Threat
The avian flu outbreak that was first reported in dairy cattle almost one year ago shows no signs of slowing鈥攄emonstrating a remarkable tenacity that continues to raise pandemic risk.
While risk to the public still remains low, more health experts are warning that that could change quickly.
- 鈥淥ver the last couple of months, it has felt like the tempo has increased,鈥 said Connecticut public health commissioner Manisha Juthani.
Failure to fight: Inadequate testing, 鈥渢oothless鈥 directives, and delayed data are all missed opportunities to crack down on the outbreak.
Reports of reinfection in herds suggest H5N1 could become endemic鈥攁nd potentially evolve into a more dangerous form under the radar.
Related:
Rare bird flu strain found in California raises potential of wider spread 鈥
Will bird flu spark a human pandemic? Scientists say the risk is rising 鈥 HEALTH COMMUNICATION Strengthened Trust in Scientists
Trust in scientists is moderately strong worldwide, finds the largest post-pandemic study of its kind published in .
Study details: 71,990 people in 68 countries were surveyed in their own languages and according to their own customs, and the study included many under-researched countries in the Global South.
- The majority of respondents had a 鈥渞elatively high level of trust鈥 in scientists鈥3.62 on a 5-point scale ranging from very low to very high.
- Most viewed scientists as qualified (78%), honest (57%), and concerned about public well-being (56%).
QUICK HITS Sudan's Genocide Deepens Famine 鈥
Overview of President Trump鈥檚 Executive Actions on Global Health 鈥
RFK Jr. hearing live updates: Trump's pick to head HHS faces bipartisan skepticism 鈥
RFK Jr. says he'll fix the overdose crisis. Critics say his plan is risky 鈥
The tuberculosis outbreak in Kansas is alarming. It鈥檚 not the biggest in US history though, CDC says 鈥
Study shows long-term cannabis use disrupts critical brain processes 鈥
Deadly Hendra heralded a new era of outbreaks 鈥 but opened the door to bat research 鈥
One-minute video game could diagnose your child with autism 鈥
Oyster Blood May Provide a Powerful Weapon Against Antibiotic Resistance 鈥 Thanks for the tip, Xiaodong Cai! Issue No. 2646
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 .
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As tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians stream back into northern Gaza, finding much of it in ruins, the stark needs are coming into relief鈥攊ncluding massive health challenges.
- ~30,000 people need ongoing rehabilitation for 鈥渓ife-changing injuries,鈥 such as the loss of limbs.
- 12,000+ need to be evacuated for specialized care; some of those with preexisting health issues have gone a year or more without care.
- Israeli bombs damaged or destroyed most of Gaza鈥檚 36 hospitals; only half are still partially operational.
Risks in the rubble: Decimated sanitation and sewer systems create the conditions ideal for the spread of disease; debris contaminated with toxic chemicals, asbestos, and human remains, and unexploded munitions also threaten returnees.
Israel鈥檚 response: Israel, maintaining that Hamas bears responsibility for damage because it used hospitals to shield fighters, hasn鈥檛 shared a reconstruction plan.
WHO plan: When it鈥檚 safe, WHO and partners will boost hospital capacity with prefabricated containers, and prioritize trauma and emergency care, primary health care, and mental health support.
Related:
Gaza: No Safe Pregnancies During Israeli Assault 鈥
Israel says eight hostages to be freed in Gaza deal's first phase are dead 鈥
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners U.S. public health officials yesterday were ordered to stop working with the WHO, effective immediately, in person and virtual; workers surprised by the sudden stoppage warned it would set back work investigating and addressing threats including Marburg virus, mpox, and avian flu.
Racial gaps in life expectancy narrowed by about four years between 1990 and 2018, 鈥攂ut even in 2018, Black women could still expect to live three years less than white women, and Black men five years less than white men.
Public trust in government health agencies, including the CDC, FDA, and state and local health officials, declined over the past 18 months, continuing a trend that began during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a KFF Tracking Poll; individual doctors remain the most trusted source of health information.
Coca-Cola has recalled beverages in some European countries鈥擝elgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands鈥攐ver safety concerns surrounding levels of cholate, which can be produced when chlorine-based disinfectants are used in water treatment and food processing. Trump Transition News USAID officials put on leave for allegedly not abiding by executive order 鈥
Trump Order Suspends Healthcare in Refugee Camps 鈥
NIH memo addresses 鈥榗onfusion鈥 about restrictions imposed by Trump, easing some concerns 鈥
Doctors opposing RFK Jr. rally in the lead-up to his confirmation 鈥
Conservative Wall Street Journal warns RFK Jr is 鈥榙angerous鈥 to public health 鈥
As states diverge on immigration, hospitals say they won't turn patients away 鈥 CLIMATE CRISIS Climate Model Predicts High Mortality
Extreme temperatures could claim an extra 2.3 million lives in European cities by the end of the century if no action is taken to fight climate change, according to .
- Using temperature and mortality data from 854 urban areas across Europe, researchers explored several warming scenarios and considered the effects of mitigation strategies to keep people safe amid rising heat, such as increasing green space and shade in cities.
- The results suggest that heat-related deaths will surpass those caused by cold conditions in even the most positive scenarios, and that temperature-related deaths overall could increase by ~50%.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES BREASTFEEDING Wean in Rome
Scholars are gaining new insights into ancient Roman practices around breastfeeding鈥攚ith dental research that is 鈥渓iterally drilling down into something that we really cannot get from texts,鈥 said Roman medicine historian Laurence Totelin of Cardiff University.
Background: Infant feeding practices in ancient Rome have been studied through medical texts鈥攚hich mainly reached wealthy families.
The new , published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Nexus, looks at both rural and urban populations鈥攁nalyzing dental tissue from 45 Roman adults to pinpoint when weaning occurred.
Findings: Urban families followed Roman physicians鈥 recommendations to wean by age 2. Rural families breastfed longer, from 1.5 to 5 years鈥攍ikely delaying the transition to solid food to conserve food supplies.
QUICK HITS 'We're witnesses to the horror of the world': the one-of-a-kind Italian clinic treating refugees for trauma 鈥
Cleanup of LA fires has begun 鈥 and toxins are a key challenge 鈥
Dozens of People Died in Arizona Sober Living Homes as State Officials Fumbled Medicaid Fraud Response 鈥
New framework to bolster health in fragile settings offers timely guidance for countries 鈥
China to prioritise physical education in schools as obesity rates rise 鈥
The United States Needs More Medical Interpreters 鈥
A Less Brutal Alternative to IVF 鈥 Issue No. 2645
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 .
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The Trump administration announced a sweeping freeze on nearly all U.S. foreign aid, with immediate鈥攁nd potentially lasting鈥攔epercussions for global health and humanitarian efforts, .
Order details: The stop-work order lasts 90 days while programs are reviewed, exempting only emergency food programs and military aid to Israel and Egypt.
Instant impact: Leading aid organizations said they would cease operations immediately. The freeze 鈥渃ould have life-or-death consequences鈥 for vulnerable populations, said Abby Maxman of Oxfam America.
- The order suspends PEPFAR, the U.S.-funded anti-HIV program that provides lifesaving medications for over 20.6 million people, .
- Atul Gawande, former USAID global health lead, that the freeze will halt bird flu monitoring, harm efforts to battle Marburg virus and mpox, and hamper polio eradication鈥攁mong other efforts.
Starting a trend? Italy鈥檚 deputy prime minister proposed a bill to withdraw from the WHO, following Trump鈥檚 order to leave, . But Trump floated rejoining at a rally Saturday, .
Related:
Trump's Snub to Global Health Leaves The Field Wide Open 鈥
A week of chaos in public health 鈥
鈥楴ever seen anything like this鈥: Trump鈥檚 team halts NIH meetings and travel 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES EDITOR鈥橲 NOTE Help Us Spread the Word
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In uncertain times, you can count on Global Health NOW to deliver the essential news in global health 鈥 free.
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Brian The Latest One-Liners Heart disease continues to kill more people in the U.S. than any other cause, with an 鈥渁larming鈥 uptick in risk factors like high blood pressure and obesity highlighting an ongoing crisis, per a from the American Heart Association.
Navajo Nation leaders have raised alarm over at least 15 reports of Indigenous people in Arizona and New Mexico being questioned and detained during immigration sweeps by federal law enforcement last week.
In Montenegro, thousands of protesters staged a rally in the capital Podgorica demanding the resignation of senior security officials over the government鈥檚 response to a mass shooting that killed 12 people on January 1.
A tuberculosis outbreak in Kansas has risen to ~70 cases鈥攖he largest outbreak in the state鈥檚 recorded history; health departments are currently working to identify close contacts of those who have tested positive. REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RIGHTS In Rwanda and Nigeria, Abortion Stigma Persists
Strict abortion bans in Rwanda and Nigeria have long shaped public opinion on reproductive rights. Although updated laws allow for exceptions, widespread stigma and uncertainty remain鈥攎eaning many women resort to self-managed abortions.
- In Rwanda: Abortion was decriminalized in 2018, allowing it in cases of rape, incest, forced marriage, or health risks, yet uncertainty persists among both abortion seekers and providers. The cost of legal abortion also remains an obstacle.
- In Nigeria: Abortion is illegal except to save the woman鈥檚 life. Sanctions can include up to 14 years in prison. This has led to dangerous, clandestine abortions, causing 6,000+ related deaths annually.
Related: Emergency contraception pill could be an alternative to mifepristone for abortions, study suggests 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES VACCINES Undermining America鈥檚 Immunity
The CDC鈥檚 Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) has shaped U.S. vaccination policy for 60+ years, advising government agencies on particular shots and schedules.
But if Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is confirmed as health secretary, health advocates fear that his anti-vaccine views could fundamentally reshape the committee鈥攁nd immunity in the U.S.
ACIP鈥檚 role: The committee includes 19 experts in fields like vaccinology, pediatrics, and virology. Its guidance has helped turn the tide on measles and whooping cough.
If ACIP is remade: A politicized鈥攐r disbanded鈥擜CIP could lead to delayed or reduced vaccine schedules, and could limit vaccine availability鈥攅specially for children on Medicaid.
- Such changes could erode immunity to preventable diseases over time.
Related: The Vaccine Schedule Is Under Fire. What鈥檚 the Evidence for It? 鈥 HUMAN RIGHTS Preventing Child Marriage in Bangladesh
Over 60% of Bangladeshi families practice child marriage, by the NGO BRAC, with 56% of girls being forced into marriage before completing secondary school.
BRAC鈥攚hich provides primary education for many of the nation鈥檚 children鈥攂elieves that preventing children from dropping out of school can reduce the prevalence of the practice.
BRAC鈥檚 solutions:
- Provide stipends for families of primary school girls.
- Provide one-room schools in every village to eliminate travel problems鈥攁nd floating boat schools for some remote communities inaccessible by road.
- Train local teachers, rather than bringing in outsiders.
David Lammy 'horrified' after meeting Sudan war victims face-to-face 鈥
Real-world study: RSV vaccine 78% to 80% effective against infection, severe illness in older US veterans 鈥
Bloomberg offers climate cash to UN after Trump exits Paris Agreement 鈥
Bluesky鈥檚 science takeover: 70% of Nature poll respondents use platform 鈥
Cooling green roofs seemed like an impossible dream for Brazil's favelas. Not true! 鈥 Issue No. 2644
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 .
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Thousands of refugees and asylum seekers seeking resettlement in the U.S. faced abrupt cancellation of appointments, travel arrangements, and even ticketed flights, as a new executive order by President Trump halted the nation鈥檚 resettlement program, .
- 10,400+ refugees who had been approved for travel suddenly found their entry to the U.S. denied.
- In Mexico, ~30,000 immigrants had asylum appointments canceled as the CBP One app鈥攁 tool used by asylum seekers for appointments鈥攚as shut down, .
Those affected: The suspension affects refugees from Afghanistan, Syria, Burma, Venezuela, and parts of Africa. The total suspension has left families 鈥渄evastated鈥 and 鈥渋n danger,鈥 advocates .
- 鈥淭his policy doesn鈥檛 just delay hope; it extinguishes it for so many who have already suffered so much,鈥 said Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, president of Global Refuge.
Iraq鈥檚 parliament passed a new law that allows men to marry children as young as nine years old; activists are saying it will 鈥渓egalise child rape.鈥
The NIH is grappling with widespread 鈥渦ncertainty, fear, and panic鈥 after the Trump administration ordered a wide range of restrictions on the agency, including a communications suspension, a freeze on hiring, and an indefinite travel ban for the nation鈥檚 largest research agency.
Two long COVID studies shine new light on how the illness affects different groups: , found that adult women were substantially more likely to develop long COVID than men; , shows how symptoms affect pediatric patients based on racial and ethnic differences. Trump Transition News Assessing Trump's claim that U.S. pays 'unfair' share of dues to WHO 鈥
Zimbabwe fears US withdrawal from WHO will hit HIV/AIDS programmes 鈥
Trump executive order declaring only 鈥榯wo sexes鈥 gets the biology wrong, scientists say 鈥
Who is in charge of the CDC right now? Nobody knows for sure 鈥
RFK Jr. says he鈥檚 resigned from anti-vaccine nonprofit as he seeks nation鈥檚 top health official 鈥 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Sweeping Radiation Under the Rug
After the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in March 2011, Japanese scientists closely monitored radioactive plumes emitting from the plant and the effect they had worldwide.
But two years later, Japanese researchers discovered a new type of highly radioactive microparticle near the Fukushima plant, which contained extremely high concentrations of cesium 137鈥攁 radioactive element that can cause burns, radiation sickness, and death.
Satoshi Utsunomiya, an environmental radiochemist, soon found that these particles had been present in air filter samples collected in Tokyo in the aftermath of the Fukushima accident.
- But these findings were suppressed ahead of the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, and scientists still don鈥檛 fully know the long-term dangers the microparticles pose.
In the 1970s, the prevalence of sexual abuse was rarely discussed, victims were nearly always considered to be at fault, and few rapists were arrested鈥攚ith a lack of evidence often cited as the excuse.
- Martha Goddard, a philanthropic organization executive who worked with young rape victims, was determined to change that. Her work led to the sexual assault evidence collection kit, known as a 鈥渞ape kit,鈥 that is now an important forensic tool in many sexual assault cases.
Thanks for the tip, Cecilia Meisner! ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION Stressed? Stop and Smell the Corpse Flower
With bated breath鈥攁nd plugged noses鈥攕pectators are waiting for the rare blossoming of a giant, rancid flower in Sydney.
The endangered corpse flower, lovingly named 鈥淧utricia,鈥 is poised to bloom for just 24 hours 鈥攖he first blossom in 15 years. And the plant has gained a cult following, despite the fact that its aroma has been likened to 鈥渨et socks, hot cat food, or rotting possum flesh.鈥
Thousands of viewers have tuned in to the Gardens鈥 , though there鈥檚 not much to see yet: 鈥淧utricia stands silent and tall in front of a brown curtain, comfortably ensconced behind a red velvet rope,鈥 .
But in this case, virtual may be preferable: A journalist covering a corpse flower鈥檚 bloom in London last year 鈥渁 whiff of unwashed lavatory with strong undertones of something that went off at the back of the fridge.鈥
With each day, the online fandom grows more zealous, : 鈥淎nyone else not wearing deodorant today in solidarity?鈥 commented one devotee. And another: 鈥淧utricia is the only vibe we need for 2025.鈥 OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Support for Haiti needed now 鈥榤ore than ever鈥, Security Council hears 鈥
Syria's military hospital where detainees were tortured, not treated 鈥
Progress Without Protection for Women in Mexico 鈥
Is a New Mississippi Law Decreasing Jailings of People Awaiting Mental Health Treatment? The State Doesn鈥檛 Know. 鈥
Ebola and a Decade of Disparities 鈥 Forging a Future for Global Health Equity 鈥
Adults diagnosed with ADHD have shorter life expectancy, UK study shows 鈥
In a City of Sprawl, Wildfire Evacuation Is Getting Harder 鈥
The new science of menopause: these emerging therapies could change women鈥檚 health 鈥 Issue No. 2843
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 .
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Copyright 2025 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.
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UN Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres decried the breakdown of global climate cooperation at the World Economic Forum yesterday, calling for business and political leaders to find ways to unite in an 鈥渋ncreasingly rudderless world,鈥 .
- 鈥淥ur fossil fuel addiction is a Frankenstein鈥檚 monster, sparing nothing and no one. All around us, we see clear signs that the monster has become master,鈥 Guterres said, warning of rising sea-levels, heat waves, and other disasters, .
- Meanwhile, the EU doubled down on its commitment to the climate agreement, calling it 鈥渢he best hope for all humanity,鈥 .
- The Global South will face the harshest consequences of inaction, critics said.
- On Bluesky, the event as a place for the world鈥檚 power brokers 鈥渢o advance and protect their own interests.鈥
A ketamine-derived nasal spray, Johnson & Johnson鈥檚 Spravato, has received FDA approval to be used as a standalone treatment for severe depression; it was previously approved to be used in combination with antidepressants.
MIT and Harvard scientists have made a 鈥渓andmark鈥 discovery in how the genetic mutation that causes Huntington鈥檚 disease works; the mutation, present from conception, grows into a larger mutation over decades until it kills certain neurons, according to .
The maternal RSV vaccine approved in 2023 was effective in reducing infants鈥 infections and hospitalizations; babies whose mothers received the vaccine during pregnancy were 61% less likely to have an RSV infection, and 78% less likely to be admitted to the hospital, a new study finds. TRUMP TRANSITION U.S. Health Agencies Ordered to Pause Communications
The Trump administration is temporarily halting federal health agencies鈥 external communications鈥攆rom health advisories to social media posts, .
What鈥檚 affected:
CDC scientific reports (yes, even the ) and public health advisories to clinicians; CDC website data updates; public health data releases from the National Center for Health Statistics; and FDA and NIH updates, .
- It鈥檚 unclear whether the directive includes urgent communications like foodborne disease outbreaks, drug approvals, and new bird flu cases.
- The move also reminded wary health officials of the 2020 Trump administration鈥檚 attempts to alter CDC reports to align with Trump messaging.
Trump's federal health website scrubs 'abortion' search results 鈥
Brady Responds to Trump Administration鈥檚 Apparent Closure of the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention 鈥
WHO comments on United States鈥 announcement of intent to withdraw 鈥
Trump signs executive order ending birthright citizenship 鈥
Fauci says he will accept preemptive pardon from Biden 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES POPULATION How Russia鈥檚 鈥榊ear of the Family鈥 Restricted Freedoms
Staring down a decades-long demographic crisis鈥攅xacerbated by losses in the Ukraine war鈥擱ussia鈥檚 president Vladimir Putin declared 2024 as the 鈥淵ear of the Family,鈥 pushing stronger 鈥減ro-family鈥 policies that included:
Abortion barriers: Over a dozen regions have passed laws against 鈥渁bortion coercion,鈥 imposing fines on doctors and employers who advise women to get abortions.
Divorce hurdles: A new law mandates a three-month reconciliation period and psychological consultations before divorce鈥攑otentially putting domestic violence victims at risk.
Pro-family messaging: Schools have introduced new 鈥渇amily studies鈥 classes to emphasize family as the state's foundation. Meanwhile, a new law punishes 鈥渃hildfree propaganda鈥 with heavy fines.
OPPORTUNITY 2025 Africa Health Conference
This year鈥檚 , 鈥淏uilding Sustainable Systems: Health Financing and Innovation for Africa,鈥 will convene experts, researchers, students, and community stakeholders to explore innovative strategies in health financing, health care technology, climate resilience, and emergency preparedness to support equitable health outcomes.
- February 7鈥8, 2025
- Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School, Boston
In Belarus, Lukashenka's Regime Is Punishing Critics By Taking Their Children Away 鈥
The Real Benefits of Annual Covid-19 Booster Shots 鈥
A lifeline for mothers-to-be on Yemen鈥檚 west coast 鈥
How a decades-old study gave hormone therapy for menopause a bad reputation 鈥
What to know about protecting your cat from bird flu 鈥
People are bad at reporting what they eat. That鈥檚 a problem for dietary research. 鈥 Issue No. 2842
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 .
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Hours into his second term as U.S. president, Donald Trump signed an executive order withdrawing the U.S. from the WHO鈥攔estarting a one-year process he鈥檇 initiated in 2020 (reversed in 2021 by then-President Biden), .
High stakes:
- The U.S. is the WHO鈥檚 biggest donor, giving $1.28 billion during 2022 and 2023鈥攈undreds of millions of dollars more than the second-highest donor country, Germany.
- For the U.S., it means no more easy access to critical outbreak data, and no more 鈥渟eat at the table,鈥 says Global Health Council chief Elisha Dunn-Georgiou, ceding power to other countries like China and Russia.
Trump鈥檚 argument: Trump accused the WHO of 鈥渞ipping off鈥 the U.S., botching the COVID-19 response, and being beholden to other countries, .
Chances for a U-Turn?
- Germany announced plans today to lobby Trump against withdrawal, .
- Congress could possibly block the move, .
- Trump appeared to leave the door ajar for a deal, saying, 鈥淭hey wanted us back so badly so we鈥檒l see what happens,鈥 .
President Trump signed a round of executive orders and policies last night to roll back environmental protections and environmental justice initiatives, withdraw from the Paris climate accord, and boost oil and gas production鈥攑romising to 鈥渄rill, baby, drill.鈥
Anthony Fauci was among several people to receive a preemptive presidential pardon yesterday from outgoing President Biden; Republicans have promised to investigate Fauci for perjury and misconduct regarding the government鈥檚 COVID response.
GLP-1s bring a mix of benefits鈥攊ncluding lowered risk of heart disease, stroke, kidney disease, Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, and addiction disorders鈥攁nd increased risks for arthritis, pancreatitis, and other conditions, according to a published yesterday that analyzed U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs data. CONFLICT The Global Repercussions of Burma鈥檚 Crisis
Four years of conflict and instability have devastated Burma鈥檚 (Myanmar鈥檚) disease prevention efforts鈥攁nd consequences of the mounting health crisis could transcend borders.
- 3.5 million people have been displaced since the military coup in 2021.
- Meanwhile, medical resources have been depleted, monitoring programs have been dismantled, and health workers have been attacked.
International impact: If drug-resistant malaria spreads from Burma, it could reverse global malaria progress, affecting regions like Africa and potentially setting back efforts by 10鈥15 years.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MENTAL HEALTH Assisted Death for Mental Illness: A Growing Debate
The Netherlands has long permitted medically assisted euthanasia for extreme mental suffering.
But as requests rise鈥攁nd as requesters鈥 ages skew younger鈥攄ebate has intensified around the practice.
The spike: Requests for euthanasia on psychiatric grounds rose ~30 each year from 2012 to 2018.
- In 2023 there were 138 cases of euthanasia on psychiatric grounds, up from 68 in 2019.
- 52 such cases between 2020 and 2023 involved patients under 30.
Elsewhere: Last year, Canada delayed legalizing euthanasia for mental illness for three years. Belgium is seeing legal challenges to the practice.
OPPORTUNITY Call for Proposals: Gender Equity + Public Health
The Bloomberg Philanthropies Data for Health Initiative鈥檚 has launched a new round of support for projects that strengthen civil registration and vital statistics systems and promote the analysis and use of high-quality data for public health policymaking.
- Proposals in the outlined areas that focus on digital strategies for CRVS systems strengthening and data use are encouraged.
- Government partners are especially encouraged to apply.
- Grants of up to $100,000 are available for projects up to 15 months.
1) Project ideas must be submitted between January 27 and February 17, 2025, for screening.
2) Selected ideas will be invited to submit a full proposal, due by March 10, 2025. Only invited proposals will be considered for support.
- The application is available .
Martin Luther King Jr鈥檚 Legacy on Health Equity Through the Eyes of a Black African Doctor 鈥
CDC urges doctors to speed subtyping of patients hospitalized with the flu to better track H5N1 infections 鈥
U.S. pays $590 million to Moderna to speed up development of bird flu vaccine 鈥
In a 鈥榮hocker鈥 decision, Japan approves mpox drug that failed in two efficacy trials 鈥
A bipartisan perspective on public health鈥檚 uncertain future 鈥
Kennedy Sought to Stop Covid Vaccinations 6 Months After Rollout 鈥
Cecile Richards, former Planned Parenthood president and feminist activist, has died 鈥
Unhappy About 鈥榃oke Agenda鈥 of PEPFAR, US Conservatives Finally Have Pretext to Cut HIV Funds 鈥
A Secret Way to Fight Off Stomach Bugs 鈥
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 X .
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Copyright 2025 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.
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You can or . Issue No. 1864
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 .
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MUMBAI, India 鈥 12-year-old Sandesh Gholap weighs 50 kilograms (110 pounds) and stands 1.2 meters (4 feet). As recent summer temperatures in the city topped 39掳C (102掳F), the nearby playground was often empty.
Gholap tended to stay indoors. He gained 10 kilograms (22 pounds) in the past year, has experienced bullying, and stopped participating in social activities.
Data point: A 1掳C rise in temperature in developing countries has been associated with a 4% rise in the BMI of children and a 2% increase in the BMI of women, according to .
- In addition to driving declines in physical activity, rising temperatures can lead to changes in diet, reduced nutritional value in plants, and other impacts that influence people鈥檚 weight.
鈥淣ow that the climate has changed, we need to find a solution quickly because obesity not just impacts physical health, [it] can ruin someone鈥檚 life,鈥 Terdale says.
Read the full story for other impacts of climate change鈥攁nd possible solutions.
Ed. Note: This article is part of , made possible through the generous support of loyal GHN readers. EDITORS始 NOTE No GHN Monday
In observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the U.S., GHN will not be publishing this coming Monday, January 20. We始ll be back Tuesday with more news! 鈥 Annalies GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
COVID-19 derailed efforts to fight antimicrobial resistance at U.S. hospitals, a new HHS finds鈥攚ith 鈥渓arge-scale disruptions鈥 including larger caseloads, increased mechanical ventilation, and an overburdened workforce.
Hundreds of miners remain trapped in an illegal mine in South Africa, and 60 bodies have been recovered from the site since the effort to remove the miners began; the remaining miners are in 鈥渋ncredibly poor health,鈥 after officials cut off access to food, water, and medicine.
The U.S. bird flu response and ongoing surveillance has become a part of transition briefings between Biden and Trump administrations鈥攖he first indication of cooperation between the two teams around the H5N1 crisis. POLICY Bye Bye Red Dye
The U.S. FDA has banned Red 3鈥攖he synthetic dye erythrosine鈥攆rom food, beverages, and ingested medicines like cough syrup, citing cancer risks, .
- The ban follows a 2022 petition by two dozen food safety and health advocates.
- The FDA continued to allow its use in food, arguing that the cancer-causing mechanism didn鈥檛 affect humans. But advocates disagreed, citing concerns over its impact on children鈥檚 health.
- A 2021 found red dye No. 3 can make children vulnerable to behavioral issues, and noted that safety levels for dyes hadn鈥檛 been updated to consider new research.
The Quote: 鈥淭his is a welcome, but long overdue, action from the FDA: removing the unsustainable double standard in which Red 3 was banned from lipstick but permitted in candy,鈥 said Peter Lurie, director of Center for Science in the Public Interest.
Related: FDA proposes cap on nicotine levels in cigarettes 鈥
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES GLOBAL HEALTH SECURITY Biden's Pandemic PlaybookAs the Biden administration closes up shop, officials have released a roadmap of its pandemic defenses.
Passing the torch鈥: The 鈥攁 distillation of a 300-page report provided to the new administration鈥攔ecaps the efforts over the last four years to combat COVID-19, mpox, and bird flu, and details the measures needed to monitor and defend against future infectious threats like wastewater monitoring and vaccine stockpiles.
鈥nly for it to be snuffed?: Incoming president Donald Trump has promised to cut government spending and dismantle pandemic preparedness measures, including pulling the U.S. out of the WHO.
ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION Laziness for Achievers
With the breakneck speed of modern life, it can be hard to do nothing.
Turns out, there始s a way to achieve while getting a reprieve. Make it competitive.
For the past decade, the Seoul-born Space-out Competition has brought contestants together to do 鈥 zilch, .
The focus is on celebrating unproductive time but with prizes and glory on the line, it seems quite cutthroat, with contestants vying for votes by staging elaborate props for their space-outs ().
While the contest celebrates doing the least (no sleeping, fidgeting, talking鈥), the contest organizers seem to be doing the most, with space-out duels spreading to several cities across the globe.
The contest happened back in the fall but uhh, we spaced out and missed it. And that始s a shame because, as one friend texted to a certain GHN staffer, 鈥榊ou could 100% win this.始 See you in Seoul next year! QUICK HITS UN says it鈥檚 ready to ramp up delivery of desperately needed aid to Gaza 鈥
Mild H5N1 cases have been perplexing scientists 鈥 now they might have an answer 鈥
Wireless radiation from baby monitors significantly disrupts sleep, study finds 鈥
Longer antibiotic course not associated with increased benefit or harm 鈥
Botswana records grim gender-based violence statistics 鈥
Animal rights advocates are ready for Trump鈥檚 war on science 鈥
7 global buzzwords for 2025: From 'techquity' to 'climate displacement' to 'belonging' 鈥 Issue No. 2841
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 .
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After 14+ years of conflict, Syrians have celebrated new freedoms and relative peace in the month after the fall of the Assad regime. But the transition continues to be filled with challenges and uncertainty.
Food crisis: The price of basic food, like bread, has skyrocketed, with costs increasing 10X, .
- And the UN鈥檚 food agency says some governments and donors are hesitant to fund Syrian aid under the new government, .
- Plus: ~300,000 explosive mines remain across Syria, with nearly four children per day killed or injured by the devices, .
Related: Syria is still not safe: Refugees need protection 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Haiti鈥檚 gang violence has left 1 million+ people displaced from their homes鈥攁 3X increase over this past year, per from the UN鈥檚 migration agency.
Another federal report on alcohol鈥檚 health effects finds that even one drink a day carries health risks including cancer, liver disease, and injuries, per the new .
Obesity diagnoses should consider measurements such as waist circumference and weight-related health problems, not just BMI, per new from a global commission published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.
Drone attacks are responsible for an increasing number of humanitarian worker deaths, with 53 health care workers and 16 aid workers killed in drone strikes in 2024 alone, per a new by Insecurity Insight鈥攁 70% increase over the previous year. OUTBREAK 8 Deaths from Suspected Marburg Outbreak in Tanzania
A suspected outbreak of Marburg virus has infected nine people鈥攌illing eight鈥攁s of January 11 in northwest Tanzania鈥檚 Kagera region.
- The case count is expected to rise alongside stepped-up surveillance.
- Rwanda鈥檚 recent brush with the virus, declared over just weeks ago, infected at least 66 people and killed 15.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CHILDREN鈥橲 HEALTH Caught in Conflict
Armed conflict, climate change, and inequality have created a 鈥渘ew era of crisis for children鈥濃攄isrupting their lives and futures, UNICEF warns in its new , 鈥淧rospects for Children in 2025.鈥
More warfare: 473 million+ children鈥1 in 6 globally鈥攏ow live in conflict zones, with the number of conflicts at a historic high.
- The proportion of children in conflict zones has doubled since the 1990s and is now nearly 19%.
- Attacks on schools and hospitals are becoming more common, violating international laws.
NEUROLOGICAL DISEASES Pushing for Cerebral Palsy Prevention in Nigeria
Cerebral palsy is thought to be one of the most common neurological diseases in Nigeria, with an estimated 700,000 Nigerians living with the condition.
Many Nigerian cases are traced to untreated neonatal jaundice.
- ~60% of babies develop jaundice, which can be cured easily by early treatment with exposure to ultraviolet light.
- But in Nigeria, this treatment is often not immediately available.
QUICK HITS Bird Flu Is Raising Red Flags Among Health Officials 鈥
The FDA calls for at-a-glance nutrition labels on the front of packaged foods 鈥
This Blood Type Is More Likely To Get The Norovirus, Studies Say 鈥
CWD prions found in moose, deer, reindeer muscles in Norway, highlighting potential risk to people 鈥
Vaccine Hesitancy Among Pet Owners Is Growing: Public Health Expert On Why That Matters 鈥
A Blueprint for Better Bike Lanes 鈥
Departing NIH Director Monica Bertagnolli looks back at a whirlwind tenure 鈥
Are ultra-processed foods changing the shape of our jaws? 鈥 Issue No. 2840
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 .
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The risk of developing dementia may be much higher than previously thought鈥攎ore than 2X the estimates from older studies, with showing an average risk of 42% for Americans after age 55, .
- ~One million Americans a year are expected to develop Alzheimer鈥檚 or other forms of dementia by 2060鈥攗p from half a million this year, , one of several collaborating institutions on the study of 15,043 people from 1987 to 2020.
- Those 75 and older, because risk rises with age.
- Women, who tend to live longer.
- Black people鈥攚hose rates are expected to triple.
Risk-reducing route:
- Address racial inequities in health care.
- On an individual level, exercise, avoiding obesity, and controlling blood pressure, diabetes, and cholesterol are all key. It鈥檚 also important to stay socially and cognitively active and use hearing aids if needed, the AP reports.
Related: 15 science-based ways to reduce your risk of dementia 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Chinese scientists identified a potentially novel tickborne virus, which they named Xue-Cheng virus (XCV), in patients with fevers and recent tick bites at a northeastern China hospital; the researchers鈥 use of high-throughput sequencing technology to detect the virus.
A Kenya court ruled that criminalizing attempted suicide is unconstitutional鈥攁 decision hailed by human rights and mental health groups as an important move to shift perceptions and reduce stigma against people with mental health issues.
More patients seeking abortions in the U.K. reported relying on fertility awareness-based methods over hormonal contraception methods covering a five-year period between 2018 and 2023.
Graduate students with anxiety and depression say that overly harsh criticism and unreasonable expectations fueled their thoughts of quitting, per a survey designed to uncover which aspects of research and teaching exacerbated mental health symptoms. DATA POINT HIV/AIDS Indigenous Panamanians Face an 鈥楿ncontrolled Epidemic鈥
In Panama鈥檚 Ng盲be-Bugl茅 Indigenous territory, an 鈥渦ncontrolled epidemic鈥 of untreated HIV is threatening the region鈥檚 young people, the nation鈥檚 epidemiologists say.
By the numbers: ~2,500 people of the ~225,000 in the region live with HIV. It was the leading cause of death in the region in 2022.
- In 2023 the territory accounted for 30% of Panama鈥檚 AIDS-related deaths among people 29 or younger.
- In 2024, the area reported new infections at nearly 4X the national rate.
HARM REDUCTION HIV Prevention Efforts Hindered in Appalachia
In 2021, a CDC team visited Charleston, West Virginia, to assess an increasing number of HIV infections.
- What they found was 鈥,鈥 driven mainly by opioid and methamphetamine injection.
- But local and state policies, such as limiting the number of syringes exchanged, have hindered such programs.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES ITALY A Ban on Illness = A 鈥楥ry for Help鈥
Residents of the small Italian town of Belcastro have been 鈥渙rdered to avoid contracting any illness that requires medical assistance, especially an emergency,鈥 per a new municipal statute.
Not serious鈥攂ut serious: There are no plans to enforce the decree, said the town鈥檚 mayor, Antonio Torchia. But it is intended to protest the dearth of health care access in the region鈥攚here the health center is often closed, and where on-call doctors are unavailable outside of office hours.
- 鈥淭his is not just a provocation, the ordinance is a cry for help, a way to shine a spotlight on an unacceptable situation,鈥 Torchia told local news outlet .
QUICK HITS The psychological toll of California's catastrophic fires 鈥
鈥業 was crying, there was no anaesthesia鈥: the fight for legal and safe abortion in Nigeria 鈥
Why the 鈥楩errari of viruses鈥 is surging through the Northern Hemisphere 鈥
WHO Africa to Decide on New Regional Director Process Following Shock Death of Candidate 鈥
The cost of being a family caregiver: Burnout, debt, stress 鈥
Will MAHA add alcohol to its list of health foes? 鈥
How soda is changing the world 鈥 Issue No. 2839
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 .
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As wildfires continue to ravage Los Angeles, the city鈥檚 vast health system faces growing demand鈥攁nd increasing strain, .
The latest: ~24 people are dead and 12+ others remain unaccounted for, . ~105,000 people remain under mandatory evacuation, and another ~87,000 are under evacuation warnings as high winds intensify again today.
The fires have created 鈥渟ignificant operational hurdles鈥 for health systems, per a statement from the Hospital Association of Southern California鈥攊ncluding high call volumes and disrupted patient and supply transport.
- Emergency departments are treating patients for burns, smoke inhalation, and eye irritation.
- Some facilities are facing power outages and staff shortages.
- 700+ people have been evacuated from care facilities鈥攁nd hospitals in proximity to the fires remain on 鈥渉igh alert鈥 to potentially evacuate.
- HHS declared a public health emergency for California Friday to activate additional support, .
A new antiparasitic pill combining two drugs has shown promising results in treating intestinal worms, a parasitic malady that affects about 1.5 billion people globally, per a published in The Lancet.
The death toll in Gaza was ~40% higher than numbers recorded by the Palestinian territory鈥檚 health ministry during the first nine months of the Israel-Hamas war, published in The Lancet, which calculated 64,260 deaths.
Watching short video reels before bed was 鈥渟ignificantly鈥 linked with hypertension in young and middle-aged people, per a of 4,318 people published in the journal BMC Public Health. Avian Flu News Cambodian man dies from H5N1 avian flu, possibly after eating sick chickens 鈥
D.C. area on alert after bird flu detected in poultry in Maryland, Delaware 鈥
Bird Flu Is a National Embarrassment 鈥
How the US is preparing for a potential bird flu pandemic 鈥
Study reveals why H5N1 flu cases today are less severe than historic outbreaks 鈥 ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE Overlooked Agony
Over 400 million people鈥攑rimarily women鈥攕uffer from UTIs annually, with up to half likely to experience a recurrence within a year.
- Recurrent UTIs and the acute pain they cause remain a largely neglected problem with scant research into why they occur, and no targeted treatments beyond antibiotics.
The Quote: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a public health problem and it takes people away from their lives and nobody cares,鈥 said Elizabeth Kavaler, a urologist based in New York.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MENTAL HEALTH Coping with a Slow-Motion Crisis
The collective trauma faced by survivors of Hurricane Helene will persist for years, and North Carolina officials must bolster resources to prepare for it, mental health experts warn.
While recovery efforts are underway, many people are still without safe housing or work鈥攑rolonging and worsening mental health impacts.
- Trauma from disasters can cause 20%鈥40% of survivors to experience PTSD, often peaking months or years later, per
- The state has pledged $25 million for mental health services and is bolstering its mental health workforce.
- Schools are investing millions in crisis support services and mental health staff.
Related:
NC addiction treatment programs partner to reduce maternal deaths from substance use 鈥
Climate Change鈥檚 Psychological Impact | Hopkins Bloomberg Public Health Magazine 鈥
More than 15,000 doctors sign letter urging Senate to reject RFK Jr. as health secretary 鈥
鈥業 can鈥檛 go toe to toe with social media.鈥 Top U.S. health official reflects, regrets. 鈥
The rate of HMPV infections in northern China is declining, health official says 鈥
Cameroon Suspends NGOs, Harming Gender-Based Violence Survivors 鈥
What to know about a controversial new study on fluoride and IQ 鈥
Dementia is a neglected noncommunicable disease and leading cause of death 鈥
Climate Change Threatens the Mental Well-Being of Youths. Here's How To Help them Cope 鈥
Yogan Pillay, SA鈥檚 healthcare鈥檚 insider outsider 鈥 Issue No. 2838
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 .
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Tens of thousands of people are under evacuation orders in Los Angeles as high-force winds fuel multiple rampant fires around the city鈥攕ome of the most destructive in L.A.鈥檚 history, .
The latest: The fires have killed at least five people, burned 27,000+ acres, and destroyed ~2,000 structures, .
More danger ahead: Much of Los Angeles County remains under a red flag warning, with forecasters predicting dangerous conditions through Friday night.
Far-reaching hazard: The smoke blanketing the area is creating for people across the region, .
Water shortages: The region鈥檚 water system buckled under the high demand, with some fire hydrants running dry, .
Evacuation gridlock: Cars clogged major roads as residents fled鈥攁 perilous scene feared by residents who have long advocated for better planning, .
Slashed resources: L.A.鈥檚 fire chief warned last month that $18 million in budget cuts had 鈥渟everely limited the department's capacity鈥 to prepare for wildfires, .
Inmate firefighters: California has long depended on hundreds of inmate firefighters to help contain wildfire spread; those numbers have been dwindling due to prison reform and the COVID-19 pandemic, .
Bigger picture: Climate researchers warn that a warming world increases the number of 鈥渇ire weather鈥 days globally鈥攚here conditions are more suited for conflagrations, . GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
More than 46,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israel-Hamas war, with women and children accounting for more than half of the fatalities, per Gaza鈥檚 Health Ministry, which also reports 109,378 wounded as the 15-month conflict grinds on.
Mayo Clinic-led researchers characterized the risk potential for thousands of mutations of the BRCA2 cancer gene, offering insights to help providers identify patients with breast, ovarian, pancreatic, or prostate cancer who might benefit from more targeted treatments, according to a yesterday.
Taking doxycycline within 72 hours after sex reduced the incidence of chlamydia (by 79%), syphilis (by 80%), and gonorrhea (by 12%), per a 鈥攐ne of the first to show the effectiveness of the doxyPEP (doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis) strategy outside of clinical trials.
A new aimed at improving surveillance, research, and response to possible chronic wasting disease spillover from cervids, such as deer to people or farm animals, offers recommendations to help public and animal health agencies recognize and address a species jump. GHN EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY A light micrograph image of oocysts of the parasite Cryptosporidium parvum. M. Kandasamy and B. Striepen The Most Neglected NTD: Cryptosporidiosis
The 14-month-old boy arrived last January at University Teaching Hospitals鈥擟hildren鈥檚 Hospital in Lusaka, after suffering 12 days of diarrhea and poor appetite. Lethargic and dehydrated, he had underlying severe acute malnutrition.
Lab tests confirmed he was infected with Cryptosporidium. Despite maximal care that followed WHO protocols, the child died after a week in the hospital.
Cryptosporidiosis, implicated in the heartbreaking toll of 200,000 child deaths annually, receives far too little attention and should be added to the WHO list of (NTDs), write five members of the Cryptosporidiosis Therapeutics Advocacy Group.
A place on the WHO鈥檚 list would:
- Increase awareness of the disease鈥檚 impact on vulnerable populations and emphasize the need for quick action.
- Encourage governments to allocate resources and develop strategies for disease surveillance, diagnosis, and control measures.
- Persuade regulatory agencies like the U.S. FDA to prioritize evaluating and approving diagnostics, treatments, and potential vaccines.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES HEARING LOSS What鈥檚 Your Number?
Over the course of our lives, every one of us will experience a decline in hearing.
What isn鈥檛 so common: getting regular hearing tests to understand how our hearing changes over time.
Now, with free smartphone apps, anyone can learn their 鈥溾濃攖he measure in decibels of the softest speech sound a person can hear. This metric could help people decide when to use new strategies and technologies, such as over-the-counter hearing aids, to optimize their hearing.
Why it matters: Several large studies have linked hearing loss to cognitive decline. Now there are more accessible tools to identify hearing changes鈥攁nd intervene鈥攅arlier.
ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION No Good Win Goes Unpunished
For the college football coach lucky enough to clinch the annual Duke始s Mayo Bowl, the prize is bragging rights 鈥 and five gallons of mayo to the face.
And teams始 approach to the prank is surprisingly strategic.
Like any good sports coach, this year始s Duke始s dumpee, Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck, assessed his assets. 鈥淚 think with my bald head the mayo should just slide right off,鈥 . 鈥淚 might have to do a little pre-dumping of the mayo just to make sure.鈥
Tryouts to be the mayo dumper include mayo bucket deadlifts and catching footballs with mayo-soaked hands.
Not a mayo-thlete? Mere sports fans can dump stuff from the stands in the, which set a record this year by raining over 100,000 plush pals onto the ice at a hockey game in Pennsylvania. QUICK HITS New year brings little new hope for children in Gaza, with at least 74 children reportedly killed in first week of 2025 鈥
鈥楩orgotten鈥: How one Mexican city struggles against big industry for water 鈥
Delhi's air quality remains in 'very poor' category, AQI stands at 322 鈥
Ecuador: ongoing violence displacing thousands 鈥
Survival of the luckiest? New study hints at the potential role of luck in evolution 鈥 Issue No. 2837
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 .
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Copyright 2025 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.
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LODWAR, Kenya鈥擨n a sweltering children鈥檚 hospital ward, frail children lie on narrow beds, their tiny bodies locked in battle with kala-azar鈥攁lso known as visceral leishmaniasis.
On their wrists, thin plastic cannulas are taped in place, a constant reminder of the daily injections they must endure to survive the parasitic disease.
- Kala-azar is called a silent killer because its early warning signs鈥攆ever, fatigue, low appetite鈥攃an be easy to dismiss. But untreated, the disease, caused by Leishmania parasites transmitted through sandfly bites, kills 90% of its victims.
- And cases have surged recently in arid Turkana County, in northwestern Kenya鈥攚here the hospital now diagnoses and treats around five to 10 cases per day, a significant increase from previous years.
Scovian Lillian reported on the reasons for this, the need for safer, simpler treatments, and progress under a framework to eliminate child deaths from the disease by 2030鈥攑ointing to another country鈥檚 success story as proof such ambitious goals are attainable.
Ed. Note: This article is part of , made possible through the generous support of loyal GHN readers. Scovian Lillian, an independent journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya, reported on this story as a recipient of the DNDi media fellowship for Eastern African health journalists GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
Thousands of rescue workers have poured into Tibet to search for survivors after a 7.1 magnitude earthquake killed ~126 people and trapped hundreds more.
A compound derived from a tree native to southern Brazil kills the parasite that causes visceral leishmaniasis and may provide a breakthrough treatment for the disease, a published in Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy has found.
The U.K. cut health-related aid to vulnerable nations while also hiring nurses from those countries鈥攄espite their 鈥溾 status as regions with severe health workforce shortages, per a new analysis by the Royal College of Nursing.
The FDA has set limits for toxic lead in processed baby foods like jarred fruits, dry cereals, and yogurts, which could cut exposure by 20%鈥30%, the agency says; however, the limits are voluntary, not mandatory. TUBERCULOSIS A Powerful Prescription: Cash
A Brazilian economic program that provides cash to poor residents has been linked to significant positive health outcomes鈥攊ncluding lowering rates of tuberculosis, a new published in Nature Medicine has found.
Researchers looked at data on 54 million+ Brazilians living in poverty, 44% of whom received monthly cash payouts from the country鈥檚 Bolsa Familia Program, launched 20 years ago.
Their findings: Families receiving cash were significantly less likely to contract TB, with TB cases and deaths dropping by over 50%鈥攁nd by more than 60% among Indigenous populations.
How might payouts prevent TB? Researchers say the cash supplements allow people to improve their living conditions, diversify their diets, and take time off work for medical care.
Related: Significantly shorter treatment regimens for tuberculosis in children and adults now recommended 鈥 GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES POLIO For Indian Americans, A Not-So-Distant Scourge
For many Indian Americans, polio is a recent painful memory.
Vaccines only became widely available in India in the 1970s, when ~200,000 cases were reported each year. The country was finally declared polio-free in 2014 after extensive vaccination efforts.
Now, with rising vaccine skepticism and the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as U.S. health secretary, Indian American health providers and advocates are voicing concerns about potential polio resurgence in the U.S.
The Quote: 鈥淚 want to be the last generation who remembers the impact of polio,鈥 said Nahid Bhadelia, director of Boston University鈥檚 Center on Emerging Infectious Diseases, whose uncle in India had polio. 鈥淚 wish our children鈥檚 generation didn鈥檛 have to deal with this anymore.鈥
RIP Jimmy Carter鈥檚 Global Health Legacy
Following his presidency, Jimmy Carter, who died on December 29, spent five decades鈥攈alf of his 100 years鈥攑lacing much of his focus on global health in the world鈥檚 poorest countries. His quiet yet far-reaching work helped bring health and sanitation to millions and reshaped the work of aid organizations, .
Some highlights:
Focus on NTDs: Carter made a priority of bringing attention to NTDs, especially to Guinea worm. With the help of the Carter Center鈥檚 efforts, cases dropped from 3.5 million in 1986 to 14 in 2023, .
Leveraging status: Carter visited remote and impoverished populations with his wife, Rosalynn鈥攁nd later advocated for those groups in international forums. He negotiated a ceasefire during Sudan鈥檚 civil war to allow health teams to tackle a parasitic disease and brokered drug donations for illnesses like river blindness.
Community-led efforts: The Carter Center set new standards for international aid鈥攑rioritizing locally led, long-term initiatives.
Related:
Jimmy Carter leaves behind a global public health work legacy 鈥
Covering Carter: Seeing Hope Restored in Africa 鈥
鈥極ur country ignored Africa,鈥 Jimmy Carter said. He didn鈥檛 鈥 QUICK HITS Breakthrough drugs herald 鈥榥ew era鈥 in battle against dementia, experts predict 鈥
'Toxic male technique' could reduce female mosquito population by poisoning them during sex 鈥
Mongolian horses are contracting H5N1 under the radar, says new study 鈥
Environmental groups sue FDA over refusal to tackle risky plastic packaging 鈥
Doctors worry that iodine deficiency 鈥 a dietary problem from the past 鈥 is coming back 鈥
New Global Standard? Iron Infusions Boost Pregnancy Outcomes in Landmark Study 鈥
Atul Gawande on Global Health's Past and Present 鈥 Issue No. 2836
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 2025 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.
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You can or .
A sharp rise in human metapneumovirus (HMPV) infections among children 14 and under in China that began late last month has led to crowded hospitals and global concerns.
- Videos of crowded hospitals have circulated on social media, recalling COVID-19鈥檚 early months.
Background:
- HMPV is a common virus that鈥檚 been recognized since 2001, (and circulated in humans for decades before that).
- HMPV infection is usually mild with symptoms similar to the common cold. But severe cases can lead to bronchitis or pneumonia, 鈥減articularly among infants, older adults and immunocompromised people,鈥 per the Times.
- HMPV and influenza cases will likely spike at the end of this month when many Chinese travel for the Lunar New Year holiday, according to an official with China鈥檚 Center for Disease Control and Prevention per the Times.
The U.S. FDA has rolled out new recommendations for manufacturers to improve the accuracy of pulse oximeters鈥 use with patients of color; the devices have been found to overestimate Black patients鈥 oxygen levels, potentially delaying treatment.
Vasectomies increased by 95% and tubal sterilizations by 70% among Americans between 19 and 26, within months of the June 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, .
Indonesia鈥檚 new government launched a new initiative yesterday to reduce malnutrition by feeding ~90 million children and pregnant women through 2029; the Free Nutritious Meal program will cost $28 billion through 2029. YEAR-END RECAP Global Health Issues to Watch in 2025
It may be a new year, but many of the global health stories from the last few years are still playing out, writes Helen Branswell for STAT鈥攚ho adds that 鈥渋t doesn鈥檛 feel like the 2020s are ready to cut us any breaks.鈥
Among the questions in the new year:
- How might H5N1 bird flu evolve?
- Can mpox transmission be stopped?
- Will the U.S. play a decreased global health role with the incoming Trump administration?
- WHO looks back at 2024 鈥
- 鈥楴ot the new normal鈥 鈥 2024 'one of the worst years in UNICEF鈥檚 history' for children in conflict 鈥
- 2024: The year in photos 鈥
- Public Health in 2024: Historic Firsts, Unwelcome Comebacks, and Rays of Hope 鈥
After the first U.S. death from H5N1 avian flu was reported yesterday鈥攁 Louisiana resident hospitalized last month who was over 65 and had underlying medical conditions鈥攖he WHO said that the risk to the general population remains low, .
- The CDC also says the risk to the broader public remains low, 鈥攁lthough the virus appears to have developed some concerning mutations in the course of the Louisiana patient鈥檚 illness. Canada reported similar findings in a girl who fell ill in November.
- 鈥淵ou are surrounded by highly pathogenic viruses in the wild and in farm animals,鈥 said Marion Koopmans, head of virology at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands. 鈥淚f three months from now we are at the start of the pandemic, it is nobody鈥檚 surprise.鈥
The Quote: 鈥淚 hear over and over from workers, 鈥楾he cows are more valuable than us,鈥欌 says Bethany Boggess of the National Center for Farmworker Health. DECEMBER EXCLUSIVES Makeshift houses in the Garden House Compound area of Lusaka that share makeshift toilets built from wood and rags. Lusaka, Zambia, November 6, 2024. Freddie Clayton Exclusives to Close out 2024:
New Local Reporting Initiative reporters Kennedy Phiri and Freddie Clayton explore efforts to avoid a repeat of last year鈥檚 deadly cholera outbreak in Zambia in this two-part series:
Michelle Morse, New York City鈥檚 acting health commissioner, shares her public health priorities for the residents of the largest city in the U.S.鈥攁nd how her global health experience influences her work today鈥攊n a Q&A with GHN鈥檚 Brian W. Simpson.
And, reporter Joanne Silberner examines how the U.S. government鈥檚 approach to public health might change when the second Trump administration begins on January 20鈥攅xploring what powers states have to determine and take action on their own public health priorities.
As Mexican cartels seek to dominate the fentanyl market, they are increasingly turning to a new source for recruits: university chemistry labs, using high salaries and other incentives to lure students.
The bigger ambition: Cartels are trying to synthesize chemical compounds known as 鈥減recursors鈥 that are key to making fentanyl, which would free them from being dependent on China for production鈥攎aking it more difficult for law enforcement in both Mexico and the U.S. to stop the flow of the deadly drug.
Women on the Lymphatic Filariasis Front Lines
The mosquito-borne disease lymphatic filariasis takes an especially heavy toll on women in India鈥攅specially in poor, rural regions, where women are more vulnerable due to daily outdoor chores and have less access to health care.
- While annual mass drug administration campaigns aim to reduce transmission, mistrust and lack of awareness keep the preventive medicines out of women鈥檚 reach.
Portugal鈥檚 Practical Health Priorities
Portugal has a life expectancy nearly four years longer than the U.S.鈥攄espite spending just 20% of what the U.S. spends on health care per person.
The focus? Not cutting-edge technology or expensive medical facilities, but rather 鈥渙ld fashioned primary care and public health,鈥 including free or low-cost health care for every resident and clinics embedded in neighborhoods.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES QUICK HITS The surgeon general wants the U.S. to know alcohol causes cancer. Plenty stands in his way 鈥
WHO announces the development of new guidelines for lenacapavir and updated HIV testing guidelines 鈥
Sweet Danger: How Sugary Drinks Are Fueling Millions of New Diabetes and Heart Disease Cases Worldwide 鈥
Krutika Kuppalli and Placide Mbala Kingebeni鈥 What we learnt from the DRC鈥檚 malaria outbreak 鈥
Mycetoma: A Neglected Tropical Disease Affecting Ethiopia's Rural Communities 鈥
Health Insurers Limit Coverage of Prosthetic Limbs, Questioning Their Medical Necessity 鈥
Wait, should I bother using antibacterial soap? 鈥 Issue No. M-Dec.2024
Global Health NOW is an initiative https://us14.admin.mailchimp.com/campaigns/edit?id=10286596of 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 2025 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 sharp rise in human metapneumovirus (HMPV) infections among children 14 and under in China that began late last month has led to crowded hospitals and global concerns.
- Videos of crowded hospitals have circulated on social media, recalling COVID-19鈥檚 early months.
Background:
- HMPV is a common virus that鈥檚 been recognized since 2001, (and circulated in humans for decades before that).
- HMPV infection is usually mild with symptoms similar to the common cold. But severe cases can lead to bronchitis or pneumonia, 鈥減articularly among infants, older adults and immunocompromised people,鈥 per the Times.
- HMPV and influenza cases will likely spike at the end of this month when many Chinese travel for the Lunar New Year holiday, according to an official with China鈥檚 Center for Disease Control and Prevention per the Times.
The U.S. FDA has rolled out new recommendations for manufacturers to improve the accuracy of pulse oximeters鈥 use with patients of color; the devices have been found to overestimate Black patients鈥 oxygen levels, potentially delaying treatment.
Vasectomies increased by 95% and tubal sterilizations by 70% among Americans between 19 and 26, within months of the June 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, .
Indonesia鈥檚 new government launched a new initiative yesterday to reduce malnutrition by feeding ~90 million children and pregnant women through 2029; the Free Nutritious Meal program will cost $28 billion through 2029. YEAR-END RECAP Global Health Issues to Watch in 2025
It may be a new year, but many of the global health stories from the last few years are still playing out, writes Helen Branswell for STAT鈥攚ho adds that 鈥渋t doesn鈥檛 feel like the 2020s are ready to cut us any breaks.鈥
Among the questions in the new year:
- How might H5N1 bird flu evolve?
- Can mpox transmission be stopped?
- Will the U.S. play a decreased global health role with the incoming Trump administration?
- WHO looks back at 2024 鈥
- 鈥楴ot the new normal鈥 鈥 2024 'one of the worst years in UNICEF鈥檚 history' for children in conflict 鈥
- 2024: The year in photos 鈥
- Public Health in 2024: Historic Firsts, Unwelcome Comebacks, and Rays of Hope 鈥
After the first U.S. death from H5N1 avian flu was reported yesterday鈥攁 Louisiana resident hospitalized last month who was over 65 and had underlying medical conditions鈥攖he WHO said that the risk to the general population remains low, .
- The CDC also says the risk to the broader public remains low, 鈥攁lthough the virus appears to have developed some concerning mutations in the course of the Louisiana patient鈥檚 illness. Canada reported similar findings in a girl who fell ill in November.
- 鈥淵ou are surrounded by highly pathogenic viruses in the wild and in farm animals,鈥 said Marion Koopmans, head of virology at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands. 鈥淚f three months from now we are at the start of the pandemic, it is nobody鈥檚 surprise.鈥
The Quote: 鈥淚 hear over and over from workers, 鈥楾he cows are more valuable than us,鈥欌 says Bethany Boggess of the National Center for Farmworker Health. DECEMBER EXCLUSIVES Makeshift houses in the Garden House Compound area of Lusaka that share makeshift toilets built from wood and rags. Lusaka, Zambia, November 6, 2024. Freddie Clayton Exclusives to Close out 2024:
New Local Reporting Initiative reporters Kennedy Phiri and Freddie Clayton explore efforts to avoid a repeat of last year鈥檚 deadly cholera outbreak in Zambia in this two-part series:
Michelle Morse, New York City鈥檚 acting health commissioner, shares her public health priorities for the residents of the largest city in the U.S.鈥攁nd how her global health experience influences her work today鈥攊n a Q&A with GHN鈥檚 Brian W. Simpson.
And, veteran GHN freelancer Joanne Silberner examines how the U.S. government鈥檚 approach to public health might change when the second Trump administration begins on January 20鈥攅xploring what powers states have to determine and take action on their own public health priorities.
As Mexican cartels seek to dominate the fentanyl market, they are increasingly turning to a new source for recruits: university chemistry labs, using high salaries and other incentives to lure students.
The bigger ambition: Cartels are trying to synthesize chemical compounds known as 鈥減recursors鈥 that are key to making fentanyl, which would free them from being dependent on China for production鈥攎aking it more difficult for law enforcement in both Mexico and the U.S. to stop the flow of the deadly drug.
Women on the Lymphatic Filariasis Front Lines
The mosquito-borne disease lymphatic filariasis takes an especially heavy toll on women in India鈥攅specially in poor, rural regions, where women are more vulnerable due to daily outdoor chores and have less access to health care.
- While annual mass drug administration campaigns aim to reduce transmission, mistrust and lack of awareness keep the preventive medicines out of women鈥檚 reach.
Portugal鈥檚 Practical Health Priorities
Portugal has a life expectancy nearly four years longer than the U.S.鈥攄espite spending just 20% of what the U.S. spends on health care per person.
The focus? Not cutting-edge technology or expensive medical facilities, but rather 鈥渙ld fashioned primary care and public health,鈥 including free or low-cost health care for every resident and clinics embedded in neighborhoods.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES QUICK HITS The surgeon general wants the U.S. to know alcohol causes cancer. Plenty stands in his way 鈥
WHO announces the development of new guidelines for lenacapavir and updated HIV testing guidelines 鈥
Sweet Danger: How Sugary Drinks Are Fueling Millions of New Diabetes and Heart Disease Cases Worldwide 鈥
Krutika Kuppalli and Placide Mbala Kingebeni鈥 What we learnt from the DRC鈥檚 malaria outbreak 鈥
Mycetoma: A Neglected Tropical Disease Affecting Ethiopia's Rural Communities 鈥
Health Insurers Limit Coverage of Prosthetic Limbs, Questioning Their Medical Necessity 鈥
Wait, should I bother using antibacterial soap? 鈥 Issue No. 2835
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 2025 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 .