Global Health NOW: The U.S. Has Left the WHO. What Now?
Cardiovascular disease fatalities dropped in the U.S. by 2.7% between 2022 and 2023, per a new report from the American Heart Association—but heart disease and stroke are still the nation’s leading cause of death, accounting for more than a quarter of all deaths in the U.S. in 2023. ABC News
An infant formula recall affecting 18 countries has been issued by French dairy company Lactalis after some batches were flagged for a dangerous toxin; the recall marks the third major infant formula recall this year following other contamination incidents from Nestlé and Danone. France24
Maternal genetic factors may shed new light on common factors behind pregnancy loss, finds new research published in Nature, which analyzed ~140,000 IVF embryos and found links between specific variations in a mother's DNA and their risk of miscarriage. Johns Hopkins University via Medical Xpress IN FOCUS A sign with the WHO logo outside their headquarters in Geneva, on August 17, 2020. Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images The U.S. Has Left the WHO
The U.S. formally leaves the WHO today, completing a yearlong withdrawal process begun on President Trump’s first day in office in 2025, and leaving a budgetary crisis and ruptured global health security in its wake, reports Reuters.
Global fallout: The loss of the U.S.—once the WHO’s largest donor—has led the agency to make deep budget cuts and plan layoffs for nearly a quarter of its staff.
- These losses, combined with the loss of U.S. cooperation, leaves the world less equipped to handle worldwide disease detection, response coordination, and intelligence sharing—crucial collaborations during recent global health crises like COVID-19 and the Ebola outbreak.
A path to return?: While global health leaders say they do not anticipate a U.S. return to the organization in the near future, former WHO advisor Peter Singer wrote in an op-ed for Think Global Health that some WHO reforms, including results-based accountability, could eventually lure the U.S. back.
Related: Maga-backed researchers call for WHO to be ‘reformed or replaced’ on eve of US withdrawal – The Telegraph GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES ZOONOTIC DISEASES Pangolins and Pandemic Risk
Pangolins are one of the most trafficked animals in the world, as demand for their scales and meat remains high in places like Laos—a major hub of illegal wildlife trade. Rampant trafficking threatens the mammal with extinction and poses a global health security threat, say epidemiologists.
- Pangolins' unique immune tolerance allows them to host pathogens undetected, and the animals’ long captivity with other species and humans in unsanitary spaces creates a risk for spillover.
Flinging the windows open for some fresh air: It’s an invigorating feeling now and again.
In Germany, it’s much more than that. The practice of multiple daily airings—no matter the weather—is ingrained from childhood and for tenants, often a contractual obligation.
Lüften-lite: But now, much to some Germans’ chagrin, American influencers have co-opted lüften under a new name: “house burping,” presenting it as a mere suggestion. A refreshing home hack, with no threat of eviction for noncompliance—or warning that over-commitment may ruin your relationship.
Breeze-crossed lovers: For one German-American couple, the partner doing the heavy lüften-ing invited in cold air, chilly feelings, and one time, three bats, The Washington Post reports. His practice, which exceeded the lüften minimums required by his lease, left his American girlfriend cold and “confused,” and their love went out the open window like stale air caught in a crossbreeze. “Lüften is largely responsible for the fact that they’re no longer together.”
QUICK HITS The US is on the verge of losing its measles elimination status. Here’s why that matters – APDozens Are Sickened by a Rare Fungal Infection in Tennessee – The New York Times (gift link)
Study highlights impact of gender dynamics on antibiotic use – CIDRAP
Vitamin D can help protect you against the flu, study suggests – The Independent
ActionAid to rethink child sponsorship as part of plan to ‘decolonise’ its work – The Guardian
Can your health records be sold for profit? A lawsuit says it’s happening. – The Washington Post (gift link)
Trees — not grass and other greenery — associated with lower heart disease risk in cities – UC Davis Health
Global buzzwords that will be buzzing in your ear in 2026 – NPR Issue No. 2851
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Mpox’s Silent Spread; and U.K. Seeks a Road Safety Overhaul
The Africa CDC confirmed the cancelation yesterday of a U.S.-funded study on hepatitis B vaccines involving newborns in Guinea-Bissau, citing ethical concerns over the proposed research design—particularly the possibility of delaying access to a lifesaving vaccine for some newborn participants. Premium Times Nigeria
Prenatal exposure to wildfire smoke may be associated with an increased likelihood of autism diagnosis by age 5, per a study published yesterday in Environmental Science & Technology; the strongest association was found among those exposed to more than 10 days of wildfire smoke in the third trimester. Tulane University via News Medical
A coalition of U.S. health groups has expanded a lawsuit against HHS Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., challenging his agency’s “egregious, reckless, and dangerous” changes to the childhood vaccine schedule; the plaintiffs—which include the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Physicians, and the American Public Health Association—had already sued over the agency’s changes to COVID-19 vaccine policy. The Hill IN FOCUS Social mobilizers wait for community members ahead of the launch of an mpox vaccination campaign at the General Hospital in Goma, DRC. October 5, 2024. Aubin Mukoni/AFP via Getty Mpox’s Silent Spread
Mpox may be spreading asymptomatically in parts of Africa, new research shows—a revelation that could have significant implications for understanding and preventing transmission, reports The Telegraph.
Researchers analyzed new and historic blood samples from 176 Nigerian adults with no known mpox exposure and discovered something unexpected: ~3% had developed new mpox antibodies over nine months—indicating recent infection, finds the study published in Nature Communications, which was conducted by scientists at the University of Cambridge and the Institute of Human Virology Nigeria.
- The research points not to “explosive spread”—but rather to persistent transmission via “sporadic chains of infection” shaped and potentially contained by past smallpox vaccination, per a university news release via Medical Xpress.
- The study also found no major differences in immune responses between health care workers and the general population—meaning exposure isn’t limited to medical settings, reports CIDRAP.
- “If we only look for obvious disease, we will miss part of the picture,” said Alash'le Abimiku, executive director of the Institute of Human Virology Nigeria.
U.K. officials have unveiled the country’s first comprehensive road safety strategy in over a decade, aiming to cut road deaths and serious injuries by 65% by 2035.
Background: Advocates and officials say the reforms come after years of inaction, as the country falls further behind European road standards.
- “For too long, progress on road safety has stalled. This strategy marks a turning point,” said U.K. transport secretary Heidi Alexander.
- Stricter alcohol limits and higher penalties for violators.
- Mandatory eye tests for drivers ages 70+.
- Longer learning periods for new drivers.
- Automatic emergency braking in all new cars.
- Increased penalties for uninsured motorists and those not wearing seatbelts.
- Improved crash testing.
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: The Bacterial Detective Battling Superbugs in Nigeria; and Historic Clues for a Modern Medical Mystery
Chinese authorities are blocking online searches about the country's plunging births after official figures released yesterday showed the country's birth rate dipped to 5.63 per 1,000 last year—the lowest since the 1949 founding of the People's Republic. Newsweek A personalized experimental drug based on mRNA technology halved melanoma patients’ risk of recurrence or death after five years compared with patients treated only with immunotherapy, per Moderna. The Washington Post (gift link)
A new meta-analysis and systematic review of 43 studies concluded that taking Tylenol (also known as paracetamol) during pregnancy does not cause autism in children, per a Lancet Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women’s Health article; the review follows President Trump’s warning against taking the medication during pregnancy. AP IN FOCUS: GHN EXCLUSIVE Iruka Okeke and her small team run a national surveillance project tracking antimicrobial resistance in Nigeria. Andrew Esiebo The Bacterial Detective Battling Superbugs in Nigeria IBADAN, Nigeria—Inside a crowded University of Ibadan lab, Iruka Okeke and her dozen students are running a national surveillance project for one of Nigeria's—and Africa's—most understudied problems: antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
- More than 1 million deaths in the WHO’s Africa region in 2019 were associated with bacterial AMR.
- “AMR deaths threaten Africa’s future,” says Okeke.
- She and her team use whole genome sequencing and other tools to understand how microbes inherit and spread resistant traits.
- They’ve already investigated more than a dozen suspected outbreaks.
- The lab—Nigeria’s first reference lab for AMR surveillance—obtains samples from three sentinel hospitals in Ibadan and sequences pathogenic bacteria, sharing data with the Nigeria CDC.
- “There are days I wake up, and I think, ‘Oh, gosh, there’s too many problems to solve—like how are you going to keep the electricity uninterrupted?’” Okeke says. “And then, there are days I wake up and think, ‘It’s amazing we’re doing this stuff that nobody else is doing.’”
980,000
—————
The number of midwives needed across 181 countries—90% of them LMICs; improved access could potentially save 4.3m lives a year by 2035, per a new analysis by the International Confederation of Midwives. —The Guardian
CANCER Historic Clues for a Modern Medical Mystery U.K. scientists seeking to understand why colorectal cancer continues to rise sharply among young people are looking to hospital archives for leads. The clues: A vast collection of century-old cancer samples stored at St. Mark’s Hospital in London.
- The samples, which have been preserved in wax, are being sent to the Institute of Cancer Research for molecular tests that can identify DNA damage “signatures,” revealing possible triggers.
What science says about how weight-loss drugs affect cancer risk – The Washington Post (gift link)
Sugar Land resident advances global cancer research while still an undergrad – The Fort Bend Star GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES QUICK HITS Napkins for bandages: How 11 doctors survived the siege of El Fasher – The Telegraph The near death — and last-minute reprieve — of a trial for an HIV vaccine – NPR The Obituary Of The US Childhood Immunization Schedule – Health Affairs (commentary) Drug use disorders a growing public health concern in the Americas, PAHO study finds – The San Pedro Sun Public Views About Opioid Overdose and People With Opioid Use Disorder – JAMA Network Open More than half of mpox patients in 2022 outbreak experienced lasting physical effects: Study – ABC Alzheimer's finger-prick test could help diagnosis – BBC Issue No. 2849
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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How Concerning Are Microplastics? The Jury Is Still Out.
Earth's average 2025 temperature was one of the three hottest on record, and the pattern of the past three years indicates that warming could be accelerating, international climate monitoring teams say. NPR
Vaccine exemptions among kindergarteners for religious or personal beliefs have risen steadily in counties throughout the U.S. since the COVID-19 pandemic, finds research published Wednesday in JAMA, which showed the median rate for such exemptions rising from 0.6% in 2010-2011 to 3.1% in 2023-2024. NBC News
Mosquitoes are increasingly using humans as a blood source instead of wildlife as deforestation expands, finds a new study published in Frontiers—a shift researchers say will continue to raise the potential for the spread of mosquito-borne diseases. ABC News EDITORS' NOTE No GHN Monday
We will not be sending out the newsletter on Monday, January 19, in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
We’ll be back Tuesday with more news!
IN FOCUS Plastic fragments on a person's fingers. Peter Dazeley/Getty Images Microplastics Research Faces Tough CritiquesWidely publicized studies claiming that microplastics are pervasive in human tissue and organs are being increasingly debated by scientists, some of whom argue that limits and flaws in the nascent research field may have led to distorted results, reports The Guardian. A young field: While researchers agree plastic pollution is ubiquitous and its impact on the body merits urgent study, there is no consensus on how the tiniest particles may infiltrate and impact the body, leaving the true risk—and appropriate level of public concern—an open question.
- Critics of recent papers say that microplastic and nanoplastic particles are so small they are at the limit of today’s analytical techniques and instruments.
- Amid the rush to publish research, scientists say routine scientific checks have been missed, potentially leading to false positives, contamination, and weak lab controls.
- But in November a group of scientists published a letter criticizing the research, citing “methodological challenges.” It is one of many studies being questioned for the same reason.
- “We do have plastics in us—I think that is safe to assume. But real hard proof on how much is yet to come,” said Dusan Materic, one of the researchers who signed the letter to Nature.
When Poland saw a rapid influx of 1.5 million Ukrainian refugees in 2022, health officials were on high alert for drug-resistant tuberculosis, as Ukraine has one of the highest TB burdens in the world.
But the crisis laid bare Poland’s own outdated tuberculosis response system, which involved long, isolated hospital stays and multiyear, often toxic, drug regimens.
Rapid revitalization: Poland swiftly overhauled its care model, implementing a pilot program that included a six‑month course of an oral drug combination known as BPaL/M, which has far higher cure rates than Poland’s previous standard protocol of various drugs.
- The pilot inspired a new national TB program set to be implemented by 2030.
This week in YOLO news: He wanted the fastest trash can on wheels, and he made it so.
Completing “literally the most rubbish project” he’d ever worked on, U.K. inventor Michael Wallhead’s motorized bin—known as the Great General Waste—accelerated to an unprecedented 55mph, beating out the previous Guinness world record by 10mph.
The speeds are impressive, but we’re more interested in pun-ability. Suggested names included:
- Light-bin McQueen
- Bin Diesel
- Gone Bin 60 Seconds
One bin of contention: Wallhead demonstrated his warp-speed wheelie bin by riding in it. But we’d much rather it drag our trash to the curb without us going near it, let alone inside it. Please and thank you. QUICK HITS HHS terminates, then reinstates, thousands of grants for substance use, mental health – Politico Hundreds of laid-off researchers at US workplace safety center are being reinstated – AP Medical groups will ask court to block new CDC vaccine recommendations – CNN 25,000 TB Cases Unreported ... Ghana Risks Missing WHO Target - Dr Amenyo – Ghanaian Times via AllAfrica Should younger and older people receive different treatments for the same infection? – Salk Institute for Biological Studies Researchers uncover hundreds of emojis in patient records – University of Michigan Health Issue No. 2848
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: U.S. Aid Cuts Threaten Progress Against AIDS Orphanhood; and America’s New ‘Trade for Aid’ Global Health Paradigm
U.S. kidney donations from recently deceased people fell for the first time in over a decade last year—from 15,937 in 2024 to 15,274, per a new Kidney Transplant Collaborative analysis; the decline follows heightened scrutiny of the transplant system that prompted thousands to remove themselves from U.S. organ donor registries. Axios
Sugary drinks and alcohol are getting relatively cheaper, fueling diseases like diabetes and cancer, and prompting the WHO to call for tax increases on such products to stem consumption levels and allow countries to capture funds for health services. France24
Cancer survival rates have reached a major new milestone, as 70% people now survive five years+ after diagnosis of all cancers, per the American Cancer Society’s latest annual report; in the 1970s, just half of those diagnosed survived that length of time. NBC IN FOCUS A client waits to be seen by a doctor during an HIV clinic day at TASO Mulago service center. Kampala, Uganda, February 17. Hajarah Nalwadda/Getty U.S. Aid Cuts Threaten Progress Against AIDS Orphanhood Expanded access to HIV treatment and prevention has led to a major decline in AIDS-related orphanhood in sub-Saharan African countries like Uganda—gains that have been jeopardized by abrupt U.S. cuts to such programs, reports CIDRAP. The research: A Uganda-based study published in The Lancet Global Health found that scaling up antiretroviral therapy cut AIDS-related orphanhood in Rakai, Uganda, by ~70%—from 21.5% in 2003 to 6.3% in 2022. Still vulnerable: Despite this progress, ~10.3 million children in sub-Saharan Africa have already lost a parent to HIV.
- And a high burden of orphanhood persisted in 2022—showing that “sustained investment and adaptation” of HIV programs is critical to prevent a new wave of orphanhood and instability.
- And the U.S. is pulling back support for primary prevention tools—a move advocates called “the most short-sighted policy imaginable.”
1 in 4
———
UK teenagers in care, including foster, residential, and kinship care, have attempted suicide, and are 4X more likely to do so than their peers with no care experience, per UCL Centre for Longitudinal Studies researchers.
—The Guardian
HEALTH POLICY America’s New ‘Trade for Aid’ Global Health Paradigm As the U.S. negotiates new international aid deals with African governments, a new framework is taking shape—with funding linked directly to trade and geopolitical goals. The basics: The U.S. has pledged ~$16 billion and signed 14 deals with countries in recent weeks as part of the new “America First” aid strategy. Agreements in the works include:
- A $1.5 billion deal with Zambia that is reportedly contingent on mining access.
- A $2.1 billion deal with Nigeria—made with the condition that the country increase its own health spending and promote Christian faith-based health care providers.
Inside Trump's $11 billion health plan to replace “neo-colonial” USAID – Axios
KFF Tracker: America First MOU Bilateral Global Health Agreements - KFF Health News GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES QUICK HITS Cocoa, Child Labour and Côte d’Ivoire: The Emerging Change – The Pulitzer Center
New RFK Jr. pick for vaccine panel: ‘I was not anti-vaccine. I am now.’ – The Washington Post (gift link) Lawsuit dismissed after Trump admin quietly restored tens of millions to Planned Parenthood – Politico Harvard Chan researchers win $100 million MacArthur grant for infectious disease surveillance system – Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Sleeping less than 7 hours could cut years off your life – Oregon Health & Science University via ScienceDaily
‘It’s not the 90s any more’: the all-women team reinventing abortion advice for the TikTok age – The Guardian Issue No. 2847
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Frontline Genomics With AI; and Ghana’s Long Quest for the Hepatitis B Shot
U.S. Congress votes tomorrow on a bipartisan funding bill that includes $9.4 billion for global health—more than 2X the amount the State Department requested—and would restore funding for reproductive health and family planning, neglected diseases, and Gavi cut last year by the Trump administration. POLITICO Pro
A federal judge ordered the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to restore nearly $12 million in American Academy of Pediatrics funding, citing evidence of a “retaliatory motive” in the termination of seven grants for public health programs, including rural health care and efforts to prevent sudden infant death. AP IN FOCUS: GHN EXCLUSIVE A West African Centre for Cell Biology of Infectious Pathogens researcher runs a genome sequencer at their laboratory. Courtesy: WACCBIP Frontline Genomics With AI New technology working in tandem with powerful AI-based software is eliminating the need to send samples for genomic sequencing to distant reference labs—and wait a week for results.
- Now, a rough bacterial genome can be sequenced in a hospital or clinic within hours, using a portable harmonica-size genome sequencer and AI.
- Since then, ACEGID has sequenced Africa’s first SARS-CoV-2 genome within 48 hours of detection, trained thousands of African scientists, and helped national labs with real-time sequencing.
- The center has become a major hub for genome sequencing and bioinformatics training, supporting spoke labs in West and Central Africa to establish capacity for genomic surveillance.
“What the world now calls 'calm' would be considered a crisis anywhere else.” ————————— ––UNICEF’s James Elder at a Geneva briefing today
after noting that roughly one child has been killed
every day in Gaza since the ceasefire began in October. VACCINES Ghana’s Long Quest for the Hepatitis B Shot
As the U.S. rolls back its long-established hepatitis B vaccination recommendation for newborns, doctors in Ghana are fighting for access to the shot. ~1/10 people in Ghana live with chronic hepatitis B, with ~10,000 new infections reported each year.
- While the country has a vaccine that can be administered to one-month-old babies, it has long sought access to vaccines for newborns—who are most vulnerable to transmission.
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Deadly Crackdown on Iran’s Intensifying Protests; and Drones Deliver Lifesaving Care in Ghana
Background: Protests that began in late December over economic collapse and political repression have now spread to all Iranian provinces. The government has responded with intensifying force, including an internet and phone blackout—which has meant the true toll of the violence remains unclear. ‘Horrible scenes’: Health workers who have managed to reach contacts outside the country report that protestors have been shot with live ammunition and pellets, with young people targeted, reports The Times.
- One hospital worker in Tehran said there were so many wounded that staff did not have time to perform CPR, per the BBC. Others have described creating makeshift operating rooms and activating new morgues as existing facilities are strained.
A fleet of drones is transforming health care in rural Ghana, delivering millions of critical vaccines, medications, antivenoms, and blood units to remote facilities with limited access to such inventory.
About the program: The delivery service is funded by Ghana’s government and implemented by the California-based company Zipline, which built a digital platform connecting ~3,000 health facilities to six distribution hubs.
- Mobile requests are sent to these hubs, where products are placed in temperature-controlled packaging and delivered via drone and parachute.
Impact: The drones have delivered 8.4 million medical products in Ghana from 2019 to 2025—drops credited with saving ~9,700 lives.
Ongoing obstacles: Weak mobile signals in remote areas sometimes stymie orders, highlighting the need for improved mobile infrastructure.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Measles response puts personal choice over orders – Axios Bird Flu Viruses Raise Mounting Concerns Among Scientists – The New York Times (gift link) Face masks ‘inadequate’ and should be swapped for respirators, WHO is advised – The Guardian California's School-Based Tobacco Use Prevention Program After Proposition 56: Results From a Statewide Evaluation – Journal of Adolescent HealthThe long shadow of the one-child policy: China pays for its biggest social experiment with a demographic crisis – El País
10 Considerations for Global Health Reform in 2026 – Think Global Health (commentary) A child is born: Italians celebrate village’s first baby in 30 years – The Guardian Issue No. 2845
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Unpacking America’s New Dietary Guidelines
Burning plastic for household heating and cooking is far more widespread than previously known, finds new research published in the journal Nature Communications; the practice presents a growing health and environmental threat especially in low- and middle-income countries, researchers say. The Guardian
Strains of drug-resistant typhoid capable of resisting the strongest available antibiotics have emerged in South Asia, escalating fears over the rapid spread of drug-resistant infections; the samples collected from hospitals in India contain a gene capable of breaking down the powerful antibiotic class known as carbapenems. The Telegraph
The U.S. House is set to vote today on a measure that would renew health insurance subsidies that expired at the end of last year; the three-year extension is expected to pass the House, but its future in the Senate is unclear. NPR IN FOCUS A social media post from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services showing the revised food pyramid in Lafayette, California, on January 7. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images Unpacking America’s New Dietary Guidelines
The U.S. food pyramid is again being overhauled, as sweeping new 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, released by the Trump administration yesterday, call for avoiding processed foods in favor of whole, fresh foods and increased protein, reports the AP.
Key changes include:
- Processed in the crosshairs: The guidance urges Americans to ditch highly processed foods, a major shift in formal federal dietary policy. The guidelines also say “no amount” of added sugars or non-nutritive sweeteners is considered part of a healthy diet.
- Pro-protein: The recommendations call for potentially doubling protein consumption.
- Saturated fat reframing: The guidelines keep limits on saturated fats—but they approve previously avoided sources like butter or beef tallow, reports CNN.
- Alcohol guidance loosened: The long-standing cap of 1–2 drinks per day is gone, replaced by a simple message to “drink less”—drawing pushback from public health groups, reports Reuters.
Reactions: Medical groups praised the move away from processed foods and the emphasis on fresh foods, with American Medical Association president Bobby Mukkamala saying the rules “affirm that food is medicine.”
- But other groups, including the American Heart Association, expressed concerns about how the embrace of animal meat and dairy products could harm cardiovascular health.
Implications: The guidelines’ most direct impact is on federal nutrition programs and in shaping the school meal programs used to feed ~30 million children daily, reports CNN.
- But school leaders say they lack the funding to implement more fresh and from-scratch foods.
Related: Common food preservatives linked to cancer and type 2 diabetes — CNN
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MALARIA Cameroon’s Push to Save Its Malaria ProgramWhen health workers in Cameroon learned last year that the U.S. was cutting critical malaria funding to the country, they feared a total loss of hard-won gains against the disease.
But they persisted: As stocks of essential medications dwindled, nonprofits stepped in at critical junctures, and dedicated health workers continued to work unpaid for months—making door-to-door visits and rushing supplies to those in need via bicycle.
- “We are the people who save small children. Of course we had to keep doing the job,” said health worker Bachirou Agarbe.
What’s next: A proposed compact with the U.S. could lead to the restoration of $399 million over five years, contingent on Cameroon boosting its health spending.
- Meanwhile, Cameroon’s malaria program is restarting with renewed shipments and stipends.
The New York Times (gift link)
ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION These Words Are Tired. Let Them Rest. Whoever suggested the list as “a whimsical New Year’s Eve party idea in 1976” couldn’t have imagined we’d be here, 50 years later, lamenting and celebrating worn-out words, thanks to Lake Superior State University’s annual Banished Words List.A sampling of 2026 banishments for, hopefully, the last time.
- 6-7: Technically numbers, but certainly deserving of the dishonor.
- Cooked: Or preferably, “all forms of the word cook.” A blow to chefs, or anyone who likes food.
- Incentivize: A painful example in “the longstanding effort to turn nouns into verbs.”
- Reach Out: Deserved to die in emails—but on dance floors, Four Tops’s classic bop remains immortal.
Why trust LSSU? Because this is an institution that welcomes spring by burning a snowman and prominently displays rules for hunting unicorns. (Stick to enchanted forests, and bring pinking shears, “serious intent,” and sweet talk.)
Where do we apply? QUICK HITS Why a fatal ‘black fungus’ struck India during the COVID-19 pandemic – Science
Three hospitals are under investigation for providing gender-affirming care to trans youth – The 19th
COVID continues to exact heavy toll on older US adults, study suggests – CIDRAP
Blue zones: Are global longevity hotspots a myth? New study shows where people really live longer – Euronews
How a parasite 'gave up sex' to find more hosts—and why its victory won't last – Phys.org Issue No. 2844
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Understanding America’s Mounting Malnutrition Rates; and Navigating Zimbabwe’s Deadly Roads
Widespread HPV vaccination could substantially reduce the risk of precancerous lesions even among unvaccinated people through herd immunity, finds a new nationwide cohort study that examined rates of cervical lesions among 850,000+ unvaccinated women and girls in Sweden. CIDRAP Quick tuberculosis identification and treatment can significantly improve survival rates for people with HIV-related sepsis, found University of Virginia researchers in a five-year trial in East Africa. UVA Today (news release) IN FOCUS People wait in line for food distribution at La Colaborativa's food pantry in Chelsea, Massachusetts, on November 15, 2025. Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Understanding America’s Mounting Malnutrition Rates Malnutrition is America’s fastest-growing cause of death—up 6X in about a decade, now ranking with arterial disease, mental disorders, and deaths from assault, reports The Washington Post (gift link). Why? The pattern is rising across all states, ages, races, and education levels, but the sharpest growth is among those age 85+.
- While food insecurity amid rising costs is one reason for the increase among this demographic, there’s another key factor: data collection.
- Over the last decade, new criteria, clinical and insurance initiatives, and screenings have increased documentation of malnutrition—especially in cases where chronic illness drives weight and appetite loss in geriatric and hospice care.
- And childhood food insecurity has a lifelong impact on health and longevity, reports NPR Shots.
- The end of the report marks a “rupture in long-standing data on food security among Americans,” per analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
94%
———
Reduction in the number of people estimated to be at risk of trachoma and requiring interventions—which fell from ~1.5 billion people at risk in 2002 to 97.1 million as of November 2025.
––WHO
ROAD SAFETY Navigating Zimbabwe’s Deadly Roads In Zimbabwe, driving instruction is no longer just about helping people obtain a license: It is about teaching new drivers to survive on some of the world’s deadliest roads.
- “We teach them to stay alive,” said driving instructor Tafara Muvhevhi.
- Crashes are reported every 15 minutes.
- 5 deaths and 38 injuries are recorded per day.
Adults in England eating as much salt a day as in 22 bags of crisps, study show – The Guardian 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Vaccine Schedule Change Draws Fire; and India’s ‘Preventable Tragedy’
New cervical cancer screening guidelines from a U.S. health agency include a home HPV test option using self-collection swabs to send to a lab for analysis; the guidelines, detailed in JAMA, cite studies demonstrating the potential for self-collection to up screening rates—including in hard-to-reach populations. CIDRAP
The U.S. EPA is dismissing a WHO cancer review agency’s determination that atrazine, the second most common herbicide in the U.S., is “probably carcinogenic to humans”; 60+ countries have banned the chemical due to endocrine-disrupting properties and groundwater contamination risks. Health Policy Watch
New research on stimulants used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) work—but by targeting the brain’s reward and wakefulness centers, not by acting on the brain’s attention circuitry, as had been assumed; the findings, published in Cell, also point to the important role of sleep deprivation in the disorder. The Washington Post (gift link) IN FOCUS A child sports a Paw Patrol Band-Aid after receiving a flu vaccine during a Los Angeles immunization event on October 24, 2025. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Vaccine Schedule Change Draws Fire Astonished U.S. health leaders are sharply criticizing the unprecedented reduction in the U.S. childhood vaccination schedule announced yesterday by federal health officials.
- Recommended vaccines were cut from 17 to 11, STAT reports.
- U.S. officials said the new schedule would improve public trust, blaming the previous schedule for falling vaccination rates. They referred to limited safety data about vaccines, despite rigorous safety testing.
- “Unfortunately, it’s becoming increasingly clear that we can no longer trust the leadership of our federal government for credible information about vaccines, and that’s a tragedy that will cause needless suffering,” said American Academy of Pediatrics’ chair of its infectious disease committee Sean O’Leary.
- “[T]his will increase confusion and decrease vaccine uptake,” said immunologist Helen Chu.
- “Weakening recommendations for vaccines in the name of ideology over epidemiology undermines America’s leadership in public health and trust in our health authorities,” said John Crowley, Biotechnology Innovation Organization president.
Related:
Rotavirus Could Come Roaring Back—Very Soon – The Atlantic (gift link) US cuts the number of vaccines recommended for every child, a move slammed by physicians – AP GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CERVICAL CANCER India’s ‘Preventable Tragedy’ Cervical cancer kills 75,000+ women in India each year—a crisis driven by a range of preventable factors that lead to increased transmission, late diagnosis, and high mortality. Some contributors:
- Low vaccine coverage: Despite exhortations from the WHO and other public health leaders, India lacks a nationwide HPV vaccination program.
- Early marriage: Doctors link early marriages and repeated marriages with increased vulnerability.
- Minimal screening: Only ~2% of eligible women have access to routine screening.
- Poor protection: A 2021 report found that fewer than one in 10 men in India use condoms.
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: The Struggle to Stop Maternal Bleeding; and New Year’s Resolutions from the ‘Mother of Injury Prevention’
U.S. states will no longer be required to report how many children and pregnant women covered by Medicaid are vaccinated, per a letter from the Trump administration to state officials; the move could significantly impact visibility into nationwide vaccination rates, as Medicaid programs cover almost half of U.S. children. Axios Babies who miss getting their first round of vaccines on time—at 2 months old—are more than 7X less likely to get vaccinated against measles, mumps, and rubella by age 2 (months beyond recommendations), per a study in JAMA Network Open. STAT A UK ban on TV junk food ads before 9 p.m.—and a total ban for online ads—takes effect today as part of a wider effort to tackle childhood obesity; the Advertising Standards Authority will serve as the watchdog and enforcer for the bans. The Guardian IN FOCUS A woman weakened by childbirth complications rests as her baby is wrapped in a blanket in the maternity ward of the Civil Hospital. Tonj, South Sudan, May 5, 2017. Fabio Bucciarelli/AFP via Getty The Struggle to Stop Maternal Bleeding New efforts to prevent mothers from bleeding to death during childbirth in 10+ countries have stalled since U.S. foreign aid cuts last year—reversing decades of progress in maternal survival and imperiling vulnerable mothers, reports The Independent. Background: Groundbreaking research in 2023 showed postpartum hemorrhage deaths could be cut by 60% through faster diagnosis, a simple blood-measuring drape, and immediate medication interventions.
- Resulting programs in countries with some of the world’s highest maternal mortality rates proved transformative.
- In parts of Malawi, clinics recorded thousands fewer antenatal visits and lost track of hundreds of pregnant women.
- Excessive bleeding rates have returned to pre-2022 levels, and audits suggest that some deaths could have been prevented without the cuts.
50+
———
The number of countries that have eliminated at least one NTD in the past decade—helping to reduce the number of people needing NTD interventions by 32%, from 2.2 billion to 1.5 billion in 2023. ––The WHO’s third Global Report on Neglected Tropical Diseases
GHN EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY Sue Baker spent her career preventing injuries to children, truck drivers, pilots, and others. Undated photo New Year’s Resolutions from the ‘Mother of Injury Prevention’ After a bruising year for public health, injury prevention pioneer Sue Baker can provide inspiration and career guidance for 2026, writes Natalie Draisin. Baker, a professor emerita at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, changed the perception that injuries were “accidents”—inevitable acts of fate. Draisin, who’s writing a book about Baker, sifted through hours of interviews for three important lessons: 1. Don’t be afraid to take on new challenges. As a 36-year-old homemaker with three young children, Baker took a computer programming class so she could get a job with the School’s then-Department of Chronic Diseases. That challenge cracked open a window into public health. “Strike out for the things you really want to see happen, even if it seems unlikely, because some of them will work out,” Baker advises. 2. Go to the field to understand it. To learn how to prevent injuries, Baker drove an 18-wheeler, earned a pilot’s license, and spent a week on an aircraft carrier. 3. Speak the truth—even when it’s unwelcome. From motorcyclists who didn’t like helmets to trucking companies more interested in profits than safety, Baker stood up to opponents with disarming calm. The takeaway: Baker reminds us that the promise of 2026 lies in our willingness to think—and act—boldly, writes Draisin. READ THE FULL COMMENTARY GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES DEMOGRAPHICS China Imposes a Contraceptive Tax China has imposed a 13% value-added tax on contraceptive drugs and condoms as the country continues a series of drastic policy reversals around birth rate targets, reports Reuters. History: For 30+ years, contraceptives have been tax-exempt in China as the country sought strict enforcement of its one-child policy. Today: As the nation’s birth rate plummets, Chinese officials have made an about-face, introducing a range of “fertility-friendly” incentives, subsidies, and classes to encourage people to have more children. Backlash: Critics say this measure will have little to no impact on birth rates as economic pressures continue—and they say it will unfairly burden low-income citizens, reports TIME.
- Meanwhile, health experts fear that the taxes could lead to more sexually transmitted diseases.
Canadian officials say US health institutions no longer dependable for accurate information – The Guardian Baltimore Drove Down Gun Deaths. Now Trump Has Slashed Funding for That Work. – KFF Health News Vaccines Are Helping Older People More Than We Knew – The New York Times (gift link) Deborah Birx: Public health data should be as available as the weather forecast – STAT (commentary) What viruses an infectious-disease doctor is watching for in 2026 – The Washington Post (commentary/gift link)
He made beer that’s also a vaccine. Now controversy is brewing – Science News Thanks for the tip, Cecilia Meisner! 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: 2025's Global Health Bright Spots
Antiseptic properties of tree sap from the New Guinea Rosewood tree show promise in helping to treat skin ulcers that afflict children in Papua New Guinea, say scientists involved in an ongoing randomized trial there. The Telegraph An early-warning approach for detecting the chronic bacterial skin infection called Buruli ulcer can flag hotspots years before human cases occur; the method relies on surveillance of possum excreta and innovative genomics. The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity EDITOR’S NOTE Our Last Issue Until 2026 It has been a tumultuous year for global and public health, and we know that the news has often been hard to read. But there have also been some tremendous global health wins—and some standout success stories and examples of solidarity from around the world. For our last issue of the year, we’re keeping the focus on the bright notes, bringing you our take on the year’s best global health news. We’ll be back on Monday, January 5, with more news; until then, we hope you have a joyous, restful holiday season! —Dayna IN FOCUS Global Health Wins from 2025
- Shielding Babies From Mosquitoes: Lesus, traditional baby swaddles used in Uganda, could be used to protect against malaria once treated with mosquito repellent, finds a new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which found that malaria infections fell by ~65% among children who used the treated wraps. MedPage Today
- Pandemic Pact Reached: After three years of negotiations, WHO member states signed a historic pandemic agreement—paving the way to future pandemic prevention and response by strengthening disease surveillance and improving global access to vaccines and other drugs; notably, the U.S. did not sign on, despite previous involvement in the pact’s development. Health Policy Watch
- Leaning into Lenacapavir in the HIV Fight: Amid upheaval in the fight against HIV/AIDS, the WHO urged governments to expand access to prevention tools, especially the new twice-yearly injectable lenacapavir—with health leaders lauding the “remarkable momentum” of the drug’s approval in several countries this year. WHO
- A New Vaccine for the Meningitis Belt: A century of meningitis outbreaks across a wide strip of sub-Saharan Africa may be dramatically reduced thanks to a new vaccine that prevents the lethal disease; Men5CV, developed by India’s Serum Institute of India and the Seattle-based PATH, is expected to cost $3 per dose and has been distributed in Niger and Nigeria, with more to come. The Telegraph
- How Guinea Stopped Sleeping Sickness: A so-called “tiny targets” approach helped make a massive dent in cases: Researchers discovered that the tsetse flies that spread the parasitic disease are attracted to the color blue and developed tiny blue fabric screens coated with insecticide to attract and kill the insects. El País
- Triple Triumph in the Maldives: This year, the Maldives became the first country in the world to eliminate mother-to-child transmission of three diseases: hepatitis B, HIV, and syphilis, thanks to a combination of strong antenatal care, standardized newborn hepatitis B vaccination, and free diagnostic services and vaccines included in universal health coverage. European AIDS Treatment Group
- Brazil Turns Around Its Teen Pregnancy Epidemic: Brazil once had the highest teen pregnancy rates in Latin America—but births among Brazilian girls ages 15–19 have plummeted 44% over the last 25 years; expanded birth control access—including free birth control, condoms, and IUDs—is credited, along with poverty reduction and better opportunities for young women. The Telegraph
- Hope for Fistula Survivors in Nigeria: Free fistula repair surgery will soon be available at clinics throughout Nigeria, health officials announced in March—a “groundbreaking move” in a country that sees ~12,000 new cases a year of vesicovaginal fistula, which can be a debilitating and highly stigmatizing condition. Nigeria Health Watch
- Standing Up to Stigma: In Rwanda, stigma can lead to social isolation, especially in school-age children, who are often mocked for taking HIV medication in class. New protective measures include trainings for school officials, youth-driven anti-AIDS clubs, and the use of discrete pill boxes in classrooms. The New Times
- Slovenia’s Preventive Care Pays Off: More than 20 years ago, Slovenia adopted a chronic disease prevention strategy that is now showing impressive results and becoming a model for other countries; the system emphasizes primary care, screening, and coaching the population to seek regular checks at health promotion hubs. STAT
Fast-track your career this January with the Winter Institute. Designed for working professionals and students, our condensed credit or non-credit courses will accelerate your learning goals. Our flexible courses range from a single day to two weeks and cover a variety of public health interest areas.
Learn more and register WINTER READING SEND-OFF A selection of book recommendations from GHN readers. Dayna Kerecman Myers Revisiting GHN Book Recs
In August, some GHN readers shared book recommendations that we're resharing here n case you need some winter reading … or last-minute gift ideas! Thanks again to all who sent in tips.
- The Education of an Idealist and A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, both by Samantha Power —Lorina McAdam
- Poverty, by America by Matthew Desmond —Hannah Schoon
- Sick Souls, Healthy Minds: How William James Can Save Your Life by John Kaag —Lorenn Walker
- Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio —Michael Kowolik
- Escape on the Pearl: The Heroic Bid for Freedom on the Underground Railroad by Mary Kay Ricks —Stephan Gilbert
- Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green —Caitlin Lavigne
- On Call by Tony Fauci
- The Wide Wide Sea by Hampton Sides
- Caste by Isabel Wilkerson
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: A ‘Brutal,’ Man-Made Hunger Crisis and the Best Global Health Reporting of 2025
- The lengths World Food Program workers went to warn of dangers, from emergency cables to appeals made over elaborate dinners in Nairobi.
- Trump administration officials’ studied refusal to acknowledge the urgency.
- And the suffering endured by families in Nairobi’s Kakuma camp, where rations fell to historic lows, malnourished children wasted and died, and families fled rather than starve.
The report expands on another ProPublica report earlier this week depicting how U.S. officials celebrated USAID cuts with cake—even as dire warnings of resulting cholera deaths in South Sudan loomed.
The pair of articles from Anna Maria Barry-Jester and Brett Murphy cap a year of excellent reporting from many global health journalists on the global fallout from slashed foreign aid, leading us into our round-up of 2025’s must-reads. 2025's BEST GLOBAL HEALTH REPORTING The Toxic Toll of Battery Recycling American car companies have long relied on recycled lead for batteries. But the process of recycling is steadily poisoning the communities working and living around the factories throughout Africa.
- Children near one factory cluster outside Lagos, Nigeria, had lead levels that could cause lifelong brain damage.
- Automakers were aware of the lead pollution for nearly 30 years, yet they opted not to act—and actively blocked advocates’ attempts to intervene.
A Portrait of Measles Resurgence As measles swept through North America amid declining vaccination rates, reporter Eli Saslow chronicled one West Texas family’s battle with the virus—which forced the father and four children to spend days in the hospital.
- “‘I feel like I’ve been lied to,’ [the father] Kiley texted his wife, as his temperature hit 40°C (104°F). He treated himself with cod liver oil and vitamin D," as recommended by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“As the pandemic rose, I saw my patients get sick and in some cases die, including a 42-year-old mother of two young children whose loss is seared into my soul. As it receded … the overwhelming public sentiment was: never again. Today, it seems: never what?” ——————————— Siddhartha Mukherjee in a March 10, 2025, commentary in The New York Times (gift article) Argentina’s ‘Tidal Wave’ of Health Cuts
Extreme cuts to Argentina’s health systems under President Javier Milei’s austerity measures forced patients and their families to resort to desperate measures to access vital care, including turning to Facebook to obtain donated cancer drugs. AP
A Scourge of Dud Cancer Drugs
Critical chemotherapy drugs used worldwide have failed key quality tests, leaving cancer patients in 100+ countries at risk of ineffective treatments and life-threatening side effects—exposing dangerous gaps in international drug regulation. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism
- Meanwhile, new must-read TBIJ reporting has found that globally-exported generic medications from major Indian drugmaker Zee Laboratories have been repeatedly flagged as ineffective and dangerous; but a lack of repercussions means the company continues to ship pharmaceuticals worldwide.
More Notables:
- Wielding Obscure Budget Tools, Trump’s ‘Reaper’ Vought Sows Turmoil in Public Health – KFF Health News
- How Imperial Brands’ confidential contract kept cigarette prices low in Laos—while secretly enriching a political insider – The Examination
- Trump Halted an Agent Orange Cleanup. That Puts Hundreds of Thousands at Risk for Poisoning. – ProPublica
A grad student’s wild idea triggers a major aging breakthrough – Mayo Clinic via ScienceDaily 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: An ‘Accelerating’ Measles Outbreak; and GHN's Best Exclusives of 2025
Suspected militants killed two people including a police officer guarding a team of polio workers in northwestern Pakistan today, amid a weeklong nationwide campaign aimed at immunizing 45 million children. AP Speakers and members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) frequently commented about infectious disease risks from immigrants during this month’s meeting of the CDC panel, sparking concerns about anti-immigrant rhetoric. CIDRAP
Personalized risk-based breast cancer screening was as effective as one-size-fits-all annual mammograms in a large trial of ~46,000 women; the findings suggest a risk-based approach could improve screening by shifting resources from low-risk women to high-risk women. JAMA IN FOCUS The heart of downtown Spartanburg, South Carolina, on June 13, 2021. J. Michael Jones An ‘Accelerating’ Measles Outbreak The surging South Carolina measles outbreak has topped 120 cases and sent hundreds into 21-day quarantines, as state health officials hunker down for a monthslong fight.
- 126 cases—many among schoolchildren—have been reported in the state’s northwest, per CIDRAP. 119 of the measles patients were unvaccinated.
- 303 people are in quarantine (some for the second time), and 13 are in isolation.
- "There's some people who don't want to do it, and that's up to them," McMaster said. "People need to understand it's dangerous just like a lot of other diseases. If there's some way to prevent it, you ought to do it."
- Local people are divided with some skeptical of vaccines and aggrieved by COVID-19 remote learning and shutdowns, while others worry about risks for their youngest children, per The New York Times (gift link).
Workers in the area produce 50,000 tons of firecrackers annually—most of India's fireworks—in factories prone to explosions and fires. Journalist Kamala Thiagarajan’s two-part series takes readers inside a poorly regulated factory system that led to at least 100 deaths in 2023–2024.
Kamala Thiagarajan for Global Health NOW Migration Response Done Right: Brazil’s Model PACARAIMA, Brazil—Migrants fleeing Venezuela’s deteriorating political and economic system have found something wondrous at the border with Brazil: Open arms. Since 2018, the Operação Acolhida (Operation Welcome) partnership has blended military logistical support with respect for humanitarian autonomy to provide housing, essential services, and efforts to counter human trafficking, though U.S. foreign aid cuts have forced some organizations to scale back. Julianna Deutscher for Global Health NOW (with support from the Johns Hopkins-Pulitzer Global Health Reporting Fellowship) Dispensing ‘Free Chances at Life’ In this hard-partying college town of Iowa City, the beloved Deadwood Tavern is known as a great place to relax, watch Iowa football, pick up free naloxone, birth control, emergency contraceptives, gun locks, wound care kits, and needle disposal kits. They’re all available, free and anonymously, from the public health vending machine at the back of the bar—part of a trend taking off in dozens of cities.
Annalies Winny, Global Health NOW
Peru’s Illegal Mining Surges … and Destroys LIMA, Peru—Soaring gold prices and plunging U.S. government funds are pushing Peru’s southeastern jungle, scene of a booming illegal mining industry, into a public health crisis—with destroyed forests, mercury poisoning, and fast-spreading infectious diseases. The cancelation of U.S.-supported reforestation and mercury poisoning mitigation projects has been likened to “throwing gasoline on an already hot fire.”
Lucien Chauvin for Global Health NOW Why Latin America Needs Its Own CDC—Now More Than Ever (Commentary)
Latin American governments must champion the creation of a regional CDC, similar to the Africa CDC model, that would work alongside PAHO to ensure faster, more efficient responses to health emergencies, according to three public health leaders from the region.
Patricia J. García, Jorge Saavedra, and Ariel García for Global Health NOW
Other Notable Exclusives
- Inside India’s Funding Failure in Rare Genetic Disease Care by Rupsa Chakraborty
- A Promising Fight Against a Silent Killer by Scovian Lillian
- Fighting Infant Mortality With Vaccines and Cash in Northern Nigeria by Abiodun Jamiu
- Climate Change’s Overlooked Role in Obesity by Sanket Jain
- How to Keep Doing Global Health: Tips From the Global South (commentary) by Siddhesh Zadey and Dhananjaya Sharma
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Mosquito-Borne Illnesses Engulf Cuba; and Prosecutions Climb in a Post-Roe Landscape
The U.S. FDA may place a “black-box” warning on COVID-19 vaccines, CNN reports; a decision on whether to place the label—used to flag serious threats to life and health—is expected by the end of this month. Mother Jones
The FDA also approved two antibiotics, zoliflodacin and gepotidacin, to treat gonorrhea late last week; the approval comes as Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the bacterium that causes the STI, has “outsmarted every previous antibiotic deployed against it, including the sole therapy that remains effective.” The New York Times (gift link)
A $2.5 billion aid deal between Kenya and the U.S. has been suspended by a Kenyan court over data privacy concerns, after a consumer rights group sounded the alarm that under the deal Kenyans’ personal medical data could be viewed by U.S. officials. BBC IN FOCUS An employee of Cuba's Ministry of Public Health fumigates a house in the Jesus Maria neighborhood of Havana, on November 20. Adalberto Roque/AFP via Getty Images Mosquito-Borne Illnesses Engulf Cuba Mosquito-borne illnesses are sweeping through Cuba’s population amid medicine shortages, overcrowded hospitals, and a lack of government action and transparency, reports El País. On the ground: Health officials and independent advocates report a mix of dengue, chikungunya, Oropouche, and other respiratory viruses circulating simultaneously.
- Many Cubans simply refer to the illnesses as “the virus”—reflecting confusion about what they are suffering from amid little to no diagnostic resources.
- Symptoms include high fever, rashes, swelling of joints, vomiting, diarrhea, and persistent pain that leaves many unable to walk normally.
- A report from The Guardian last month suggested that one-third of the Cuban population was infected.
- Children and older people have been especially affected.
Conditions are exacerbated by severe food and medicine shortages, sanitation failures, prolonged power blackouts, and failed vector control.
-
“Nobody is okay here. … We are an army of zombies,” 57-year-old Mercedes Interian told El País.
Related: Fewer characters on TV had abortions this year — and more stories reinforced shame – NPR QUICK HITS Trump Officials Celebrated With Cake After Slashing Aid. Then People Died of Cholera. – ProPublica Nearly half of Japanese have experienced loneliness and isolation – Japan Times New clues about long covid’s cause could unlock treatments – The Washington Post (gift link) Harvard Replaces Leader of Health Center Said to Have Focused on Palestinians – The New York Times (gift link)
AI finds a surprising monkeypox weak spot that could rewrite vaccines – University of Texas at Austin via ScienceDaily The Epidemic of Tobacco Harms among People with Mental Health Conditions – The New England Journal of Medicine (commentary) What's behind the wellness claims for the synthetic dye methylene blue? – NPR The gift that shaped my career in science – Nature 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Ukraine Births Under Siege; and Slovenia’s Preventive Care Pays Off
An international study has identified a blood-based indicator of intestinal damage and inflammation that strongly predicts mortality in sick children; the new biomarker could help to identify children at greatest risk of dying post-hospitalization in low-resource parts of the world. Nature
Even a small proportion of citizens who do not comply with public health measures can amplify an epidemic’s spread in large cities, per a Politecnico di Milano outbreak simulation in Turin, Milan, and Palermo that analyzed the role of individual behavior in the spread of contagions. Medical Xpress IN FOCUS Bogdana Zhupanyna surveys the damage to her apartment days after it was struck by a drone during a Russian bombardment. July 23, Kharkiv, Ukraine. Scott Peterson/Getty Ukraine Births Under Siege Childbirth in Ukraine has grown increasingly perilous, as relentless bombardments and displacement fuel a maternal mortality crisis and contribute to plunging birth rates that threaten the country’s future. Dangerous delivery: Maternal deaths in Ukraine spiked 37% between 2023 and 2024, reaching 25.9 deaths per 100,000 live births, reports France24.
- Doctors report a sharp increase in complications, including more premature births, a 44% rise in uterine ruptures, and dangerous spikes in C-section rates—up to 46% in frontline regions like Kherson.
- Last week, a maternity hospital in Kherson was attacked, further compromising severely strained medical services, per the WHO.
- Power outages and supply shortages further contribute to rising risks.
- That has led to fears of population collapse, with the country’s population plummeting from 42 million in 2022 to a projected 25 million by 2051.
- Such hubs are staffed with community nurses, dentists, gynecologists, and other specialists, and offer workshops on topics like nutrition, stress, and obesity.
In yesterday’s GHN, in a story about the DRC’s cholera outbreak, we referred to the disease as a virus, but cholera is caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. We regret the error. Thanks to Hasanain Odhar for pointing out the mistake! ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION Will This Christmas Kill ‘Last Christmas’? Think of it as the GameStop short squeeze—but for a Christmas song. And no one gets rich. After decades of relentless overplay from Halloween til Christmas, a group of pals in Europe has organized the masses in a takedown of the loathed holiday track.
The first rule of Whamageddon: Don’t play the song—unless it’s a cover. Us versus the airwaves: Refereed only by the honor system, players
must publicly forfeit themselves if they’re “hit” by the signature synth. WHAMbushing others is a no-no and radio hosts, who can send countless players to dreaded “Whamhalla” with a single play, have been shamed for this “lowest of the low acts.” Full disclosure: Until now, we actually didn’t realize we were supposed to hate the song and are now trying to catch up. If you’re in the same boat, defer to this scathing, line-by-line takedown of its “inanity” and narrative incoherence. But we will say: If making sense is how this YouTube scrooge rates music, we’d love to hear his take on ‘I Am The Walrus.’ QUICK HITS The fight to beat neglected tropical diseases was going well. 2025 could change that – NPR Goats and Soda Meta shuts down global accounts linked to abortion advice and queer content – The Guardian U.S. mass killings drop to 20-year low. Some policy shifts might be helping. – The Christian Science Monitor EU officials acted to aid tobacco giant abroad, documents show – The Examination Climate Change Is an Information Crisis; Public Health Already Knows How to Fight Those – Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs (commentary) Japan turns to AI, robot caregivers to tackle dementia crisis – Firstpost 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: COVID Vaccines’ Safety Confirmed Amid U.S. Scrutiny; and How to Read a Scientific Study
The first single-dose dengue vaccine has been approved for use in Brazil; the shot, Butantan-DV, protects against four strains of dengue and will initially be given to 1 million people in January. The Telegraph
Children exposed to extreme heat are less likely to meet basic developmental milestones than children living nearby in cooler areas, finds a study of 20,000 children published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry; low-income children are especially vulnerable. NPR Goats and Soda
Civicus downgraded the U.S.’s civic health rating from “narrowed” to “obstructed,” citing a “sharp deterioration of fundamental freedoms in the country” this year and placing the U.S. in the same classification as 39 other countries including Hungary, Brazil, and South Africa. The Guardian IN FOCUS People waiting to receive a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the Clermont-Tonnerre military hospital in Brest, France. April 6, 2021. Loic Venance/AFP via Getty COVID Vaccines’ Safety Confirmed Amid U.S. Scrutiny A major French study is offering one of the clearest looks yet at the long-term safety of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, concluding that the vaccines did not increase mortality rates in France, reports Radio France Internationale.
- The research arrives amid renewed debate of the vaccines’ safety in the U.S. sparked by an FDA memo that alleged vaccine-related deaths—claims rejected by former FDA leaders and unsupported by data.
- The team tracked all causes of death for four years—far longer than most prior studies.
- Prasad also said he plans to implement tighter vaccine-approval standards, though it is unclear what data sources the FDA is using to assess the safety of the vaccines or the approval process, reports CNN.
- How can nonscientists avoid falling for oversimplification, distortion, or manipulation?
- Eye the essentials: Know the journal and its quality; understand the abstract section; look at the introduction to understand the study’s purpose, and read the discussion section to learn more about how to interpret the study.
- Consider possible limitations, including sample size, participant demographics, and what needs further study.
- Distinguish between correlation and causation.
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Polio: An Influx of Cash—and a Funding Shortfall
Countries must jointly enact policies and fund programs against climate change, biodiversity loss, land degradation, and pollution, per a UN report published this morning; the report, based on the work of 287 scientists, calls for unprecedented transformation of government, the financial sector, and industry. AP
A multidrug-resistant bacterial colonization of the gastrointestinal tract is prevalent worldwide, per a new meta-analysis in the American Journal of Infection Control; carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales often precedes infections in critically ill hospital patients. CIDRAP
Returning to school after the COVID-19 pandemic improved children’s mental health, according to a California-based study that found kids’ probability of being diagnosed with a mental health condition dropped 43% nine months after school reopening compared to pre-opening levels. The Washington Post (gift link) IN FOCUS A child is vaccinated against polio by Thane Municipal Corporation Health Department on December 8, 2024, in Mumbai, India. Praful Gangurde/Hindustan Times via Getty Images Polio: An Influx of Cash—and a Funding Shortfall
International donors committed to $1.9 billion against polio yesterday, but is it enough?
- The funds will be used to vaccinate 370 million children against polio each year as well as build up health systems, per the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI).
- The Gates Foundation pledged $1.2 billion, and Rotary International committed to $450 million, CNN reports.
Shortfall: Despite the pledges, there’s still a $440 million gap in support for GPEI through 2029.
- The U.K., Germany, and other countries have pulled back plans for development assistance and health funding in 2026, and U.S. support for polio efforts is unclear for 2026.
- GPEI expects to cut its budget by 30% next year because of the global retreat in foreign aid, per Reuters.
The Quote: Without the full $6.9 billion needed for GPEI’s strategy, “children will be left unprotected against polio,” GPEI spokesperson Ally Rogers told CNN.
Polio memories: In a new study in Vaccine X, the University of Toronto Mississauga’s Madeleine Mant interviewed 65 people who had polio between 1941 and 1977. Their message: Young people shouldn’t have to experience polio or other vaccine-preventable diseases, per Medical Xpress.
Related: Bill Gates renews call to eradicate polio and malaria with UAE as key partner – The National (UAE)
4.6 billion
—————–
The estimated number of people worldwide who still lack access to essential health services; while countries have advanced toward universal health coverage, major challenges remain. —WHO
HEALTH SYSTEMS A Health Care Breakdown in a Health Care Town
Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital is southwest Georgia’s largest health provider—but also the region’s dominant employer and economic power center.
And yet: Locals describe a system fraught with access limitations, poor outcomes, high prices, and fractured care—including dismissive treatment reported by uninsured residents.
Inflection point: When the region became one of the nation’s first COVID-19 hot spots in 2020, the crisis exposed frayed relationships between the hospital and the community, especially poor and Black residents who suffered the worst outcomes.
Bigger picture: The more hospitals operate as behemoth businesses, “the fewer incentives there are to lower costs or improve quality and the less communities can do about either.”
ProPublica QUICK HITS More Americans refusing vitamin K shots for newborns, new study finds – The Hill Warning issued after new mpox strain identified in England – The Independent Why Some Doctors Say There Are Cancers That Shouldn’t Be Treated – The New York Times (gift link) Surprise! Your health care provider added a fee for that questionnaire you filled out – North Carolina Health News
Zimbabwe’s only female heart surgeon on medicine, misogyny and making a difference – The Guardian Issue No. 2834
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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: The Hepatitis B Vote: A Pivotal Moment for U.S. Vaccine Policy
2 MERS cases have been reported in France; both patients had been on the same trip to the Arabian Peninsula; no secondary transmission has been detected. Outbreak News Today
Kenya signed a $2.5 billion, five-year agreement to accept U.S. funding to help fight infectious diseases, becoming the first country to sign a deal aligned with the Trump administration’s foreign policy goals; the agreement sparked concerns about the security of sensitive health data. BBC
Environmental advocates in Canada are pushing for a moratorium on the use of glyphosate, the key ingredient in RoundUp, after a 25-year-old foundational research paper on the herbicide’s safety was retracted by the journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology following revelations that RoundUp’s maker, Monsanto, may have helped produce the paper. CBC IN FOCUS Members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices at the CDC headquarters. Atlanta, Georgia, December 5. Megan Varner/Bloomberg via Getty The Hepatitis B Vote: A Pivotal Moment for U.S. Vaccine Policy It’s a tectonic shift in U.S. immunization policy: The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) voted Friday to withdraw a long-standing recommendation that newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccination at birth.
- The decision was made without new evidence and against the strong consensus of medical groups that the change puts children at unnecessary risk, reports Health Policy Watch.
- But the vaccine’s safety is well established, reports Nature, which outlines the history of the shot, its timing, and its role in bringing down infections in young people by 99%.
- President Trump weighed in Friday, urging health officials to review the entire childhood vaccine schedule, calling the U.S. an “outlier,” reports The Washington Post (gift link).
- But states are already pushing back against ACIP’s recommendation: New York declared that it would not change guidance, and Ohio officials criticized the move.
Australia this week, prompting platforms like Meta, TikTok, Snap, and YouTube to deactivate hundreds of thousands of accounts, reports Reuters via The Straits Times.
- Other governments worldwide are watching the move, which Australian officials call the “first domino” in such regulation.
- A “layered safety approach,” including AI-informed age detection, activity-pattern analysis, and mandatory age verification.
- Protections to block circumvention attempts, and parent reporting.
- Fines of up to $49.5 million for platforms.
Faulty glucose monitors linked to 7 deaths and more than 700 injuries, FDA warns – AP
'Very concerning': Opioids for sickle cell pain often not administered fast enough in ED – Healio
How the new H-1B visa fee is upending health care in rural America – The Washington Post (gift link) Editors’ pick 2025: Our favourite essays and longform stories on public health in South Africa – Bhekisisa Ashish Jha to leave Brown University School of Public Health – The Brown Daily Herald ‘One bite and he was hooked’: from Kenya to Nepal, how parents are battling ultra-processed foods – The Guardian Issue No. 2833
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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Global Health NOW: Child Deaths Are Rising—And Avoidable
A “pre-pandemic” plan to address bird flu risks has been shared with EU health officials by the European CDC, which is urging increased surveillance and hospital capacity as H5N1 spreads in birds and as risk of mutation and human spread grows. The Telegraph
A single HPV vaccination could be as effective as two doses to prevent the virus that causes cervical cancer, finds a new U.S. National Cancer Institute-led study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which enrolled more than 20,000 girls and tracked them for five years. AP
The vaccine advisory panel to the U.S. CDC is expected to vote later today on whether to abandon the universal hepatitis B vaccine recommendation for newborns; anticipated votes posted online late Wednesday suggest a shift to “individual-based decision-making” for the newborn shot and a recommendation to delay administering the vaccine until babies are 2 months old. CNN IN FOCUS Denish Odule, a Village Health Team officer, takes a blood sample to do a malaria rapid diagnostic test, in Apac District, Uganda, on April 7. Hajarah Nalwadda/Getty Images Child Deaths Are Rising—And Avoidable
Global child mortality is projected to rise for the first time this century, as countries and major donors cut foundational health funding and as diseases like malaria gain a stronger foothold, find two major reports released this week by the Gates Foundation and the WHO.
- “It is 100% avoidable. There is no reason why those children should be dying,” said Mark Suzman, CEO of the Gates Foundation, which released its annual Goalkeepers Report yesterday.
Deaths of children under age 5 are expected to reach 4.8 million in 2025, per that report, which is ~200,000 more than last year, per CNN. And further aid reductions of 20%–30% could lead to 12–16 million additional child deaths by 2045.
Malaria’s mounting toll: Meanwhile, young children made up the greatest share of ~610,000 deaths in 2024, per a WHO report released today—an increase from 2023, which does not account for 2025 funding cuts, per Reuters.
- Many of the deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa, as funding shortfalls stall progress and as rising drug resistance and climate change threaten resurgence, warned WHO leaders, per Nile Post.
Clear solutions: Well-established solutions like improved primary health care and routine immunizations are the “best bet” at strengthening protections for children—if they can be funded.
- “We could be the generation who had access to the most advanced science and innovation in human history—but couldn’t get the funding together to ensure it saved lives,” said Bill Gates.
Related: Over 5,000 Ugandans Died of Malaria in 2024 as WHO Warns of Rising Drug Resistance – Nile Post
GHN EXCLUSIVE REPORT Phasing Out Mercury FillingsMercury will no longer be used as a key ingredient in dental fillings, after countries agreed to phase out its usage at COP-6 last month.
Background: While mercury-based dental amalgams have been used for 150 years, more countries have begun banning the metal’s usage as its harmful environmental and health impacts come to light.
The rollback: In the agreement, countries pledged to phase out mercury by 2034.
- After years of debate, the decision was carried over the finish line by late backing from the WHO, Brazil, and the U.S.—which reversed its longstanding opposition to a ban.
Freddie Clayton and Kennedy Phiri for Global Health NOW
OPPORTUNITY Calling All HumanitariansIn-Sight Collaborative is accepting applications for a 10-week Humanitarian Leadership Program (February 16–April 27, 2026), designed for anyone interested in learning more about humanitarian leadership, whether they’re new to the sector or are seasoned humanitarian professionals.
- To keep the program accessible to people from all socioeconomic backgrounds, attendees are asked to “pay what they can” for participation.
- Learn more and apply
- Deadline: January 30, 2026
“ChatGPT, design me a massive holiday mural that’s less festive and more epic hellscape.”
Something like this, surely, was the AI prompt behind the work of “Lovecraftian horror” that, for a time, loomed over passersby in an otherwise-charming London suburb.
Because “you know what’s Christmassy? A snowman with a [expletive] eye on his cheek,” one Redditor joked.
Reportedly “commissioned” by a Kingston upon Thames building landlord, the work was inspired by Bruegel the Elder—but was giving Hieronymus Bosch.
Yet somehow, it was still a gift—a horror to look at, but a joy to put into words:
- “The disturbing scene appeared to contain large troops of men with misshapen bodies and contorted faces attempting to skate over shallow, foamy waters. Elsewhere, groups filled an infeasibly large wooden boat. Heavily-disfigured dogs bounded about, some appearing to transmogrify into birds,” wrote Jo Lawson-Tancred for Artnet.
If this description turns out to be AI-generated, well, we’ll just cry.
QUICK HITS Congo hosts Africa’s first simulation exercise on antimicrobial resistance surveillance – WHO Researchers slightly lower study’s estimate of drop in global income due to climate change – AP A dozen former FDA commissioners condemn plan to tighten vaccine approvals – The Washington Post (gift link) FDA names Tracy Beth Høeg, fresh from vaccine safety probe, as acting head of drug center – Fierce Biotech WHO launches new, unified plan for countries to manage coronaviruses: COVID-19 and beyond – WHO Issue No. 2832Global 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 Facebook and follow us on Instagram @globalhealth.now and X @GHN_News.
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