A multistate outbreak of E. coli infections has prompted an expansive, by the CDC and U.S. agencies that have linked the infections to McDonald’s restaurants.
Outbreak details, : The food poisoning has sickened at least 49 people in 10 states, including 10 who were hospitalized and one person who .
- But the number of people affected by the outbreak is likely much higher, .
- A specific ingredient has not been confirmed as the source of the outbreak, but the that the onions or beef patties used for Quarter Pounders are the likely source of contamination, .
- McDonald’s has taken Quarter Pounders in about a fifth of its stores, and the onion supplier, Taylor Farms Colorado, issued a broader recall of yellow onions—though the company said that it has found no traces of E. coli in tests.
Related: Why food recalls are everywhere right now – GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Rifaximin, a common antibiotic used to treat liver disease, is fueling bacterial resistance to daptomycin—one of the few treatments effective against the superbug vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecium (VRE), .
People 50 and older should get pneumococcal vaccines to protect against pneumonia and other dangerous illnesses, a CDC advisory panel recommended yesterday, replacing earlier guidance aimed at people ages 65+.
A second dose of the 2024–25 COVID-19 vaccine is now for people ages 65+ and for people with moderate or severe immunocompromising conditions, per a CDC vaccine advisory group.
Single-use vapes will be banned in England starting next June, as the British government tries to curb rising vape usage among children and teens. VIOLENCE ‘Shocking, Staggering’ Sexual Violence in DRC
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has seen an “acute escalation” of sexual violence in recent years, per a from Physicians for Human Rights.
- ~90,000 documented sexual assaults were reported in 2023 in DRC—up from 40,000 in 2021. The group believes it is a “severe undercount.”
Other organizations echo the findings:
- A recent described an “explosion of sexual violence,” with MSF teams treating 25,000+ sexual assault survivors in 2023 compared to a previous average of 10,000 victims per year.
- UNICEF’s chief of child protection in the DRC, Ramatou Toure, described a ”skyrocketing” crisis in camps—where “almost every girl or every woman has experienced sexual violence.”
Related: Four in 10 deaths in war zones last year were women, UN report finds – GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES SUBSTANCE USE What Makes ‘Pink Cocaine’ So Dangerous
A designer drug called tusi has been in the news lately due to its connections with Sean “Diddy” Combs and the recent death of Liam Payne.
- It’s a bright pink powder combining any number of substances. Common ingredients include ketamine and ecstasy, but usually not cocaine.
- The drug has been linked to at least nine deaths so far, including four suicides and four accidental overdoses.
When U.S. farm veterinarians began to sound the alarm about avian influenza detected in cows, they were expecting a full-blown response from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, including widespread testing and surveillance.
Instead, they got silence: “Nobody came. When the diagnosis came in, the government stood still,” said one veterinarian.
Conflict of interest: The USDA’s sometimes conflicting mandates to oversee the safety of the nation’s food animals while also protecting the nation’s agriculture trade has resulted in a “‘don’t test, don’t tell’ policy among dairy farmers.”
The result? There is no nationwide surveillance or accurate sense of H5N1’s scope as the virus continues to spread.
- “We are repeating every single mistake” of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Keith Poulsen, director of the Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory.
Iconic is usually a compliment in the fashion world. Not this time.
The hospital “gown” is an affront to formalwear everywhere. An insult to our tastes and our figures. And really more of a glorified sheet than a garment.
Why the sartorial shame? The New York Times’ fashion critic
- This wretched wearable was designed to accommodate IVs and provide easy access to the body, resulting in the “dehumanizing” fronts-in, butts-out design behind (ahem!) countless hospital humiliations.
- Even Diane von Furstenberg couldn’t make it chic. The designer reimagined her iconic wrap dress as a patient gown for the Cleveland Clinic. And it’s .
U.S. Study on Puberty Blockers Goes Unpublished Because of Politics, Doctor Says –
Crackdown on Homeless Encampments Raises Public Health Questions –
World’s first vaccine for norovirus the ‘winter vomiting bug’ begins final stage trial –
Perspectives on Medical School Admission for Black Students Among Premedical Advisers at Historically Black Colleges and Universities –
Youth cheerleading is getting more athletic — and riskier –
Surgical Centers Urged to Nix Mandatory Pre-Op Pregnancy Tests – Thanks for the tip, Chiara Jaffe!
Drinking is cheaper than it’s been in decades. Lobbyists are fighting to keep it that way –
How breast milk can help fight climate change – Issue No. 2803
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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Gene therapy project receives major funding
?
Gene therapy for rare neurological disorders will move one step forward thanks to a $1.14 million grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).
Gene therapy project receives major funding
?
Gene therapy for rare neurological disorders will move one step forward thanks to a $1.14 million grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).
UN officials are urging protections for health care facilities in Lebanon after an Israeli airstrike Tuesday near the Rafik Hariri University Hospital—the largest public hospital in Lebanon—led to “significant damage,” .
Another hospital, the Al-Sahel Hospital in Dahiyeh, was evacuated amid “horror and tears” after Israel claimed that Hezbollah is stockpiling cash and gold in a bunker under the hospital, increasing fears that Lebanon’s health sector could face the same destruction as Gaza’s, .
Other mounting health risks: 400,000+ displaced Lebanese children face growing risk of cholera, scabies, and waterborne diseases due to unsanitary conditions in shelters, .
- Last week, health authorities Northern Lebanon’s first case of cholera.
- And the WHO led a “high risk” in northern Gaza to transfer patients to Gaza City this week amid intense hostilities and the denial of deliveries of critical medical supplies, blood, and fuel.
Girls and young women may be more susceptible to the clade Ib mpox subvariant, that found a higher percentage of cases and a much earlier average age of infection—6 years—among girls, compared with 17.5 years for boys.
An E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounder hamburgers has sickened at least 49 people in 10 U.S. states, leading to one death and 10 hospitalizations, the yesterday; investigators are focused on onions and beef as potential sources of contamination.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture weakened its bird flu emergency order last spring in response to pushback from state and industry officials—potentially contributing to disease transmission across state lines, records show. GOOD NEWS Malaria Becomes ‘Ancient History’ in Egypt
After three years of interruption to the transmission chain in Egypt, the country malaria-free.
- The country had a prevalence of ~40% in 1930—but public health officials made strides over the last century, .
- Free diagnosis and treatment, regardless of legal status.
- Malaria detection training for health professionals.
- Malaria screenings provided at the country’s borders.
The Quote: "Malaria is as old as Egyptian civilization itself, but the disease that plagued pharaohs now belongs to its history,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES BIG TOBACCO Switching Sides on the Tobacco Fight
As the FDA fights an “epic struggle” against the tobacco industry over next-generation nicotine products, the agency is contending with a particularly galling dynamic: lawyers who have shifted alliances.
Nearly two dozen FDA lawyers have left the FDA’s tobacco regulation arm to advise, litigate for, or work with the tobacco and vaping industry over the last 15 years, according to a review by The Examination.
Insider advantage: The lawyers often helped craft and defend the same regulations the industry is fighting—giving them a powerful upper hand in litigation.
- “It seems like every time we get sued in the tobacco industry, a former FDA lawyer is leading the lawsuit,” FDA Commissioner Robert Califf told an oversight organization last year.
Climate-related changes threaten more than people’s physical safety and livelihoods. These changes also act as a “threat multiplier,” increasing risks for mental health problems.
- Survivors of California’s 2018 Camp wildfire were diagnosed with PTSD at a rate comparable to war veterans.
- Slower-onset changes like drought, land cover change, rising sea levels, etc., can cause stress over time that erupts into violence like 2019’s Ogossagou massacre in Mali.
To address these issues, researchers are pushing for mental health to be a focus in climate policy and interventions, such as in countries’ Paris Accord climate action plans.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Polio Anywhere is a Threat Everywhere: Why the UK Must Act –
Dengue fever: with a record 12.4m cases in 2024 so far, what is driving the world’s largest outbreak? –
Ukraine: Population drops by 10 million since Russia invaded in 2014, UNFPA reports –
Elderly Americans with dementia have become some of the GOP’s top donors without even realizing it –
Beyond Longevity: The Critical Role of Mental Health in Japan’s Well-Being –
How one woman set up a mental health helpline for the whole of South Africa –
How does the brain react to birth control? A researcher scanned herself 75 times to find out –
Coke, Twinkies, Skittles, and … Whole-Grain Bread? – Issue No. 2802
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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KAMPALA, Uganda—Every year, —people like Owen Ntanda, an 18-year-old boat operator who drowned in the lake last summer, despite being a good swimmer—giving the lake a reputation as one of the “” in the world.
- by researchers at Makerere University and the CDC estimated Uganda’s drowning death rate to be 8.5 per 100,000 population per year—~2,942 drowning deaths a year.
- Worldwide, . But in Uganda, young adults aged 20–39 years are most affected, —and men in Uganda are 3X more likely to drown than women.
- A lack of safety gear like life jackets—most of which are substandard.
- Overloaded cargo boats—which are not well-policed.
- Supercharged floods fueled by climate change.
- Uganda will become one of the first countries to implement a national drowning intervention strategy—expected to launch this fall—giving each stakeholder ministry a mandate and drowning prevention activities.
- The Ministry of Health has established emergency response services focused on water emergencies, boosting first aid training, and procuring water boat ambulances.
School administrators in Mexico have six months to implement a government-sponsored ban on junk foods like sugary fruit drinks and chips or face heavy fines between $545 and $5,450, which could double for a second offense.
Washington state its first suspected avian flu infections in people—four agricultural workers who tested positive after working with infected poultry at a facility that culled ~800,000 birds that tested positive for avian flu last week.
U.S. infant mortality was higher than expected in the months following the Supreme Court decision that eliminated federal abortion protections, , corresponding with a 7% absolute increase in infant mortality overall, representing 247 excess deaths. DATA POINT VIOLENCE A Public Health Approach to Political Violence
As political rhetoric grows more incendiary leading up to the first U.S. presidential election since the January 6, 2021 insurrection, the at the University of California at Davis has begun to study the threat of political violence in earnest.
A key goal of their research: Identify risk factors and interventions that could deescalate potential unrest before it arises.
“Openness to change”: According to a from the program released last month, just 3.7% respondents said it was “very likely” that they would participate as a combatant in a large-scale civil conflict—but ~44% said they would be “not likely” to join if they were dissuaded by family members, and ~30% said they could be deterred from participating if a respected religious leader urged them not to.
Such findings can “guide prevention efforts,” the survey concluded.
HEALTH DISPARITIES Heeding Africa’s Hearing Loss
54 million people in Africa are facing hearing loss by 2030, due to factors including a shortage of hearing specialists and a limited budget for ear and hearing care (EHC).
- Up to 75% of child hearing loss in LMICs is preventable.
- Only 10% of the 33 million people who need hearing aids have access and can afford them.
- Hearing loss costs Africa an estimated $27 billion per year, in terms of the impact on human lives and economies.
OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Committee reviewing euthanasia in Canada finds some deaths driven by homelessness fears, isolation –
A Maine Law Could Have Forced the Lewiston Mass Shooter Into Mental Health Treatment. Why Wasn’t It Used? –
China unveils first diagnosis guidelines to battle escalating obesity crisis –
Medicaid will cover traditional healing practices for Native Americans in 4 states –
Ending “domestic helicopter research” –
As Ukraine's birth rate plunges, here's what one doctor is doing to reverse the trend –
The Perverse Consequences of Tuition-Free Medical School – Issue No. 2801
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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While health workers in Pakistan battle a growing polio outbreak, polio vaccination teams in Gaza are also contending with widening obstacles.
In Pakistan: Health officials have confirmed six more cases of wild poliovirus type 1, bringing the total number of infected children this year to 39—after just six cases last year, .
- Vaccine hesitancy and attacks against vaccination teams have increased as hardline clerics and militants spread misinformation about the vaccine’s safety, “leading to missed opportunities for immunization and leaving children vulnerable,” said Melissa Corkum, chief of UNICEF’s polio team in Pakistan.
- Pakistan will launch a nationwide vaccination campaign next week to vaccinate 45 million+ children.
- But conditions have deteriorated in the enclave since the first round of vaccinations—making it more difficult for families to travel to vaccination sites amid destroyed infrastructure and increased safety concerns.
- And health workers are concerned polio vaccines won’t reach Gaza’s northern communities because of ongoing fighting and fears for health workers’ safety, .
Whooping cough cases in the U.S. have hit their highest number—18,506—since 2014; outbreaks of the disease, which can be prevented by vaccination, are hitting mostly older kids and teens.
Women seeking pain relief at emergency departments can wait 30 minutes longer than men, per a published in PNAS that assessed 22,000 discharge notes from emergency departments in the U.S. and Israel.
Over-the-counter contraceptives could be required to be covered by U.S. health insurers without cost-sharing, according to a new proposal the Biden administration unveiled today. OPIOID CRISIS The Overdose Vaccine ‘Moon Shot’
Efforts to prevent opioid overdose with a vaccine have largely been fruitless—until now. A number of opioid overdose vaccines are currently being tested, all relying on the same basic strategy:
- Stimulate the immune system to protect against an opioid’s ability to overwhelm the brain and shut down the breathing process.
Also underway: The first fentanyl monoclonal antibody is undergoing human trials, with initial published in Nature Communications showing that monkeys treated with the antibody survived a lethal dose of fentanyl.
The Quote: “It’s a moon shot, but a moon shot is what the country needs right now,” said JR Rhan, co-founder of startup Ovax, which is developing an opioid overdose vaccine.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES WEST NILE VIRUS Ukraine’s Viral Threat
West Nile virus has killed 11 people and sickened 88 in Ukraine over the last three months—marking a “serious” new threat to the country that will likely become more common with climate change, said Ukraine's Deputy Health Minister.
- “We probably have to get used to the fact that this fever will be in even greater numbers in Ukraine,” Ihor Kuzin said.
CHILD & ADOLESCENT HEALTH Where Early Education is Enshrined
In Norway, the “intrinsic value” of childhood is upheld in the 63-page Kindergarten Act of 2006, a law guaranteeing every child’s right to attend kindergarten.
These schools, serving children 5 and under, are seen “as an investment for society and the child,” said Kristin Aasta Morken, a program leader in Oslo.
As such, Norwegian kindergartens are:
- Publicly funded: National funds cover 85% of operating costs.
- Inclusive: Children with disabilities are not segregated, and non-Norwegian speakers are given communication aids.
- Embracing nature: Children spend 70% of their kindergarten time outside, in all weather—in keeping with the Norwegian saying: “There is no bad weather, just bad clothes.”
China ends international adoption. Reactions range from shock to relief –
Under a L.A. Freeway, a Psychiatric Rescue Mission –
Tobacco Sponsorship of F1 Could Put Children on a Fast Track to Addiction –
Nut bans little help to allergic air passengers –
Life-saving spongelike 'bandage' rapidly stops hemorrhaging and mitigates risk of infection – Issue No. 2800
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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Photo Courtesy of the Sabin Vaccine Institute Rwanda’s Marburg Vaccine Quandary
As Rwanda rushes to contain the third biggest outbreak of the fatal Marburg virus ever, it has quickly greenlit experimental vaccines and treatments.
But officials have taken divergent routes in deploying those, approving the first-ever clinical trial for a Marburg treatment, while rejecting a similar trial for vaccines, .
This reflects an “agonizingly difficult” debate:
- Marburg outbreaks are rare and small—Rwanda has confirmed 62 cases and 15 deaths—meaning there are few opportunities to test vaccine efficacy.
- Yet the virus is lethal, with ~80% of cases affecting health care workers, which “weakens the area’s overall health infrastructure,” virologist Kari Debbink explained to “Public Health on Call.”
The vaccine: Rwanda has received 1,700 doses of an experimental vaccine from the Sabin Vaccine Institute, and ~700 people have been vaccinated—primarily health care workers and contacts of those infected.
The therapy trial: The Rwandan government has agreed to proceed with a WHO-led randomized clinical trial to test the antiviral drug remdesivir and a monoclonal antibody against Marburg, . GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners
The U.S. FDA put a hold on Novavax’s application to advance its combination COVID-19 and influenza vaccine after a trial participant reported a serious adverse event—a form of nerve damage—last month; the patient received the combination shot in a phase two trial that finished in July last year.
Italy has criminalized surrogacy overseas, levying jail time and steep fines for citizens who go abroad to have children via surrogate in a move opponents described as “medieval” and discriminatory to same-sex couples.
Breast cancer risk is “slightly higher” for women with hormonal IUDs, finds a large study published in ; the findings align with similar risks tied to taking long-term hormonal birth control pills.
Western Pacific nations are failing to meet UN targets to reduce premature deaths from lifestyle-related diseases like cancer and diabetes by 2030, —largely due to a slow decline in tobacco and alcohol consumption. GHN EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY Doctors consult with patients in a clinic in a camp for internally displaced people in South Kordofan, Sudan, on June 17. Guy Peterson / AFP via Getty War-Torn Sudan’s Medical Training Nightmare The ongoing conflict in Sudan has not only pushed public services beyond the point of collapse, it has disrupted medical training and licensing, with lasting consequences for the country’s health care workforce, write three Sudanese medical professionals in an .
- Medical education in much of the country has halted because of the destruction of medical schools and hospitals.
- Medical students and interns have emigrated—worsening the long-standing brain drain of medical professionals.
- Physicians are still training interns and students.
- Displaced physicians are establishing specialty units in neurosurgery and orthopedics, for example, in remote hospitals.
- Disruptions in medical training have compromised the national public health infrastructure, exacerbating the country’s overwhelming health needs.
- Broken health systems will continue to undermine public health even after the war ceases.
- International agencies and organizations need to join now with Sudanese partners to revitalize medical training in the country.
- Sudan must act as soon as possible to avoid future physician shortages by facilitating resident transfers to other in-country residency programs with better security and additional capacity.
In a country with income inequality, a recent temperature-mapping study found that heat also impacts neighborhoods very differently: Overall, townships were 6?C (42.8?F) hotter than wealthier suburbs.
Environmental factors: Under the hot sun, tree cover allows for evaporative cooling. The suburb of Waterkloof has 54.1% tree cover—compared to only 2.6% in the neighboring township of Mamelodi.
Structural inequality: Township residents often live in makeshift steel shacks that trap heat and can reach up to 48.5?C (119?F) inside.
Extreme heat can cause heat stroke, dehydration, and heat exhaustion, and exacerbate respiratory problems.
ALMOST FRIDAY DIVERSION A ‘Conker’-Versial Victory
An English town—and chestnut enthusiasts everywhere—has been roiled by a spot of scandal after the winner of the World Conker Championships was accused of cheating.
The beloved autumn tradition in the village of Southwick involves stringing up chestnuts and hurling them at one another until one competitor is obliterated. But this year, “King Conker”—82-year-old David Jakins—was caught with a steel conker in his pocket after winning the contest.
- According to , Jakins’ opponent claimed that his own conker “disintegrated in one hit" when he faced Jakins. “That doesn’t just happen.”
- The case will be a tough nut to crack: Jakins claims he carries the steel conker as a joke. That old chestnut…
Six people sought new organs. They ended up with HIV. –
Kidney transplantation between donors and recipients with HIV is safe –
War’s Public Health Impacts Are Vast. Tallying Them Is Difficult. –
People are catching avian flu from wild birds, study suggests –
South Australia’s upper house narrowly rejects ‘Trumpian’ bill to wind back abortion care –
CDC issues interim recommendations to prevent sexual Oropouche virus spread –
‘Smart’ insulin prevents diabetic highs — and deadly lows –
6 Things to Eat to Reduce Your Cancer Risk – Issue No. 2799
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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Research on new stem cell models receives $2.6 million
An innovative new program based at The Neuro has received $2.6 million from the CQDM and the Brain Canada Foundation.
Research on new stem cell models receives $2.6 million
An innovative new program based at The Neuro has received $2.6 million from the CQDM and the Brain Canada Foundation.
All countries—even those afflicted by poverty and conflict—can cut their premature death rates in half by 2050 through a series of policy priorities, posits a new Lancet presented at the closing of the in Berlin.
The roadmap, dubbed “50 by 50,” argues that steady focus on 15 “priority conditions”—including infectious diseases like tuberculosis, noncommunicable diseases, and other issues such as accidents and suicide—is the key to dramatically improved mortality rates.
- “It’s a prize within reach,” said the report’s lead author, Gavin Yamey of the .
- Tackling tobacco: High tobacco taxes are “by far” the most crucial policy tool for reducing premature deaths.
- Improving medical access: Subsidizing essential medicines and vaccines and expanding childhood immunizations can lead to “significant gains.”
Five new suspected human cases of bird flu have been , adding to six confirmed cases in the state, the U.S.’s largest dairy supplier.
Novo Nordisk is halting its insulin pen production, the company told governments and nonprofit organizations—a move critics say was made to scale up the production of more profitable injectable weight-loss drugs.
Vaccine-derived poliovirus type 3 has been detected in wastewater samples in French Guiana, per a that urged nearby countries to keep vaccination levels above 95% to minimize the risk of outbreaks. GHN EXCLUSIVE OPPORTUNITY Workers collect freshly picked marigold flowers to sell. August 13, Qujing, China. Wang Yong/VCG via Getty Send Us Your Story Ideas!
Do you know of a global health story that the media is overlooking? The , co-sponsored by the Consortium of Universities for Global Health and GHN, is open and ready for your entries!
How it works:
- you feel deserves urgent attention, describing the story and why it deserves more coverage and support in 150 words or less.
- The best nominations focus on a specific issue in a specific location (i.e., not global chronic disease) and include available data, evidence, and contact information.
Bonus: The grand-prize winner will receive a free registration to CUGH’s annual meeting in February in Atlanta.
Deadline: Enter by November 15, 2024, at 11:59 p.m. EST. BLOOD DISORDERS Thalassemia’s Strain on Blood Supplies
People with the genetic blood disorder thalassemia are not able to produce a sufficient amount of hemoglobin and require regular blood transfusions to prevent debilitating anemia.
In Southeast Asia, the condition is so prevalent that more than a third of blood supplies go toward such transfusions.
- In Thailand and Laos, 30%–40% of donated blood is used to treat thalassemia patients.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES CLIMATE CRISIS In Defense of Biodiversity
Zoonotic diseases—caused by pathogens that spill over from animals to humans, like Ebola, mpox, and Lyme—sicken 2.5 billion people and kill 2.7 million every year. As global temperatures rise and humans disrupt ecosystems, the risk of these diseases is expected to rise.
- Deforestation, for instance, increases human encounters with animals acting as disease reservoirs, while climate change makes new regions hospitable to disease vectors like mosquitoes and ticks.
“We need to appreciate the value that the natural world offers to humanity, from an infectious disease-mitigation standpoint,” says University of Notre Dame professor Jason Rohr.
QUICK HITS Female Genital Mutilation Happens in America, Too – Thanks for the tip, Chiara Jaffe!
Millions of aging Americans are facing dementia by themselves –
France's Airports Report Increased Odyssean Malaria Cases –
State supreme court races could determine abortion access in several states –
Employers should be fined for unhealthy workplaces, says think tank –
Ukraine: Time to recognise ‘tremendous potential’ of demining –
Using genomics to find solutions to malaria –
A new way to support grandparents raising kids affected by the addiction epidemic – ?? Issue No. 2798
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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SCSD’s Distinguished Alumni Award ceremony
SCSD’s Distinguished Alumni Award ceremony will take place on Friday, October 25th?2024 from 4:30pm to 7pm
Kindly RSVP to (admin.scsd [at] mcgill.ca) before October 21st.
Refreshments will be served following the talk.
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Pro-Russian propagandists are targeting Western-funded health care programs in Africa, spreading disinformation aimed at undermining scientists fighting malaria and other infectious diseases on the continent.
A must-read New York Times report details a chilling example: Egountchi Behanzin, a French-Togolese activist, claimed on social media that malaria and dengue fever cases increased in Bana, Burkina Faso, after Target Malaria—a Gates Foundation-backed nonprofit—released genetically modified mosquitoes in the village in 2019.
- Village elders say they were consulted on the experiment, designed to create a species of mosquito that is unable to transmit malaria—and that malaria cases have actually fallen since the study’s launch.
- Behanzin—who denies receiving Russian funding, but often posts pro-Russian content—couldn’t provide any evidence to support his claims.
- Russia has sponsored 80 documented disinformation campaigns in 22 African countries since 2022, per the Africa Center for Strategic Studies.
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Nearly two million severely malnourished children are at risk of dying due to therapeutic food shortages in 12 hard-hit countries: Mali, Nigeria, Niger, and Chad have already run out of the high-protein ready-to-use food, or will soon; 8 more countries including Sudan, South Sudan, and DRC could run out by mid-2025.
Massive regional flooding has kept ~10 million children across Nigeria, Mali, Niger, and the DRC out of school this fall; the floods have displaced nearly one million people.
10 million pounds of ready-to-eat meat and poultry products made at an Oklahoma plant have been recalled by the company BrucePac of Oregon, after routine testing by U.S. Agriculture Department officials detected listeria bacteria, which can cause illness and death.
Adolescents between 12 and 18 with obesity given GLP1R treatments had a 33% lower risk of suicidal ideation or attempts compared to those treated with behavioral interventions in a study of 6,912 young people in Israel. DATA POINT VIOLENCE South Africa’s Femicide Crisis
South Africa continues to have some of the highest femicide rates in the world—with intimate partner violence continuing to take a “devastating” toll, according to findings from the South African Medical Research Council’s new on femicide and intimate partner violence.
By the numbers:
- South Africa’s rate for intimate partner femicide is at 5.5 — almost 5X higher than in the rest of the world.
- 60% of women murdered in 2020-2021 were killed by an intimate partner.
- The Eastern Cape province has the highest rates for femicide, at almost 2X the country’s overall rate.
GHN EXCLUSIVE: TRANSLATED A statue to remember the victims in Bhopal, India. August 25, 2022. Pallava Bagla/Corbis via Getty Read “Bhopal: A Tale of Two Tragedies” in Chinese
We’re pleased to share another installment of GHN articles translated into Chinese, courtesy of our collaboration with the translation program at Queen’s University Belfast.
of Pranab Chatterjee’s piece, Bhopal: A Tale of Two Tragedies, on February 28, 2024.
Special thanks to: Chen-En (Ted) Ho, FHEA, senior lecturer at the Centre for Translation and Interpreting; Queen’s University Belfast translators Xinchen Li and Zhiwen Liu (翻译:李昕辰、刘至文); and reviewers: Yingren Wang and Yifan Wang (审校:王英人、王怡凡). GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES RACISM How DEI Hostility Affects Health Research
U.S. institutes and initiatives created to research racism’s effects on health have increasingly found themselves under attack as the conservative backlash to DEI efforts leads to lawsuits, threats, and imperiled funding.
Among the impacts:
- Researchers and instructors have found themselves on right wing “watchlists” for teaching on racism and public health.
- Some grant-making organizations are now asking some researchers to stop using the word “racism” when investigating public health inequities.
- State lawmakers have introduced at least 85 anti-DEI bills since 2023.
- The Medical Board of California has been sued for requiring continuing medical education courses to include implicit-bias training.
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Public Health Has a Blueberry-Banana Problem – Issue No. 2797
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
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Escalating violence in Sudan’s North Darfur region has forced Médecins Sans Frontières to suspend its work in a major camp for displaced people—putting thousands of malnourished children at risk of death, .
- MSF was forced to halt work at the Zamzam camp—where 300,000 people live—following supply blockades and a new wave of violence between Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the Sudanese army around the city of Al Fasher.
- “We’re not talking about an emergency anymore. We’re talking about a nightmare,” said MSF coordinator Claire San Filippo, who described no escape for people in the region, where “war is everywhere,” .
Women’s acute, unmet needs: Millions of Sudanese women are suffering from a lack of sexual and reproductive health services, even as sexual violence continues to be widespread, .
Spillover to South Sudan: The number of Sudanese refugees in South Sudan has now surpassed half a million, . GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners Recoveries are outpacing fatalities in Rwanda’s Marburg outbreak, the health ministry reported yesterday; the toll has reached 61 infections, 14 deaths, 18 recoveries, and 29 cases still under treatment, while 620 vaccine doses have been administered to frontline workers.
Four countries reported new polio cases last week, including Pakistan (wild poliovirus cases) and Angola, Nigeria, and South Sudan (vaccine-derived cases), ; Spain and French Guiana also reported positive environmental samples of vaccine-derived polio—a first for both countries.
A third of oral cancer cases worldwide have been linked to smokeless tobacco products, per a major published in Lancet Oncology.
Climate-crisis health impacts will receive more focus at medical schools across Europe, with future doctors undergoing more training on mosquito-borne diseases, heatstroke, and asthma management. VIOLENCE Gangs Infiltrate the Amazon Basin
Drug syndicates that have driven Brazil’s growing homicide surge in cities are extending their reach to the Amazon Basin, creating a public security crisis as gangs try to control local markets.
- In 2023, the homicide rate in the rainforest region hit 34 per 100,000 people, compared to 22.8 per 100,000 nationwide.
- Four of Brazil’s 15 most dangerous cities are in the Amazon region as armed robbery, kidnapping, extortion, and murder—notably femicide—have proliferated.
- “We cannot ensure public safety unless we have a secure prison system,” said José Lima, Amapá State Secretary of Justice and Public Security.
As India’s infrastructure expands to keep pace with its rapid population growth, finding innovative water solutions remains critical.
But sometimes innovation means revisiting old ways—like the traditional well.
In the megacity of Bengaluru, which frequently faces water shortages, Biome Environmental Trust has restored ~280,000 traditional wells over the past decade, tapping into shallow aquifers that had been overlooked as the region shifted to deeper drilling and piping water in from rivers.
The wells, less than 100 feet deep, are energy-efficient and eco-friendly. And they allow the city to diversify its water options in a crisis.
“Truly, it’s a low, shallow-hanging fruit,” said urban planner Vishwanath Srikantiah.
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The Cutting-Edge Hearing Aids That You May Already Own – Issue No. 2796
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, Aliza Rosen, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .
Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:
Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->
Copyright 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.
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You can or .