黑料网

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Event | Seminar: Computer-based Predictions of RNA Structures: Where do we stand?

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 09:11

Join D2R for this hybrid seminar with Professor Eric Westhof from University of Strasbourg

Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Wed, 09/03/2025 - 09:43
96 Global Health NOW: Warfare Over Welfare; Reviving Pediatric Health in Sudan; and India鈥檚 Diabetes Epidemic September 3, 2025 Mortar shells move along a conveyor at General Dynamics in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on August 20. Aimee Dilger/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Warfare Over Welfare     The global arms industry should be viewed as a commercial determinant of health, similar to tobacco and fossil fuels, .     Beyond war zones: how arms production and use fuel long-term public health crises by:   
  • Disrupting health and food systems  
  • Diverting funds from critically needed health infrastructure 
  • Increasing deadly access to firearms in civilian settings 
  • Harming the environment through pollution and contamination 
Low-income regions are consistently most vulnerable to such detrimental impacts.  
  Industry influence: Much like the tobacco, alcohol, and fossil fuel industries, arms companies use lobbying, media, research funding, and 鈥渕ilitainment鈥 to shape policy and public perception, .  
  Confronting the machine: The health sector must challenge the arms industry with the same resistance applied to Big Tobacco or Big Oil, 鈥攅xposing harms, advocating for peace and disarmament, and pushing for a shift in government spending from weapons to public welfare.  
  • 鈥淚t is often argued that there are no winners in war鈥攐nly losers. This is not quite true. There is always a winner, and that is the arms industry.鈥 
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners   Respiratory infections from suspected COVID-19 or flu are surging in Gaza, where malnutrition renders many vulnerable to severe illness and depleted medical supplies complicate response efforts; 94 cases of Guillain-Barr茅 syndrome have also been reported, with 10 associated deaths.      Papua New Guinea confirmed its first human case of paralytic polio鈥攊n an unvaccinated 4-year-old boy who developed acute flaccid paralysis caused by circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2, establishing that the virus has transitioned from environmental detection to direct impact, .     An over-the-counter nasal spray, azelastine, may help prevent COVID-19 infection and a range of respiratory infections including the flu and RSV, that showed the antihistamine works as an antiviral.     1,000+ federal health employees have called for HHS Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to resign arguing that he has 鈥減ut the health of all Americans at risk鈥 by spreading misinformation, undermining the CDC, and cutting the federal health workforce.   U.S. and Global Health Policy News House GOP keeps NIH funding Trump wanted to cut 鈥      Trump鈥檚 HHS Agrees to Restore LGBTQ+, Reproductive Health Data 鈥  
Trump Wants Proof That Covid Vaccines Work. It鈥檚 Easy to Find 鈥       Big shakeups to the childhood vaccination schedule could be nearing 鈥     Vaccines are becoming an electoral liability for Republicans 鈥      What to know about a Texas bill to let residents sue out-of-state abortion pill providers  鈥   GHN EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY Two-year-old Riham Ata lies on a gurney in one of Al-Buluk Hospital's severe malnutrition wards. Omdurman, Sudan, April 26. Giles Clarke/Avaaz via Getty Scarred by War, Saved by Care: Reviving Pediatric Health in Sudan  
In Sudan, childhood has become a casualty of war.     The war that erupted between rival forces in April 2023 has spiraled into a humanitarian emergency, , a Sudanese emergency medicine intern now based in Saudi Arabia.     Sudan鈥檚 children have suffered the most:   
  • Some  now need humanitarian aid. 
  • This year, 3.2 to 4 million Sudanese children under 5 will face life-threatening malnutrition.   
How can Sudan鈥檚 children be saved? Developed countries and international organizations must immediately step up to stabilize the situation and build back .      The takeaway: Reviving pediatric care in Sudan is more than just a humanitarian priority; it is a test of whether the world will protect Sudanese children鈥檚 futures during one of the worst wars of our time, Iraqi writes in an exclusive GHN commentary.     Ed. Note: Read Iraqi鈥檚 commentary for details on essential next steps.    GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES India鈥檚 Diabetes Epidemic   India now accounts for a quarter of all global diabetes cases, with ~212 million people living with the disease鈥8X as many as in 1990, and likely surpassing China and the U.S. combined.    How it happened: A combination of factors created the perfect conditions for diabetes to thrive.  
  • The consumption of imported fast foods: Sales of ultra-processed foods in India have risen by ~13% every year since 2011. 
  • Genetic traits: People of South Asian heritage are more likely to develop diabetes at a much lower BMI, even within what is considered a healthy weight range. 
  • Urbanization: Around 35% of Indians now live in cities, compared to 18% in the 1960s; by 2030, that number is expected to rise to 40%. 
   OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Confessions of an Ex-Anti-Vaxxer 鈥     Laid-off USAID workers struggle to find work as new job cuts approach 鈥     USAID's enduring impact on anaemia management must be preserved 鈥     鈥楴o place in children鈥檚 hands鈥: under-16s in England to be banned from buying energy drinks 鈥    
Vote by Dutch lawmakers threatens major primate research center 鈥     The new faces of cancer: Young, outspoken and online 鈥       These scientists found Alzheimer's in their genes. Here's what they did next 鈥     Analysis of NEJM Abstracts Confirms the Value of Peer Review 鈥     There鈥檚 something in the water. Khayelitsha鈥檚 kids want you to see it 鈥    Issue No. 2781
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .

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  Copyright 2025 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.


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Categories: Global Health Feed

World Health Organization - Wed, 09/03/2025 - 08:00
Nearly four years into Russia鈥檚 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and 11 years since conflict began, the toll on mental health across the country is severe.
Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Tue, 09/02/2025 - 09:59
96 Global Health NOW: Foundering CDC Awash in Troubles; How Displacement Erodes Global Health Security; and When Fear Goes Viral September 2, 2025 CDC staff and supporters outside of the agency's headquarters. Atlanta, Georgia, August 28. Dustin Chambers/Bloomberg via Getty Foundering CDC Awash in Troubles    The ouster of its director, resignations by top staff, and massive cutbacks to programs threaten to overwhelm the U.S. CDC, causing some to question whether the vaunted public health agency will survive.      Updates: 
  • Nine former CDC directors who served Republican and Democratic presidents called a slew of actions by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 鈥渦nacceptable鈥 yesterday.  
  • The Trump administration tapped investor and HHS deputy director Jim O鈥橬eill to be CDC acting director, . O鈥橬eill, who had worked at HHS for six years, will try to calm the waters, but it鈥檚 unclear whether the director is expected only to follow the secretary鈥檚 instructions, former FDA official Peter Pitts said. 
  • Outside groups are stepping in to fill the void left by changes at the CDC by disseminating health information, managing data that could otherwise disappear, and launching other efforts, . But former officials warn it may take decades to restore the U.S. public health infrastructure, . 
The Quote: 鈥淚f you chop off the heads of the agencies because they didn鈥檛 pledge to go along with you, despite what the science says, then you鈥檙e eroding public health from the foundation,鈥 Cleveland鈥檚 public health director David Margolius told the Times. 

Related:  
RFK Jr deputy named CDC acting director as confusion surrounds COVID vaccine availability 鈥     What chaos at the US CDC could mean for the rest of the world 鈥     Trump demands drugmakers 鈥榡ustify鈥 COVID treatment success 鈥   GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES EDITOR'S NOTE Professors: GHN Can Help You    We often hear from professors and teachers who love to use GHN as a teaching tool鈥攎aking it assigned reading and using it as a conversation starter: 
  • Get your students thinking, talking, and debating global health issues. 
  • Show real-world applications to complement textbook studies. 
  • Spark ideas for new projects and collaborations. 
Bonus: While more media are shifting to paywall models, GHN is still free. We also provide gift links for many paywalled articles. And we鈥檝e increased the amount of opportunities we share鈥攊ncluding webinars, fellowships, and networking events that can give your students a boost.     How you can help keep GHN strong and free: Please show your support by spreading the word with students, colleagues, and friends and sharing our free subscribe link: . And let us know when you do, or if you have suggestions to help us improve. 鈥Dayna  DATA POINT

1 billion+
鈥斺赌斺赌斺赌斺赌斺赌
People living with mental health disorders, per new WHO data, with conditions such as anxiety and depression highly prevalent in all countries and communities, affecting people of all ages and income levels, and inflicting immense human and economic tolls. The Latest One-Liners    Police in Kenya fear the starvation cult linked to hundreds of deaths in 2023 is active again, with dozens of new graves of suspected victims found recently near Mombasa; officials believe that followers of cult leader Pastor Paul Mackenzie Nthenge escaped police raids and have revived the practices.       PAHO is urging countries to bolster surveillance, medical management, and vector-control against chikungunya and Oropouche viruses; 14 Americas countries have reported 212,000+ chikungunya cases this year鈥攄own from last year, but the most-affected countries are seeing not just the Asian genotype circulating previously, but also the East/Central/South African genotype.     An analysis of 1,000+ cardiovascular clinical trials between 2017 and 2023 found that although women鈥檚 participation has been improving in some areas, they are still consistently underrepresented in trials on arrhythmia, coronary heart disease, acute coronary syndrome, and heart failure.     Spouses tend to share psychiatric disorders, per a massive study in Nature Human Behaviour of ~15 million people in Taiwan, Denmark, and Sweden that shows the trend increases with each decade, across cultures, and generation.   U.S. and Global Health Policy News PAHO Targeted in New Round of US Funding Cuts 鈥     Trump plans a hefty tax on imported drugs, risking higher prices and shortages 鈥     EPA insider鈥檚 policy reversal could shift PFAS cleanup costs from industry to taxpayers 鈥   
Can RFK Jr. take COVID vaccines off the market? Here's what vaccine law experts say 鈥  
RFK Jr. links SSRIs and mass shootings. What does science say? 鈥     Legal adviser warns NIH not to kill 900 grants a second time 鈥   GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MIGRATION How Displacement Erodes Global Health Security    The 鈥渙verlooked and underfunded鈥 crisis of intra-African migration is leading to burgeoning health security risks, as growing populations are forced to live for years in overcrowded informal settlements鈥攚ith little to no health care access.  
By the numbers: 80% of African migration occurs within the continent, accounting for 46% of global displacements.  
  • 38.8 million people were displaced in Africa between 2015-2024. 
Dangers in the gaps: Many of these people are denied care due to 鈥渕edical xenophobia鈥濃攁nd are often excluded from a country鈥檚 disease surveillance and prevention efforts鈥攈eightening outbreak threats, like the 2024 mpox resurgence in the Democratic Republic of Congo.    Call to action: Migrant-inclusive health systems, improved surveillance, and cross-border disease control are all critical in mitigating risks.       EPIDEMIOLOGY When Fear Goes Viral 
Epidemiologists have traced the transmission of a different sort of contagion: rumors.     Case in point: Historians have long been puzzled by The Great Fear, a wave of panic and upheaval that spread in France in 1789, helping to fuel the French Revolution.  
  • The basis and spread of the rumors have long been up for debate. A group of researchers turned to epidemic modeling for answers. 
  • Using documents like letters and historical road maps, the researchers created a detailed diagram of the rumors鈥 movements, likening the path to a 鈥渢ransmission network for an epidemic,鈥 one researcher said.  
Data-driven history: , uses epidemiological tools to better understand social upheaval鈥攁nd the spread of misinformation.    OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Landslide in Sudan wipes out village and kills 1,000 people 鈥     'Let鈥檚 sleep early so we don鈥檛 feel the hunger': humanitarian workers in Gaza struggling in midst of famine 鈥     Do State Referendums on Abortion Work? 鈥     The Right to Care: A Feminist Legal Victory That Could Change the Americas 鈥     Tanzania: A Meal, Then a Pill - How Tanzania's Campaign is Transforming Child Health 鈥  
In Austria, Government Health Care Can Look a Bit Like a Spa 鈥  
Don't let a selfie be the end of you 鈥   Issue No. 2780
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .

Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:

Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->



  Copyright 2025 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Categories: Global Health Feed

World Health Organization - Tue, 09/02/2025 - 08:00
More than a billion people worldwide are living with mental health conditions, according to new data released by the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday.
Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments

黑料网 Faculty of Medicine news - Thu, 08/28/2025 - 09:03

Researchers at 黑料网 and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.

opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.

Categories: Global Health Feed

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