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Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

McGill Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:47

Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 09:37
96 Global Health NOW: Migration Response Done Right: Brazil’s Model; EPA Aims to Gut Key Climate Ruling; and Sierra Leone Ordered to Criminalize FGM July 30, 2025 GHN EXCLUSIVE Venezuelan refugees walk after crossing the border between Venezuela and Brazil in the city of Pacaraima, Roraima State, Brazil, on September 13, 2024. Alan Chaves/AFP via Getty Migration Response Done Right: Brazil’s Model for a World in Crisis
PACARAIMA, Brazil—Maria* steps out of a white truck on January 10 and walks toward a crowd of newly arrived Venezuelans.
  • Alone and far from home, women and girls like Maria have faced gender-based violence and human trafficking as they fled Venezuela’s political and economic collapse, in Brazil, Ecuador, and Peru.
A warm welcome: Migrants in Brazil had much more positive experiences than those in the other countries. The difference, says study author Susan Bartels, is the work of Operação Acolhida (Operation Welcome).
  • The Brazilian government launched the program in 2018, as a unique collaboration with UN agencies and NGOs. The partnership blends military logistical support with respect for humanitarian autonomy, a rare balance in crisis response. 
A streamlined process: Maria is connected to free essential services, applies for asylum or permanent residency, and receives information about universal health care.
  • She can also get free transportation to be reunited with family or friends across Brazil and is connected with employment services.
Challenges remain: U.S. government cuts to foreign aid are forcing some organizations to scale back their support of Operação Acolhida​​, but on this day, Maria’s new life begins. 

*Maria’s name was changed to protect her privacy.

Editor’s note: Julianna Deutscher, MD, MPH, reported this article—the first in a series marking today’s World Day Against Trafficking in Persons—with support from the . GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners   Cholera is a “full-blown public health emergency” in DRC six months into renewed fighting that has obliterated sanitation and water supply systems, per Oxfam’s DRC director, Manenji Mangundu—with ~35,000 suspected cases and at least 852 related deaths since January, a 62% increase compared to 2024.

Liver cancer cases are projected to double—from ~870,000 cases in 2022 to 1.52 million cases by 2050—but at least 60% of those cancers could be preventable,  published Monday. 

Undocumented immigrants faced a much higher risk of death at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic—with Latino essential workers in particular showing a staggering 91% increase in deaths compared with 8% for the white U.S.-born subgroup—. 

All NIH research funding was temporarily halted Tuesday because of a footnote from an Office of Management and Budget document that limited NIH funding to staff salaries and expenses, not to research grants; the billions of funds were restored hours later in a turnabout NIH officials described as “chaos.” U.S. and Global Health Policy Ƭ֦Ƶs Budget cuts knock down a ‘pillar of public health,’ ending nutrition education –

US placed on rights watchlist over health of its civil society under Trump –

There's a major publishing slowdown at CDC's flagship journal –

Susan Monarez confirmed as Trump’s CDC director –

Dozens of state laws take aim at food dyes, amid a wave support for MAHA – CLIMATE CHANGE EPA Aims to Gut Key Climate Ruling 
The U.S. EPA will seek to rescind a key scientific finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare—a move that could dismantle the legal basis for much of the country’s climate policy, . 

Background: In 2009, the EPA determined that CO2 and other greenhouse gases can be regulated under the Clean Air Act because they harm human health. That “” has since underpinned regulations on emissions standards for everything from factories to cars, . 

Repeal: Yesterday while at a car dealership, EPA head Lee Zeldin announced to eliminate the standards, .
  • The move is the latest Trump administration effort to roll back climate initiatives, including the country’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, . 

  • One ecologist likened a repeal to “a driver who is speeding towards a cliff taking his foot off the brake and instead pressing the accelerator.”
What’s next: The proposal must undergo public comment and is likely to face legal challenges from environmental groups and states.

Meanwhile, the WHO is at a global climate and health conference in Brasília—as the “lived reality” of climate change “threatens to undo decades of global health progress.” GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES HUMAN RIGHTS Sierra Leone’s President Ordered to Ban FGM
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) court of justice has ordered Sierra Leone to criminalize female genital mutilation (FGM), calling it “one of the worst forms of violence against women.” 
  • A 2019 survey found that 83% of women in Sierra Leone had undergone FGM—71% of them before age 15. 
In early July, Sierra Leone passed the Child Rights Act 2025, which prohibits all forms of mental and physical violence against children—but as it does not specifically address FGM, human rights advocates are encouraging President Julius Maada Bio to send the act back to parliament for revision. 
  • Despite recently becoming chair of ECOWAS, Bio has yet to publicly acknowledge the court’s ruling.
QUICK HITS People are dying of malnutrition in Gaza. How does starvation kill you? –

Colombia Opens South America's First Safe Injection Sites –

Kratom and 7-OH: What to know about the "legal morphine" compound –

AMR surveillance project in Nigeria delivers life-saving impacts –

In Uganda a new epidemic alert system is helping fight mpox –

The Dutch Intersection Is Coming to Save Your Life – Issue No. 2766
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, 07/30/2025 - 08:00
People in Haiti have expressed “despair” following the “abrupt suspension” of a wide range of humanitarian services, according to the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, in the Caribbean country.
Categories: Global Health Feed

World Health Organization - Wed, 07/30/2025 - 08:00
Some 80,000 children are estimated to be at high risk of cholera in West and Central Africa as the rainy season begins across the region, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said on Wednesday. 
Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Tue, 07/29/2025 - 09:49
96 Global Health NOW: A Temporary Dip in Global Hunger?; Why European Vaccine Policies Don’t Fit the U.S.; and Remembering David Nabarro July 29, 2025 A South Sudanese refugee carrying her child on her back works at her vegetable crops. Turkana County, Kenya, October 2, 2019. Luis Tato/AFP via Getty A Temporary Dip in Global Hunger? 
Global hunger decreased slightly last year, but rising food prices and falling aid contributions mean that momentum will be unlikely to continue in the coming years, according to the  published yesterday.

Takeaways:
  • 8.2% of people worldwide, or 673 million people, were estimated to have experienced hunger last year, a drop from 8.5% in 2023 and 8.7% in 2022.

  • 22 million fewer people experienced hunger last year compared to 2022.

  • 2.3 billion people were considered moderately or severely food insecure last year, according to the report from five UN agencies.

  • Advances in Southeastern Asia, Southern Asia, and South America were largely responsible for the lower global hunger numbers.
Threats:
  • Hunger in much of Africa and Western Asia continues to rise.

  • Global food inflation, driven by the pandemic, climate change, and the war in Ukraine, rocketed to almost 17% in early 2023 from 2% in late 2020, .
Food violence: At least two people were shot and killed yesterday by police battling desperate refugees in a northern Kenya refugee camp experiencing a food crisis, .

The Quote: “These figures … are alarming enough, but the worst may be yet to come,” Kate Munro, of Action Against Hunger UK, told The Telegraph. “Cuts in international aid will hit the most vulnerable populations hardest.” GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners   Danish researchers combed the records of 1.2 million+ children over a 24-year period and found no evidence that the use of aluminum salts in vaccines increased the risk of asthma, autism, and a wide range of conditions diagnosed in childhood, per . 

Common pollutants like PM2.5, nitrogen dioxide, and soot are all linked to a significantly higher risk of dementia, per a sweeping review of studies  that drew on data from nearly 30 million people. 

Nearly a quarter of African American adults had eye disease that went  undetected,  ages 40 and older with eye conditions in a Los Angeles suburb; diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration were especially common.  Thanks for the tip, Chiara Jaffe!

The Chinese government will offer parents a $500 subsidy per year for each child under the age of three, aimed at boosting the country’s slumping birth rate, but some economic analysts say the sums are too small to make an impact. U.S. and Global Health Policy Ƭ֦Ƶs Odds of winning NIH grants plummet as new funding policy and spending delays bite –

Group criticizes NIH over suspended funding for TB research –

Judge blocks Trump administration’s efforts to defund Planned Parenthood –

Senate to vote on Trump’s pick to lead the CDC – THE QUOTE
  "Venoms are evolutionary masterpieces, yet their antimicrobial potential has barely been explored. " —ĔĔĔĔ César de la Fuente of the University of Pennsylvania, senior author of a research project that used AI to sift through global venom libraries and uncovered dozens of promising drug candidate.&Բ;— VACCINES Why European Immunization Policies Don’t Fit the U.S.
As Trump administration health officials question the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule, they are pointing to European countries as a model for a more minimalist approach that requires fewer immunizations than U.S. guidelines call for.

Apples and oranges: But global health experts argue that differences in vaccine schedules are not due to disagreements about safety, but instead are shaped by local disease risks, demographics, and health systems. 
  • In the U.S., a more fractured and inaccessible health system means a broader vaccine schedule allows for continuity and protection that might otherwise be lost. 
The key question: “Given our specific disease burden and public-health goals, are we effectively protecting the most vulnerable people? Based on overwhelming evidence? The answer is yes,” said Jake Scott, an infectious disease physician at Stanford University. 

OBIT Remembering David Nabarro, ‘A Great Champion of Global Health’
David Nabarro, a key figure in global health who helped lead the international response to health threats ranging from Ebola to the COVID-19 pandemic, died Friday at age 75.
  • “David was a great champion of global health and health equity,” WHO chief Tedros Ghebreyesus wrote.
Legacy of service: Nabarro was a physician whose early career focused on nutrition and child health throughout Iraq, South Asia, and East Africa. 
  • He also helped coordinate the WHO’s response to the 2004 Indian earthquake, and took part in efforts to contain AIDS, malaria, bird flu, and the 2014 Ebola outbreak. He led the WHO’s messaging during COVID-19—a role that earned him a knighthood. 
“The Gandalf of the UN”: Colleagues praised Nabarro’s humility and his way of “quietly bringing people to the table who otherwise would not speak to each other.” 

RESOURCES QUICK HITS Cholera rampant among displaced and refugees in Darfur and eastern Chad – 

Measles Elimination Status: What It Is and How the U.S. Could Lose It –

WHO urges action on hepatitis, announcing hepatitis D as carcinogenic –

Preventing Firearm Suicide In Wyoming –

PAHO/WHO convenes journalists to reshape how road safety is covered in Latin America –  

845,000 dead on U.S. highways. Why not address the main cause? –

Michigan led on safe water after Flint, but mobile home parks are stubborn rough spot –

Looking at a sick person in VR can rev up our bodies’ immune systems – Issue No. 2765
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

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

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

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


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You can or .
Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Mon, 07/28/2025 - 09:42
96 Global Health NOW: Instability in Syria; Ivermectin for Added Protection?; and Nigeria’s Human Flycatchers July 28, 2025 Medical workers disinfect a hospital bed outside Sweida National Hospital, in southern Syria's predominantly Druze city of Sweida, on July 20. Shadi Al-Dubaisi/AFP via Getty Instability in Syria 
Deadly sectarian clashes in Syria’s southern Sweida province have led to mass displacement, hundreds of deaths, and a paralyzed health system—threatening the country’s tenuous postwar stability, . 

Background: The violence was sparked earlier this month by kidnappings between Bedouin tribal fighters and armed factions of the Druze minority group, . 
  • 800+ people have been killed, , and so far ~176,000 people have been displaced, . 

  • Syrian government forces have intervened and established a ceasefire, but they are accused of siding with the clans and targeting civilians. 
Health system ‘under immense strain’: The , including the killing of two doctors and obstruction of ambulances. 
  • Hospital workers and patients described violence within wards and bodies piling up inside as the city morgue reached capacity. 

  • Hospitals are now under “immense strain,” said WHO representative Christina Bethke—facing severe shortages of personnel, water, electricity, and essential supplies.
Aid access blocked: Poor security conditions are limiting the ability of the UN and partners to deliver medical supplies and other aid to those affected by the violence—leading to “severe humanitarian consequences for civilians,” . 

Related Webinar Tomorrow: Stabilizing Syria: Rehabilitating Syria’s Public Health System in a Fragile Transition, hosted by the Center for Strategic & International Studies Middle East Program, featuring keynote remarks by Syria’s Transitional Minister of Health Musaab Nazzal Al-Ali and a panel discussion with Syria experts Bachir Tajaldin, Lolwa Al-Abdulmalek, and Diana Rayes, moderated by Mona Yacoubian.
  • Tuesday, July 29, 11 a.m.–12:15 p.m. EDT
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES Today Is World Hepatitis Day The Latest One-Liners   Timor-Leste has been certified malaria-free by the WHO, which praised the country for “strong political will, smart interventions, sustained domestic and external investment and dedicated health workers” in its efforts; the designation marks the malaria-free, and the third to be certified in the WHO’s South-East Asia region.

At least 300 people—mainly children in Africa and Asia—have died since 2022 from cough and paracetamol syrups containing toxic industrial chemicals, that says “criminal networks” exploit weak regulations to use the chemicals as cheap substitutes for medicinal glycol.

A dengue outbreak in Samoa has led to a government-ordered closure of all schools in the country for a week, as children are most affected; 900+ cases were reported last week alone, , with 2,254 cases reported since January.

A Salmonella outbreak tied to raw milk from a California dairy farm sickened 171 people, including 120 children and adolescents, between October 2023 and March 2024, published last week. U.S. and Global Health Policy Ƭ֦Ƶs Lesotho mothers fear passing HIV to their babies as US aid cuts halt testing –

Rural Oklahoma kids were getting more counselors — then federal cuts pulled funding –

Trump targets supervised consumption of drugs and harm reduction in executive order –

As the ADA turns 35, groups fighting for disability rights could see their federal dollars slashed –

Congressional panels resist White House proposals for sharp cuts in indirect cost rates – MALARIA Ivermectin for Added Protection?
A new malaria control strategy involving mass administration of the antiparasitic drug ivermectin is showing promise, per results from a large trial in Kenya . 

Background: Ivermectin makes human blood toxic to mosquitoes—allowing humans to target mosquitoes via their food source, . 

Trial details: The trial, which targeted school-age children, involved 20,000+ participants across 84 communities who received ivermectin or a control drug during the rainy season. 
  • The communities that administered ivermectin saw a 26% reduction in new malaria infections. 

  • The intervention showed added protection beyond existing bed net use—meaning it shows potential as a complementary tool, . 
Mixed reception: While some researchers praised the findings and described the drug as an “addition to the malaria control arsenal,” others questioned the modest impact and “questionable public health benefits,” including ivermectin’s unsuitability for pregnant women and very young children.

What’s next: The WHO has said more evidence will be needed before it can endorse the approach. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES NEGLECTED DISEASES Nigeria’s Human Flycatchers 
In the battle against onchocerciasis, the parasitic disease that causes river blindness, researchers in Nigeria are relying on “human landing catches” to help them mark progress.
  • 40 million people are at risk of onchocerciasis in Nigeria, where there are 120,000 cases of related blindness.
How it works: Volunteers expose their skin to lure and trap the black flies that transmit the disease.

Why? The main strategy to curb transmission is mass drug administration to prevent the parasite’s spread. But researchers can only know how the effort is working by testing flies. 

A push for alternatives? Using humans as bait has long raised ethical concerns. Researchers are currently testing other trap models to potentially use instead.

QUICK HITS Israel pauses attacks in some of Gaza to allow limited aid, as global criticism grows –

‘Changed my life’: hepatitis treatment offers hope but not enough receiving care, report finds –

Native leaders push back on gender-affirming care restrictions for tribal citizens –

E.U. regulator approves injectable HIV drug that experts say could help stop transmission –

Coercive Care: Southern Europe’s Reliance on Elder Restraints –

Other nations had a pandemic reckoning. Why hasn’t the US? –

America is in denial about its flood risks –

WHO unveils health and environment scorecards for 194 countries –

The Ghost in the Therapy Room – Issue No. 2764
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 - Mon, 07/28/2025 - 08:00
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has welcomed the ceasefire agreement between Cambodia and Thailand following days of deadly fighting over their mutual border. 
Categories: Global Health Feed

World Health Organization - Mon, 07/28/2025 - 08:00
An interagency group from the UN released the flagship 2025 State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) report on Monday, estimating a global, yet uneven, decline in hunger since 2022.
Categories: Global Health Feed

Samir Shaheen-Hussain in Devoir - Mon, 07/28/2025 - 00:00
Les nouvelles générations ne devraient pas attendre les adultes pour changer le cours de l’histoire.
Categories: Global Health Feed

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