DRC Health Minister Dr Samuel Roger Kamba (right) meets health workers at Bunia General Reference Hospital after inaugurating a new Ebola treatment facilities over the weekend.

Two months after the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) declared an outbreak of Ebola Bundibugyo, the outbreak is “continuing to outpace the response” – and with 2,073 people infected and 796 dead, this is the fastest outbreak ever, World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Dr Tedros Adhanon Ghebreyesus told a media briefing on Thursday.

“Intense transmission in the province of Ituri remains our biggest concern,” added Tedros. “More than 80% of new cases are being detected outside known contact lists, showing that transmission chains are still being missed. About two-thirds of deaths are occurring in communities among people who never receive care in a health facility.”

It took 10 months for the 2018-2019 Ebola outbreak in DRC to reach 2,000 confirmed cases, said Tedros,  adding that “active armed conflict is hampering access to the affected areas and hindering the response”.

Reporting that another treatment centre in Bunia had been attacked on Wednesday, Tedros once again appealed for international support to make up the $400 million-plus shortfall needed to mount a sufficient response. 

“This is not charity. It’s an investment in national security,” Tedros stressed.

Care in health facilities, not communities

Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, executive director of WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme.

Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, executive director of WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme, said that the primary focus across all the outbreak-affected areas “is getting cases into care”. 

Over 60% of deaths are happening in communities, which means that people were likely to have been sick and infectious for weeks before their deaths – and were only diagnosed with Bundibugyo because health officials are taking swabs from dead people shortly before burials, Ihekweazu explained.

“Your chances of survival are three to four times higher when you come into care. We have, at the moment, a case fatality ratio of about 30 to 40%. If you look at those that come into care, it’s about 10 to 15%. If you look at those that die in the community, it’s about 60 to 70%,” he added.

To encourage people to seek care in health facilities, the DRC government is offering free healthcare for all diseases to everyone presenting to hospitals and clinics in the outbreak-affected areas, he added.

Ihekweazu, who recently returned from the epicentre of the outbreak, said the situation was being met by “an incredibly committed set of healthcare workers going out every single day to provide care”.

“We are facing a very difficult situation, no doubt about that. It is not out of control, but we need to work very hard and consistently into the next few weeks and months to get ahead of this. This will be a marathon.”

First vaccine safety trial starts

On Monday, the world’s first Phase I Bundibugyo ebolavirus vaccine trial was launched by the Oxford Vaccine Group (OVG) in Oxford in the United Kingdom.

Fifty healthy adults aged 18–55 years are being recruited for the trial, which will assess the safety and immune response of the ChAdOx1 BDBV vaccine. 

“In the coming weeks, and following regulatory review for trial commencement, participants will then be vaccinated and attend follow-up visits in Oxford,” the OVG said in a statement.

The vaccine uses the same viral vector platform as the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. Meanwhile, the Serum Institute of India (SII) has manufactured and stockpiled approximately 620,000 doses of the vaccine candidate to support the rapid launch of the study and progression of the vaccine candidate into clinical evaluation.

The trial is funded by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) as part of its $8.6 million programme to advance the development of Bundibugyo vaccines. 

At the beginning of July, a trial of two antivirals started patient enrolment in the DRC. The PARTNERS trial will assess whether the antivirals, a monoclonal antibody called MBP134 and remdesivir, can improve the outcome and survival rate of people with Ebola in Bundibugyo. It will also evaluate whether combining the two antivirals provides additional benefits.

The WHO-sponsored trial is being coordinated by the DRC’s Institut National pour la Recherche Biomédicale (INRB), the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Belgium, and the University of Oxford.  

It is a randomised, controlled trial that is enrolling patients of any age with confirmed Bundibugyo. Aside from the medicine, patients will receive “early supportive care, including oral or intravenous fluids, electrolyte replacement, oxygen support, blood pressure management, and pain control in line with WHO treatment guidelines”, according to the WHO. 

Image Credits: DRC Department of Health.

Ordinary Venezuelans took the lead in the aftermath of the earthquakes.

In the days that followed the earthquakes that struck Venezuela on 24 June, La Guaira, the worst-hit city, went silent. Any noise could be a sign of life, so people remained alert, listening carefully, even as entire communities took to the streets. 

“People took matters into their own hands and started looking for their friends and families,” a La Guaira sociologist who asked not to be identified told Health Policy Watch. That moment, she said, sparked “an incredible wave of solidarity.” 

But solidarity wasn’t the sole catalyst. “There was no hope that the government would mobilize resources,” said the sociologist.

According to her, Venezuelans’ perception is that resources are scarce and institutions don’t act with the necessary speed. Each community that responded autonomously did so because the population knew it was unassisted, she observed.

She believes the outcomes of the earthquake response proved them right: “People themselves had to search for relatives, renting equipment and engineering materials to help break through the concrete and recover the bodies.”

Government’s inadequate response

Interim president Delcy Rodriguez (centre) addresses journalists about her government’s earthquake response.

Following the tremors, almost 200 buildings collapsed, leaving over 17.000 displaced and 4,490 dead. While the official number of missing people hasn’t been released, the United Nations estimates that it approaches 50,000

The government’s response has been criticized by residents and international observers for delays, missing centralized information, and a lack of heavy machinery that could have saved lives. 

Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, denied the claims during a press conference, where she also affirmed that the criticism was politically motivated

Rodriguez told journalists that institutions acted immediately, mobilizing international cooperation and deploying thousands of agents. 

But sources on the ground told Health Policy Watch a different story. What they witnessed was the presence of armed personnel who, for the most part, didn’t engage in rescue efforts. 

“You could see scenes of desperate people rescuing their own relatives while police officers stood on the sidelines, doing little or nothing to help,” one source said. 

Civil society took the lead

The first 72 hours after such an event are crucial for rescue. From day one, civil society led the efforts. They were the ones going through the rubble, sometimes with their bare hands. 

The lack of information created an obstacle for volunteer first responders. Citizens answered by creating collaborative platforms to gather information, map affected buildings and list missing people.

“Civil society didn’t passively wait for all decisions to come from the government,” said Mariangelli Álvarez, founder of terremotovenezuela.com, one such platform. 

Álvarez said that making sense of what was happening was the first step, but that as the response evolved, information alone wasn’t enough. Amidst a crisis that changed every day, she said the platform’s purpose now is “to identify necessities, give orientation to families, and connect resources.” 

Most importantly, Álvarez said, it is to make sure the people of La Guaira won’t be abandoned once public attention fades. 

A crisis on top of a crisis

PAHO regional director Jarbas Barbosa.

Even before the earthquakes, Venezuela was already suffering from a grave humanitarian crisis. Over the past decade, inflation, shortage of food and medicine, and increasing violence across the country forced 7.6 million people to seek refuge abroad, in what is considered to be the largest exodus in the continent’s recent history. 

According to a UN report, before June 2026, almost eight million Venezuelans already needed some sort of humanitarian assistance.

Venezuela’s healthcare system, now operating under extreme pressure, was also not doing well before the earthquakes.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), hospitals lacked 37% of emergency supplies as of September 2024, while a 2024 report from the National Hospital Survey found an almost 60% gap in surgical capacity. 

Since the earthquakes, structural damage to health facilities, the high number of injured people, backlogged surgeries, and the shortage of personnel and medical supplies threaten hospitals’ ability to continue operating. 

International aid

For José Miguel Rodriguez, Association of Volunteers in International Service (AVSI) Country Representative in Venezuela, the government’s biggest achievement in its earthquake response has been the openness to international aid. 

“There have obviously been some unfortunate instances of restrictions,” Rodriguez told Health Policy Watch. “But overall there has been openness to the entry of aid and personnel.”

Countries like Brazil, Chile and China have donated medicine, vaccines, water purifiers and generators, while Spain has set up a field hospital in Caracas dedicated to primary healthcare. 

The international response is being coordinated by the WHO’s regional office, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), alongside Venezuelan national authorities. 

PAHO regional director Jarbas Barbosa told a recent press briefing that the organization’s response has focused on three immediate priorities: “Saving lives, maintaining the continuity of essential health services, and preventing additional health risks in the coming weeks.” 

PAHO has deployed specialized teams, delivered six metric tons of emergency health supplies from a strategic reserve in Panama, and launched a $24 million emergency appeal to support the first six months of the health response and early recovery. 

New phase of the response

According to Barbosa, as the initial increase in trauma cases has begun to stabilize, the response is entering a new phase. 

“The priority now is not only to keep health facilities open, but to ensure safe and timely access to essential health services,” he said, stressing the importance of continued care for people with chronic and non-communicable diseases.  

Barbosa said that, after an earthquake, the greatest risks tend to arise from interruptions to health services, access to drinking water, sanitation and vaccination. 

This is particularly concerning for the over 17.000 displaced people housed in 87 transitional camps, where overcrowding and poor sanitary conditions increase the risks of disease outbreaks

In the coming weeks, Barbosa said the response must prioritize re-establishing access to primary health care, safe water, sanitation, epidemiological surveillance and vaccine coverage, which was already below required levels in the country. 

But according to the sociologist from La Guaira, people in the camps report that very few resources are being distributed and there is little information about the camps’ management. 

Recovery and reconstruction

Now that rescue efforts has ceased, Venezuela is focusing on reconstruction.

The focus has shifted from rescue to reconstruction, according to terremotovenezuela.com’s Alvarez, but the emotional and social recovery “will take far longer than the initial emergency.”

Besides structural damage and physical injuries, Venezuela will have to address a mental health crisis. 

“Thousands of people have suffered losses, displacement, and uncertainty,” said Barbosa. “Mental health is also an urgent priority after a tragedy of this magnitude.”

PAHO’s director stressed that recovery must go beyond a simple return to what existed before. “It must be an opportunity to build back stronger, safer, more resilient, and better prepare health services for future emergencies,” he said.

That, however, will be particularly hard given the country’s uncertain political future. Six months ago, the United States captured Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, and has imprisoned him in the US.

The 180 days of Rodriguez’s interim presidency expired in the first week of July, and there is no timetable for new elections so far.

However, the US controls Venezuela’s finances, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio setting conditions on what that money can be spent on, and by whom, according to a recent report by The New York Times.

With no clear plan for the future, the sociologist said, suffering is even greater: “There is a sense of grief over the loss of institutions, which deepens Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis in every respect.”

Image Credits: Toposdigitales .

The risk of dementia can be reduced by addressing tobacco and alcohol consumption , lack of physical exercise and social isolation.

Up to 45% of the risk of dementia can be prevented or delayed by addressing tobacco and alcohol use, social isolation, physical inactivity, air pollution and noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), including high blood pressure and diabetes, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

The global health body released updated guidelines on reducing the risk of cognitive decline and dementia this week, providing countries with evidence-based recommendations to help prevent or delay the onset of dementia across the life course.

Brain diseases cause dementia, which affects memory, thinking and the ability to function. More than 57 million people live with dementia worldwide and nearly 10 million people get newly diagnosed every year. Alzheimer disease is the most common form of dementia and is estimated to account for 60–70% of cases.

“We know more today than ever before about what drives dementia risk, and these guidelines translate that knowledge into action,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “Countries now have clear, evidence-based recommendations they can put into practice immediately to protect people’s cognitive health.”

WHO’s new guidelines reflect the latest evidence and innovations in dementia risk reduction providing proven interventions that can effectively lower dementia risk through early awareness and timely action. 

They provide consolidated recommendations on addressing unhealthy behaviours, managing medical conditions, and reducing exposure to environmental factors that may contribute to cognitive decline and dementia.

The guidelines recommend several healthy behaviours and lifestyle interventions to reduce dementia risk, including cognitive training and cognitive stimulation and engagement in social activities for adults with normal cognition or mild cognitive impairment.

The updated advice also includes interventions that reduce risk of NCDs, including increasing physical activity, stopping tobacco use, reducing alcohol consumption, adopting a healthy diet, and a new recommendation to reduce exposure to air pollution.

Management of hypertension, diabetes, and high cholesterol can also help reduce dementia risk. Further, hearing aids may be offered as part of risk-reduction strategies.

 

Image Credits: WHO/A. Loke.

A child receiving a vaccination. Global immunization efforts are off track to meet the 2030 targets.

Nearly 90% of infants globally received at least one dose of a diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (DTP) vaccine in 2025, while around one-third of girls globally received at least one dose of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, which protects against cervical cancer.

This is according to the annual World Health Organization (WHO)-UNICEF Estimates of National Immunization Coverage (WUENIC) released on Wednesday, based on data from 195 countries and territories.

The number of children who have not received a single dose of vaccine ever, called zero-dose children, fell by 750,000 compared to the previous year.

But most countries are off track to meet the Immunization Agenda 2030, which requires them to reduce the number of zero-dose children by 50% compared to 2019 levels.

“Countries with significant improvement in their zero dose numbers include Sudan, India, Brazil, Ethiopia, and Mexico, who have made commendable progress,” said Dr Ephrem  Lemango, UNICEF’s global head of immunization.

However, 13.5 million children were still without any vaccinations, and experts warned that the impact of funding shortfalls for Gavi, the global vaccine alliance, will only show up in the data in the coming years. There is also a rising cohort of drop-outs.

Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Yemen have the highest numbers of zero-dose children, while the countries with the highest prevalence of zero-dose children are in Yemen, Papua New Guinea and Venezuela.

Every child, whether born into wealth or poverty, peace or conflict, deserves the life-giving protection that vaccines provide. Immunization is one of the most cost-effective, most equitable, and most reliable interventions for protecting children’s health and well-being,” said WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Also read: GAVI Vaccine Alliance Secures More than $9 Billion from Donors – Despite US Ambush at Pledging Event

Challenges for immunization efforts

Countries with the largest number of zero-dose children are a mix of ones with structural issues, conflict and a large growing population.

Immunization efforts are being challenged by several issues including rapidly growing populations, conflict, and structural and governance issues.

Drop-outs are another challenge. Globally, 7.3 million infants are estimated to have received their first DTP dose but dropped out before receiving their first measles dose.

This drop-out rate contributed to stalled measles coverage, with 84% of children receiving the first measles dose (MCV1) and 77% receiving the second dose (MCV2). A vaccination rate of 95% is required to maintain community immunity, and 57 countries reported large or disruptive measles outbreaks in 2025.

“We think that that is clearly related in some settings to false information, misinformation that is provided around measles vaccination, and this is of very significant concern because, as we know, measles is probably one of the most infectious viruses and is causing deaths in children around the world,” said Dr Kate O’Brien, WHO director of immunization, vaccines and biologicals.

The Americas and South-East Asia have fully recovered since COVID-19 and improved their performance, with the latter now the highest-performing region, compared to their 2019 baselines.

While Africa, the Eastern Mediterranean, and Europe saw gains last year, their coverage remains below pre-pandemic levels. In contrast, the Western Pacific experienced a decline, leaving it the region furthest below its 2019 baseline.

“Immunization programs in the least wealthy countries of the world are often closing vaccination gaps faster than wealthier ones, while also protecting what they already have achieved and continuing to do more,” Lemango said.

India, Sudan and South Africa – a story of gains and losses 

Countries with the largest number of zero-dose children are a mix of ones with structural issues, conflict and a large growing population.

The reduction in zero-dose children is largely due to gains made by countries like Sudan, India and Brazil in very different circumstances.

While India, with its 1.4 billion people, has the largest population in the world, Sudan has managed to keep its gains despite conflict.

“Sudan shows what is possible when access is improved, even during conflicts. It gained about 35 points on the first dose of DTP and 22 points on measles. This is the largest single country improvement anywhere in the world we are reporting this year,” Lemango said.

But South Africa, which was doing well, has seen backsliding, as has Bangladesh.

“South Africa again has had a pretty strong program, and in recent years has had more challenges with their program from a structural perspective, and mostly from a fiscal perspective,” said O’Brien.

“Now we’re seeing some of the effects of the financial constraints that South Africa has in terms of a weakening program, and that’s showing up through weakening coverage,” she added.

Looming threat of funding shortfall

US President Donald Trump dismantled the USAID – United States’ primary aid agency in early 2025, sending most global development agencies scrambling for funds.

However, the 2025 data represent a snapshot of where global immunization stood before the funding cuts, driven largely by the US.

Around 85% of the drop in zero-dose children occurred in Gavi-supported countries, which also accounted for 95% of girls vaccinated against HPV

Last year, Gavi was only able to secure $9 billion out of its $11.9 billion goal – largely because the US refused to support it, with US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. announcing that his country was halting support for the alliance until it could “re-earn” the public trust.

Gavi said its ability to survey outbreaks has been impacted by its funding shortage, and it is already having to make some hard choices.

“We believe that 600,000 lives that could have been saved will be impacted by this right-sizing and trying to fit to the wallet that we have,” said Thabani Maphosa, Gavi’s chief country delivery officer.

Meanwhile, O’Brien warned that more backsliding could lie ahead: “We don’t think that the impact of those funding cuts is showing up yet fully in the 2025 data. Our concerns are very much for what’s happening in programs in 2026 and what is yet to come.”

Reacting to the report, the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA)’s Laetitia Bigger said that “routine childhood vaccination remains one of public health’s greatest success stories”.

“Today’s report highlights the potential of new vaccines to transform health outcomes – such as the expansion of HPV vaccination – but also serves as a reminder that too many children still remain unprotected against life-threatening diseases,” said Bigger, IFPMA’s director of vaccines policy.

“To respond to this challenge, governments and international organisations should invest in strong health systems and continue to prioritise the introduction of new vaccines.”

Image Credits: UNICEF, WHO and UNICEF , The White House.

The Africa Clean Air Forum 2026 opened this week in Pretoria.

PRETORIA, South Africa – Participants from 47 African nations are meeting at the Africa Clean Air Forum this week as part of a continental drive to address the air pollution health crisis. 

The forum, convened by the Africa Clean Air Network (AfriCAN), is in its fourth year, and this is the first time it is being held in southern Africa. 

The theme of the four-day forum is “investment case for clean air and healthy cities”, and participants have been sharing evidence-driven clean air actions, discussing sustainable funding and promoting cross-border knowledge sharing.

It follows the first G20 resolution on clean air, which was proposed by South Africa last year. Advocates are now focusing on what the continent requires to improve air quality, especially as it faces development challenges and a growing population. 

Opening the conference, Bernice Swarts, South Africa’s Deputy Minister of  Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, said that her country’s presidency of the G20 last year created an opportunity to elevate air quality as a strategic development priority. 

This resulted in the G20’s air pollution resolution, which recognised that poor air quality is a cause of premature mortality, and the importance of open and reliable air quality data. However, the resolution also noted that sharing 

The resolution also commits G20 countries to supporting “international collaboration to combat transboundary air pollution”.

But in an interview with Health Policy Watch, Swarts asked: “What are we talking about when we say we are going to work together? It must not just be broad and blank. It must be specific so that it talks to outcomes that we want to achieve and will add value to the air quality that we are going to have.” 

However, apart from Swarts, the forum was not attended by any Cabinet Ministers or senior politicians, and focused on the work by scientists, city and provincial officials, and policy experts. 

South African Deputy Minister Bernice Swarts opened the forum.

Changing tradition for cleaner air 

Africa’s population is projected to grow from about 1.5 billion now to about 2.5 billion by 2050. The median age is 19 today, but by 2073, the number of young Africans under 25 is likely to surpass Asia. 

Development will have to pick up pace to meet the needs of the population, but the challenge is to do that without the air pollution that has typically accompanied rapid development. 

That challenge is most noticeable at the grassroots level. Xoli Fuyani from Black Girls Rising, a South African non-profit, described how she couldn’t breathe in a traditional mud hut when a fire was lit for tea. Her hosts seemed unconcerned, saying that is how their grandmothers cooked. 

“How long can we accept this as normal?” Fuyani says. 

“Any transformation begins when communities see themselves as innovators and not just beneficiaries,” said Fuyani, calling for local communities to be made partners in air quality management. 

Indoor air pollution from biomass cooking fuels remains one of sub-Saharan Africa’s most persistent yet under-prioritized public health emergencies. 

South-South cooperation

Although the focus is on Africa, South-South cooperation between all developing countries is one of the core themes. 

Rebecca Garland from the University of Pretoria cautioned against relying on the Global North’s support, including for funding, as the North often had a different agenda.

Sharifah Buzeki, executive director of the Kampala Capital City Authority in Uganda, provided a direct example of South-South collaboration. 

Officials from Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital and one of the world’s most polluted cities, visited to see Kampala’s progress in air quality management, said Buzeki. 

She explained that Kampala’s response rested on hyperlocal monitoring, live public data access via a mobile app and website, and an awareness campaign on digital screens in the city. 

A research team from the Kenyan capital of Nairobi explained how the city went from just two low-cost air pollution monitors to about 130 in four years, leading to impact on the ground. 

“Analysts have been able to map out trends in pollution. For example, it peaks between six and nine in the morning and evening. probably because of traffic and household habits. But the extensive data across Nairobi has meant enforcement can be tracked,” explained one of the researchers.

“We can now translate this into action on the ground. We are able to inspect. We are able to carry out our compliance and enforcement in various sectors within the city.”

The researchers showed the data from low-cost sensors at about 40 schools from January to May. All of them were above the WHO’s safe guideline of 5 micrograms/cubic metre of PM2.5, the fine particulate pollutant.

This is the annual conference’s fourth edition, and the largest with over 530 participants. The large number of participants this year demonstrates “a great continental movement,” says Tunde Ajayi of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency and Africa Clean Air Network. 

“Clean air is not a luxury. It is a prerequisite for healthy people, for thriving economies and sustainable development. The investments we make today will determine the quality of life of generations to come,” said Ajayi.

From left to right: Dalila Hamou (WIPO), Dr Alain Labrique (WHO), and Bilel Jamoussi (ITU) hold the newly launched joint strategic guidelines at the Artificial Intelligence for Good Global Summit in Geneva.
From left to right: Dalila Hamou (WIPO), lain Labrique (WHO), and Bilel Jamoussi (ITU) hold the newly launched joint strategic guidelines at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva.

As artificial intelligence drives rapid health innovations, global guardrails, equitable data, and local capacity are needed to ensure equitable progress. To address this, a landmark framework launched by three United Nations agencies lays out a strategic roadmap for innovators. Meanwhile, health leaders emphasise that lower-income regions must become co-creators of future innovations.

New guidelines for the use of artificial intelligence lay out a roadmap for health innovators to navigate complex intellectual property, data governance, and regulatory pathways. The landmark framework, co-authored by experts from the World Health Organization (WHO), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), was presented at the “AI for Good” Global Summit in Geneva last week.

“This collaboration between these three organisations brings our expertise together and shows how we can have a collaboration in this very important field,” said Dalila Hamou, director of the external relations division at WIPO, at the Summit.

The joint initiative arrives as technological innovation accelerates, with the number of new generative artificial intelligence patents published over the last two years topping the total from the entire preceding decade. For instance, AI-assisted liquid biopsy tests can now predictively detect multiple cancers at stage one – when survival rates reach up to 92% – long before physical symptoms manifest.

At the same time, critics warn that the rapid deployment of unregulated advanced algorithms increases risks and may end up amplifying existing health disparities and deepening social exclusion.

“The few exceptions when technology actually had an equitable positive impact in society was when equity was included by design,” said Ricardo Baptista Leite, CEO of HealthAI, in an interview with Health Policy Watch during the summit, echoing the need for guardrails.

Embedding equity in the artificial intelligence life cycle

An equitable IP framework uses field-of-use licensing and tiered cloud access to bridge global disparities.
An equitable IP framework for AI should apply field-of-use licensing and tiered cloud access to mitigate global disparities, advocates say.

Fundamentally, the joint framework, which is entirely non-biding, recommends a mixed intellectual property system for new AI tools. It guides developers in strategically combining patents for technical methods with trade secrets for proprietary datasets, ensuring commercial viability – while also building trust through careful adherence to quality assurance, safety monitoring and patient privacy.

But to actively embed equity into the innovation life cycle, the joint framework also champions access models such as differential pricing and field-of-use licensing. These mechanisms allow patent holders to serve profitable commercial markets while partnering with domestic manufacturers in the Global South for vital technology transfers.

Specifically, field-of-use licensing allows patent holders to legally differentiate their intellectual property rights by geography or therapeutic application. This means a developer can maintain exclusive, highly profitable sales in the Global North while simultaneously licensing the identical algorithm to a domestic partner in a lower-income region.

Similarly, differential pricing leverages flexible delivery methods, such as cloud-based architectures, to offer tiered access to artificial intelligence services. This mechanism ensures that resource-constrained health systems pay reduced, subsidised fees for vital diagnostic tools, while the same technology generates premium commercial revenue in wealthier markets.

Since the international guidelines lack the binding enforcement mechanisms needed to standardise protections globally, voluntary frameworks must be actively translated into enforceable national regulations, the 2025 HealthAI Global Landscape Report stresses.

Fiscal pressure drives new collaborations

From left to right: Catherine Cheney (Devex), Alex Aliper (Insilico Medicine), Leslie Yeh (Google.org), Rita Rhayem (Gavi), and John Fairhurst (Global Fund) participate in a panel discussion at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva.
From left to right: Catherine Cheney (Devex), Alex Aliper (Insilico Medicine), Leslie Yeh (Google.org), Rita Rhayem (Gavi), and John Fairhurst (Global Fund) participate in a panel discussion at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva.

The urgency to implement these global standards is driven by the fast-changing face of the technologies as well as severe economic pressures, which are prompting health systems to leverage largely unregulated artificial intelligence tools for rapid efficiency gains and/or to reach underserved populations.

“We can’t expect every country to suddenly find money in this current fiscal context that they’ve not had for the last 10 years,” said John Fairhurst, head of private sector engagement at the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, during a panel discussion with Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, and Google.org at last week’s AI for Good summit in Geneva. He noted that AI offers a pathway forward because “what countries are looking for is efficiencies. They’re looking for the ability to drive greater impact from every dollar that they spend.”

One breakthrough innovation highlighted at the summit pairs acoustic analysis with machine learning to detect tuberculosis directly from the sound of a patient’s cough. This tool, currently still in pilot stages, can be scaled up rapidly over basic mobile networks to identify people infected with TB earlier in the infection cycle.

“It’s a disease where we miss something like 3.6 to 4 million people a year, and those people go on to infect more people,” added Fairhurst.

This tool is part of a wider strategic partnership between The Global Fund and Google.org, the corporate social responsibility arm of Google, highlighting the advantages of public-private sector collaborations in a fast-developing AI landscape.

“Rather than focusing on a singular or point-to-point partnership, we try to bring together the cross-functional players [and] the cross-sector players,” said Leslie Yeh, director of scientific progress for Google.org. She explained that by treating health challenges as interconnected systems, partners can share learnings “so that we can get towards this accelerated outcome together and […] not leave anyone behind.”

Empowering local health capacity

Joyce Nabende, AI lab head, Makerere University (Uganda).
Joyce Nabende, AI lab head, Makerere University (Uganda).

To effectively serve resource-limited settings and build local health capacities, developers must also design digital health tools capable of working entirely offline or with limited power and internet data access.

“If you think about low or limited settings that we come from, then you have to ensure that you have models that can work, for example, offline or with devices that are limited,” emphasised Joyce Nabende, head of the artificial intelligence lab at Makerere University in Uganda.

Innovators are currently working to make new technologies accessible by deploying AI diagnostic tools directly onto portable phones and other devices. For example, healthcare providers in parts of rural Africa can use offline, AI-assisted ultrasound tools to triage pregnancy risks, so that only the most at-risk cases travel to distant specialist centres.

Beyond hardware adaptations, international tech researchers and leaders like Nabende stress that true empowerment requires cultivating technological expertise directly where the medical challenges occur. This strategic shift involves transferring more advanced digital capabilities into the Global South.

Bridging the data equity divide

A 3D rendering of a neural network representing artificial intelligence.
To ensure the rapid deployment of artificial intelligence does not amplify existing disparities, digital health innovations must actively embed equity by design.

Another problem involves deploying algorithms in low- and middle-income countries without representative foundational data, which currently risks perpetuating systemic health disparities. Hidden biases within imported models can trigger inappropriate clinical triaging and inadvertently cause severe patient harm.

“When we import models, they’re often trained on usually high-income countries, populations that don’t represent the target populations where these tools are meant to be deployed,” said Alain Labrique, director of data, digital health, analytics and AI at the WHO, during a panel discussion.

Approximately 90% of global genomic data currently belongs to people of European descent, dangerously skewing the efficacy of predictive tools for diverse global populations, warned Alireza Haghighi, director of the Harvard International Center for Genetic Disease, during the summit.

Consequently, governments in the Global South demand an active role as co-creators of medical AI technologies that have to undergo rigorous local validation before clinical deployment.

“Africa must not be only a market for digital health solutions,” said Habiba Mizouni, representing the Tunisian Ministry of Health, during a keynote speech at the summit. She asserted that the continent must become a producer of ethical and context-specific health AI, not merely a consumer of imported digital solutions.

To actively support this transition, the newly launched guidelines champion access models that enable the adaptation of algorithms to local disease patterns and require developers to share performance data across diverse populations to ensure algorithmic non-discrimination.

Addressing regulatory fragmentation

A major issue hindering these equitable advances is regulatory fragmentation, which prevents emerging developers from safely scaling their life-saving tools.

HealthAI CEO Ricardo Baptista Leite.
HealthAI CEO Ricardo Baptista Leite.

“Small and medium enterprises don’t stand a chance if they have to deal with different regulatory environments in every country they go to,” said HealthAI’s Leite. The Geneva-based global non-profit agency supports governments in building regulatory ecosystems to responsibly assess and scale these AI technologies.

To construct this infrastructure, the agency is building a Global Regulatory Network (GRN) that recently expanded to include Zambia, the Philippines, and Brazil. While artificial intelligence powerhouses like the United States and China remain outside formal GRN membership, they actively engage through broader communities of practice to prevent geopolitical fracturing, Leite explained.

To align internationally fragmented systems, the network is currently developing a global early warning system for post-market monitoring of new digital tools and devices. This shared platform will allow international regulators to instantly detect and communicate adverse algorithmic events, ensuring patient safety while building long-term societal trust in adaptive technologies, echoing the goals of the joint UN guidelines.

Build trust to keep innovation at pace

A robotic hand reaching into a digital network on a blue background, symbolising artificial intelligence.
Joint guidelines by WIPO, ITU and WHO set intellectual property standards and innovation guardrails.

As long as the regulatory landscape remains fragmented, both developers and patients are ultimately penalised by delayed access to life-saving medical diagnostics, the UN agencies state. The new framework directly addresses this systemic friction by proposing common intellectual property strategies and technical standards.

“Standards create trust. Without standards, innovation remains isolated. With standards, innovation becomes scalable and sustainable,” concluded Tunisian representative Mizouni.

Ultimately, the enthusiasm that greeted the new WHO, ITU, and WIPO joint report signals a readiness to govern digital health. If international guardrails support collaborative momentum and trust, the current wave of technological innovation could successfully reduce global health inequities and scale the life-saving tuberculosis and cancer breakthroughs presented in Geneva.

However, to translate these frameworks into reality, international regulators and national governments must accelerate to match the rapid pace of the technology itself. Building this regulatory legitimacy is the only way to ensure patient safety and global adoption because, as HealthAI CEO Leite emphasised, “Innovation will move at the speed of trust”.

Echoing HealthAI’s collaborative mission, Dr Hans Henri Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, reinforced this urgency during a global conference in Lisbon starting on Wednesday where the WHO brought 37 countries together to establish AI governance.

Urging leaders to regulate artificial intelligence in health “before the gaps become irreversible”, Kluge stressed: “The future of AI in health won’t be decided by algorithms. It will be decided by the frameworks we build now, the partnerships we forge, and the political will we bring to making sure this technology serves everyone – not just the countries and communities wealthy enough to shape it on their own terms”.

See related story:

An Equitable Pandemic Agreement is a Global Public Good

Image Credits: Tara Winstead via Pexels, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Google DeepMind via Pexels, HealthAI .

Experts urging a youth social media restriction insist children cannot resist deliberately addictive platforms on their own.
Lawmakers urging a phased youth social media restriction insist children cannot resist deliberately addictive platforms on their own.

The European Commission is preparing more robust youth social media restrictions to protect children from addictive algorithms, following urgent expert warnings and landmark court rulings. But unlike the blanket digital bans imposed in countries such as Australia on everyone under the age of 16, restrictions would be eased gradually as children grow older.

As countries increasingly move toward youth social media restrictions, an EU expert panel recommends the bloc enforce a “phased and gradual” digital childhood. The experts advise no independent access for children under 13, followed by a graduated transition into autonomy where “safety-by-design” is the default standard.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen expressed support for this approach, relying on Eurobarometer data showing widespread public concern. According to the study, 63% of Europeans want EU rules restricting children’s access to social platforms by age, either through an outright prohibition or delayed access.

“The platforms have a duty of care towards their users, especially the most vulnerable among them,” said von der Leyen, reacting to the panel recommendation.

This autumn, the Commission plans to propose new legislation to the European Parliament that would adopt the scheme for staggered, age-appropriate access.

Members of the European Parliament signalled broad support for the Commission’s regulatory push. However, some key lawmakers are demanding even stricter measures, such as raising the minimum digital access age to 15 years and mandating a non-addictive “youth mode”.

Science supports youth social media restriction

From left to right, Professor Jörg Fegert, Ursula von der Leyen and Dr Maria Melchior present recommendations.
From left to right, Professor Jörg Fegert, Ursula von der Leyen and Dr Maria Melchior present recommendations.

The regulatory push aims to dismantle engagement-maximising business models that prioritise profit over the physical and mental health of vulnerable children. The EU expert panel insists that tech providers must retain primary responsibility for platform safety, rather than shifting the burden of protection onto parents or the minors themselves.

The authors of the report underlying the recommendations, Dr Maria Melchior, Research Director at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), and Professor Jörg Fegert, Medical Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the Ulm University Hospital (Germany), highlight a critical neurobiological mismatch during adolescence. Children have highly active emotional and reward systems, which overpower the still-developing prefrontal cortex responsible for impulse control. Because of this imbalance, minors are especially vulnerable to platforms optimised for immediate gratification and continuous external stimulation

Based on emerging research from the UNESCO international ethics committee, neuroscientists highlight that these digital environments exploit the developing adolescent brain by merging fundamental social drives with powerful algorithmic reward systems.

According to experts, platforms intentionally condition reward systems through infinite scrolling and variable feedback, directly manipulating the ventral striatum.

While evidence of digital harm continues to mount, scientists acknowledge that establishing a definitive causal link remains a subject of ongoing debate. Researchers warn that tech giants restricting data access forces independent academics to rely heavily on correlative studies, making exact behavioural impacts difficult to prove.

EU fines and civil liability for addictive algorithms

Driven by deteriorating youth mental health, countries including Germany, France, and Spain are also actively proposing domestic access restrictions for minors. However, media law experts point to the EU’s responsibility under the Digital Services Act (DSA).

Only just last week, the European Commission issued a preliminary ruling that found Meta in breach of the Digital Services Act for its addictive design of Instagram and Facebook. If the decision is confirmed following a response from Meta, the Commission could issue a non-compliance decision, which can trigger large fines – up to 6% of the total worldwide annual turnover of the provider.

Earlier this year, US courts in California and New Mexico ordered social media companies to pay millions in damages for creating addictive products that juries determined had caused users’ depression and anxiety, in the California case, and in the New Mexico ruling, failed to safeguard users of its apps from child predators

As global efforts intensify to enforce youth social media restrictions, the burden seems to be shifting toward tech companies to prove their digital environments are safe before accessing vulnerable populations.

 

Image Credits: Kampus Production via Pexels, European Union.

Plant-based substances remain the basis of today’s illicit drug trade, but more powerful and dangerous synthetic drugs have inherent advantages that position them to take over ever more of the market, according to a new report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

Conflict is reshaping the global trade map, and the collapse of Afghanistan’s opium production could, paradoxically, be pushing the world even faster toward more dangerous synthetics. Meanwhile, governments continue to prioritise punishment over care for people caught up in the cycle of drug use.

Nearly half a million people died from drug use in 2023, driven by infectious disease, untreated addiction and the spread of synthetic drugs more potent than anything markets have seen before, according to the new report by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

“The consequences are lethal,” Monica Juma, UNODC’s executive director, wrote in the World Drug Report 2026. “These deaths are a reminder that the world drug problem remains, at its nucleus, a human challenge that affects lives, families and communities.”

An estimated 331 million people worldwide used illicit drugs in 2024, the highest number ever recorded and a 34% increase over the past decade that has well outpaced population growth.

Part, but not all, of the recorded rise reflects “the availability of new and more accurate data,” per the report, meaning better tracking of use that was already there.

“As drug use increases, more people are exposed to health and social risks,” Juma wrote. “Yet as healthcare needs continue to grow, access to treatment remains unequal. In many parts of the world, services are scarce or unavailable, leaving millions, especially women and vulnerable groups, without access to recovery and support.”

People who use drugs, 2024.

The report describes a drug trade in the middle of a historic transformation, away from crops like coca, opium poppy and cannabis that need land, seasons and favourable climates to grow, and toward chemicals that can be synthesised in laboratories anywhere in the world and sold to customers close by.

But synthetics are also leading more and more people into uncharted waters, with wide variations in toxicity and often lethal or unknown impacts on health. A record 755 new psychoactive substances were detected in circulation in 2024. Five times more unique drug types, primarily synthetic, now appear in seizures than before 2000.

“We have seen an unprecedented spike in new types of drugs on the market, and worryingly, some are more potent or dangerous than before,” Juma said.

The global drug market, she told the report’s launch in Vienna, is “rapidly evolving, expanding, and in some cases outrunning the very systems designed to stop it.”

More than overdoses: hepatitis C and HIV are the biggest killers

Of the 492,000 deaths attributed to drug use in 2023, just 172,500 were direct deaths such as fatal poisonings. Most of the rest were killed slowly, by infections passed through needles years or decades earlier.

“Opioids continue to account for the largest part of the global burden of disease attributed to drug use, while hepatitis C remains a key driver of drug use-related deaths,” the report finds. Opioids are “the most lethal group of drugs, accounting for nearly three quarters of the estimated total number of deaths directly related to drugs.”

Cirrhosis and liver disease caused by hepatitis C were the leading cause of death attributed to drug use, responsible for 46% of the total, some 224,528 lives in 2023. Opioid overdoses and other toxic effects of drug dependence were the largest source of direct deaths, accounting for 26%.

HIV/AIDS claimed another 15% of lives from people living both with the HIV virus and addiction.  That toll lands as the global HIV response reels from the biggest funding crisis in its history, with services for people who inject drugs, long among the populations left furthest behind, further squeezed by the donor retreat.

HIV Response Faces ‘Biggest Storm’ in Its History After 23% Funding Nosedive

An estimated 14.3 million people injected drugs in 2024. Nearly half of them, 7 million people, were living with hepatitis C, and almost one in eight with HIV. The risk of acquiring HIV is 14 times higher for people who inject drugs than for the general population.

Drug deaths remain a fraction of the toll from legal substances, which sit outside UNODC’s treaty mandate. Tobacco kills around 8 million people a year and alcohol some 2.6 million. But illicit drugs strike earlier in life. Use is concentrated between the ages of 15 and 34, and the report counts 29 million years of healthy life lost to drugs in 2023.

“Young people, in particular, are often more exposed to high-risk patterns of drug-use and drug-related violence,” Juma wrote.

One in 12 people get treatment, only one in 23 women

Of the 63 million people living with drug use disorders, only one in 12 received any form of treatment in 2024.

Coverage is thinnest in Africa and Asia, where the epidemic is youngest: a third of people in treatment in Africa are under 25, rising to nearly half in South America. The report lists the high cost of treatment, chronic shortages of funding and staff, long waiting lists, missing medications and “stigma and sometimes criminalization faced by patients” among the barriers.

Just one in 23 women with a drug use disorder receives treatment, against one in nine men, even though women progress faster from first use to dependence, a phenomenon researchers call the “telescoping effect.”

“Women use drugs less than men, but when they do, the impact on their lives is greater,” the report states.

Women who inject drugs are 20% more likely than men to be living with HIV. Women more often begin using drugs to self-medicate pain, depression or anxiety, and face what the report calls “double, triple or multiple stigma,” judged both for their drug use and for failing gender role expectations, “which is aggravated if they have children.”

Heightened stigma, a lack of services for women’s needs, “a lack of childcare and the fear of losing custody of their children while in treatment” keep women out of care, the report finds.

“When they enter drug treatment, women exhibit similar or, in some cases, better treatment outcomes in relation to drug use disorders than men,” it notes.

The pain divide and the opioid crisis

In 2021, 73.5 million people worldwide experienced what the Lancet Commission on Palliative Care defines as serious health-related suffering: pain and distress so severe it cannot be relieved without medical intervention. Nearly 80% of them lived in low- and middle-income countries.

Those same countries received 14% of the world’s pharmaceutical opioids.

Adjusted for population, opioid availability for pain relief and palliative care in poorer countries was 96% lower than in rich ones. In 2024, 87.5% of humanity lived in countries with below-average access. West and Central Africa, the worst-served subregion, had 25 standard daily doses per million people. High-income countries had nearly 18,000.

The reasons include weak supply chains, untrained health workers and entrenched fear of addiction. “Manufacturers in many countries may also avoid producing low-cost options such as morphine, if they are seen as unprofitable,” the report notes.

Prescription opioids, fentanyl in North America and beyond

At the same time, abuse of opoid painkillers laid the groundwork for an epidemic in North America in the first two decades of this century.

Nearly a million people died from opoid overdoses and addiction triggered by easy access to OxyContin, a prescription painkiller derived from the opium poppy.

Members of the Sackler family, whose company, Purdue Pharma, produced OxyContin, never faced criminal charges. Liability suits brought by thousands of people who said they had been wrongfully addicted were settled in civil courts for billions of dollars.

“The opioid crisis in North America, which has been linked to the aggressive marketing and overprescription of pharmaceutical opioids for reasons other than cancer treatment, surgery and palliative care, has also likely raised concerns about the misuse of pharmaceutical opioids in other countries,” the report finds.

Regional distribution of drug seizure cases across leading drug classes, 2024.

Just as awareness of OxyContin abuse grew into a national enforcement and litigation issue, fentanyl was being introduced into the supply of heroin sold on the streets, “with users initially unaware of its presence,” the report recounts.

The synthetic opioid is roughly 50 times stronger than heroin and “significantly cheaper both for producers and for consumers,” the report notes, describing the transformation as evidence that opioid markets “can permanently change.”

The fentanyl crisis defined a generation of American politics and law, filled bestseller lists and television dramas, and at its peak in 2023 killed more Americans in a single year than the entire Vietnam War. The United States, home to about 4% of the world’s population, recorded roughly 110,000 overdose deaths in 2023, according to US health authorities, accounting for roughly 25% of global drug deaths.

Opioid overdose deaths involving fentanyls fell 17% in Canada and by more than a third in the United States in 2024, the first decline in a decade, credited to shrinking supply, wider access to the overdose antidote naloxone and expanded treatment.

If fentanyl were to break out of North America and into the drug markets of other countries at scale, the results would be disasterous the report warns, elevating “levels of harm for those using illegally sourced opioids.”

After fentanyl, something even stronger: nitazenes

Meanwhile, fentanyl’s successors are already circulating, the report finds, and some are even stronger. Nitazenes, a class of synthetic opioids that can exceed fentanyl’s potency, have been identified in 37 countries since 2019, “making them far more geographically widespread than fentanyls ever have been.”

Some nitazene metabolites “may even exceed the potency of the parent compound,” causing respiratory depression so severe it can require repeated doses of naloxone to reverse.

In the United Kingdom, nitazenes were linked to roughly 750 overdose deaths between June 2023 and August 2025, about three times the toll of fentanyl there. In West Africa, nitazenes have turned up in “kush,” a cheap smoked mixture spreading among adolescents; in Guinea, nearly 1% of school students surveyed in 2024 reported using it. A newer class still, the orphines, has surfaced in at least 14 countries.

“We see a lot of nitazenes now,” Chloé Carpentier, the UNODC research chief who coordinated the report, told UN News. “The worry is really that synthetic opioids might replace heroin and lead to much more harm.”

Synthetics: a market that cannot be stopped

Most commonly used stimulant drugs (past-year use), 2024 or most recent year for which data are available.

Plant based drugs continue to dominate – for now

The synthetic takeover is, for now, a threat still largely looming in the future. Plant-based drugs continue to dominate the global trade.

With 256 million users worldwide, cannabis remains by far the most used drug. Production of cocaine, a derivative of the coca plant native to the Andes, meanwhile hit an all-time record of 4,100 tons in 2024, more than four times the level of a decade ago.

Overall, synthetics “are well placed to supplant plant-based drugs; however, to date this seems to be far from the case in practice,” the report finds.

Synthetic drugs need no land, no harvest and no particular climate, and can be made next to their consumers, slashing the risk of interception. The only real constraints, the report finds, are chemical expertise and precursor supplies, “barriers which are too easily overcome in a globalized, digitalized world characterized by the free flow of information and plentiful channels for international trade.”

Since 2014, the international control system has scheduled 92 new psychoactive substances. In 2024 alone, 118 new ones appeared.

The precursor economy has meanwhile pulled drug policy into superpower politics. US intelligence names China and India as the primary sources of fentanyl precursor chemicals, and Washington has designated illicit fentanyl and its core precursors as weapons of mass destruction.

Fentanyl became the formal legal basis of American tariffs on China in 2025, before the Supreme Court struck them down this February, and Beijing has tightened chemical controls in trade-deal instalments after each summit with Washington.

Most precursors in use today are “designer” chemicals not scheduled anywhere, redesigned faster than either government can ban them.

Dictators, insurgents and the drug supply

Estimated global illicit opium production,
2018–2025.

Two political earthquakes, more than any enforcement strategy, are redrawing the world’s drug map. Criminal groups, Juma wrote, “rapidly adjust to changing circumstances.”

The first came from Kabul. The Taliban spent two decades taxing the opium trade to fund their insurgency, then banned it upon taking power. Afghan production, once 80% of the world’s illicit opium, has collapsed 95%, from 6,200 tons in 2022 to an estimated 296 tons in 2025. Heroin prices in 12 major destination markets doubled in two years, to nearly $500 per pure gram, and UNODC estimates Afghan stockpiles could run dry by the end of 2026.

No other producer is filling the gap. Myanmar is now the world’s largest source of opium, but its rise reflects its own civil war, not Afghan shortfalls. Rebuilding poppy fields and smuggling networks is unlikely, the report concludes, and traffickers turning to fentanyls, nitazenes and orphines would be “essentially reshaping global illicit opioid markets.”

History’s most effective supply-side intervention, delivered by an insurgency the drug war was never designed to produce, may end up pushing the world toward far deadlier drugs.

The second earthquake was the fall of Bashar al-Assad in late 2024, which dismantled what had effectively become a narco-state. Syria’s captagon industry, an amphetamine trade researchers valued in the billions of dollars annually, dwarfing the country’s legal exports, grew under regime protection and serviced markets across the Gulf. “The stimulant was used on the battlefield but also found a market in the wider region,” the report notes.

Since December 2024, Syria’s new authorities have dismantled 16 mostly industrial-scale laboratories, and panicked operators dumping stockpiles drove a surge in seizures. The price of a captagon tablet in Lebanon more than doubled, from $2–3 to $5–7.

Methamphetamine is moving into the space captagon left behind. In Saudi Arabia it has taken root among former captagon users and now ranks among the country’s three most used drugs; in Iraq and Türkiye it has become the leading drug of concern in treatment. The two drugs share a precursor chemical, and in 2024 Iraqi authorities dismantled a laboratory in Sulaymaniyah province producing both.

The numbers nobody is counting

People under 25 years of age among people in drug treatment, 2024.

The report’s data has major gaps. It is built on what governments report to Vienna, and much of the world reports little.

The toxicology data behind direct-death estimates come from 66 countries, roughly a third of UN member states, and mostly wealthy ones with functioning death registries. The estimate that one in four people who inject drugs is a woman rests on data from 23 countries.

For amphetamines, one of the world’s most used drug classes, the report concedes the global trend “cannot be calculated” for lack of data. In Africa and Asia, home to billions, data scarcity “prevents a clear understanding” of cocaine use and makes adolescent trends impossible to assess.

The undercounting cuts both ways in time: if some of the decade’s recorded rise in use is simply better counting, the past was darker than the old numbers showed, and the half-million death toll is likely a floor.

“A global map, no matter how detailed, will never fully capture the texture of local realities on the ground,” Juma said at the launch.

Punishment over care

People in the criminal justice system for drug offences, 2024.

Some 5.9 million people came into formal contact with police for drug offences in 2024, 63% of them for possession or personal use. Of 2.2 million people convicted worldwide, more than half were convicted for using drugs or possessing them.

The link between drugs and crime “is best understood as probabilistic rather than deterministic,” the report finds. “Many intoxicated people do not display violent behaviour.”

Civil society groups seized on those numbers at the report’s launch, telling member states that people who use drugs should be “supported and not punished.” Amnesty International used the same week to demand that UN drug control bodies act against the death penalty for drug offences, which it says continues to be applied unlawfully in a string of countries.

Poverty, homelessness and poor mental health, not drug use itself, are the strongest predictors of violence and insecurity, the report’s security chapter concludes, and “the worst security and safety outcomes are avoided when there is sufficient availability of health and social care interventions, including evidence-based drug treatment.”

Its prescription is treatment where there is none, pain relief where it is absent, prevention aimed at the young, and responses “grounded in evidence, centred on people and tailored to local contexts.”

“Only by combining public health, justice and security approaches can we reduce harm, save lives and build safer, healthier and more resilient societies,” Juma wrote.

Image Credits: Fatima Shahid.

HPV vaccination of school girls in Malawi.  The WHO set an ambitious goal of having 90% of girls vaccinated against HPV by 2030. Regionalized vaccines can help meet that target faster.

HPV vaccines have transformed cervical cancer prevention, but the next generation of vaccines must better reflect regional disease patterns, including the HPV35 genotype prevalent in Africa.  

The recent WHO Global Status Report on Cancer paints a sobering picture. Among the many challenges, human papillomavirus, or HPV, is one of the world’s most serious infectious causes of cancer.

Cervical cancer kills hundreds of thousands of women each year, with the greatest burden falling on lower-income countries and regions where screening and treatment are less accessible. Yet much of this disease is preventable. HPV vaccination, combined with screening and treatment, gives the world a credible path toward the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem. But elimination efforts will not be equitable or effective if the vaccines available to the highest-burden populations are not designed around the HPV types driving disease in those populations.

 The first HPV vaccines focused on a small number of the most important cancer-causing HPV types. The current 9-valent vaccines have expanded protection and increased potential impact. But HPV genotypes are not distributed evenly across regions. In parts of Africa, particularly southern Africa, the HPV35 genotype appears to be an important contributor to cervical cancer, and disproportionately affects people living with HIV. Yet the HPV vaccines currently used in Africa are not specifically tailored to HPV35. Equity requires more than access to any HPV vaccine; it requires vaccines that are appropriate to the disease patterns of the populations most affected.

Incidence of the HPV 35 genotype, in light turquoise, is significantly higher in Africa than elsewhere in the world.

Beyond the universal vaccine model

HPV genotypes covered by current vaccines and percentage contribution in invasive cervical cancer.

The default answer in vaccine development has often been to aim for a universal product: one vaccine composition, many countries, and broad coverage. This approach has obvious advantages: easier production, regulation, procurement and introduction into national immunization programs. But universality is not always optimal. More valencies are not automatically better if they do not include the types that matter most in a specific region. That is why a more regionally-tailored approach to HPV vaccine design deserves serious attention.

For Africa, that could mean prioritizing a vaccine that includes HPV35, rather than assuming that the best next product must be a high-valency vaccine designed for every market at once. For other regions, the composition might look different. The principle is straightforward: vaccine design should be guided by the disease burden in the population that will use it.

This is not an argument against broad-spectrum HPV vaccines, but for asking what protection is needed, where, and for whom, and then building the scientific, manufacturing and regulatory pathways that allow those needs to be met.

Start with better evidence

global cervical cancer mortality heat map
Low and middle income countries experience the highest burden of deaths from cervical cancer – with Africa having the highest rates in 2024.

The first requirement is better surveillance. We need better data on HPV genotype distribution across regions, especially in places where cervical cancer incidence and mortality are high. Better surveillance would show where HPV35 and other genotypes are driving disease, making vaccine composition more responsive to disease burden rather than market assumptions.

The second requirement is a manufacturing model that can support regional priorities. Much of the HPV vaccine market has been shaped by large multinational manufacturers. More recently, Indian and Chinese manufacturers have shown growing interest in HPV vaccines, including multivalent products. This is welcome. More suppliers can improve affordability, security of supply and access.

But the regional approach also intersects with the post-COVID-19 push for local manufacturing, particularly in Africa.  Efforts to expand African vaccine manufacturing raise a practical question: what sustained public health products should that capacity produce? A regionally relevant HPV vaccine, including HPV35 where appropriate, could provide a practical use case for building durable manufacturing capacity.

Turning regional priorities into viable products

A new 14-valent jab under development would be the first to cover HPV35.  But more regionally tailored vaccines might be an even better answer – rather than assuming that the best next product must be a high-valency vaccine designed for every market at once.

This will require a clear pathway to be put into place: clear demand signals, priority product profiles, procurement commitments, risk-sharing finance and well-defined regulatory requirements. Here, immunogenicity becomes key. Regulators and developers should work toward allowing immune response data to serve as a surrogate for protection, where scientifically justified. If a vaccine candidate induces an immune response comparable to that seen with existing, protective HPV vaccines, and if the manufacturing quality is robust, this could provide a more feasible route to approval. The regulatory question is how to define the evidence package clearly so developers can invest with confidence.

Manufacturing quality will remain essential. Any regional or locally manufactured HPV vaccine must meet rigorous standards for good manufacturing practice, consistency, validation and quality control. Regionalization cannot become a euphemism for second-tier products. The goal is exactly the opposite: high-quality vaccines designed around the needs of the people who will receive them.

Three priorities for the future 

HPV vaccination coverage by region as of 2024. Africa has moved faster than several other regions – but regionally adapted vaccines would be even more effective.

The future of HPV vaccination should therefore move on three tracks at once.

First, scale up what we already have. Too many girls and young people still do not have access to HPV vaccination. The immediate priority remains expanding coverage through increased financing, procurement, delivery, community trust, and integration into national immunization programs.

Second, improve the evidence base. Better genotype surveillance, especially in Africa and other high-burden settings, should guide future vaccine composition. HPV35 should be treated as a serious priority for Africa.

Third, create a development pathway for regionally appropriate vaccines. That means aligning manufacturers, governments, regulators, funders and public health agencies around realistic product strategies, including African manufacturing capacity where appropriate.

A smarter and more equitable approach

In Dwazark Community, Freetown, Sierra Leone, students at St. Augustine School receive the HPV vaccine to protect against cervical cancer.

The world has an opportunity to be more ambitious and more practical at the same time. HPV vaccines have already shown what prevention can do. The next step is to make sure that vaccine innovation is smarter: driven by the goals of equity and impact, grounded in regional disease patterns, supported by sustainable production, and enabled by rigorous regulatory pathways that are not unnecessarily slow.

 Cervical cancer elimination also requires education, infrastructure, screening, treatment, political will and financing. But vaccine design is key. If HPV35 is helping drive cervical cancer in parts of Africa, future HPV vaccines for Africa should be designed accordingly. The right to health demands more than access to any vaccine; it requires access to prevention tools that are effective, high quality and appropriate to the people and places where the burden is greatest.

 

Dr Marco Cavaleri, Head of Public Health Threats, European Medicines Agency.

 

Image Credits: Nadia Marini/MSF , Wei F, et al, The Lancet, August 3, 2024, Murahwa et al, Reviews in Medical Virology, 33 March 2026, IARC/WHO, HPV World , WHO, Gavi.

Photograph of the University of Texas at El Paso campus (USA) taken on 6 March 2025.

Record-breaking dust storms sent pollution levels soaring in China and the US-Mexico border region in 2025, disrupting transport, shutting schools and airports, and sending thousands to emergency rooms, according to a new World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report.

Overall, average dust concentrations in 2025 were similar to the previous year, but the regional extremes were severe, the WMO Airborne Dust Bulletin found. It is the tenth in the annual series.

Around 2,000 million tonnes of dust enter the atmosphere each year, with dust storms now affecting more than 150 countries forcing schools, highways and airports to shut down.

“More than 80% of [global dust] originates from the North African and Middle Eastern deserts and can be transported for hundreds and even thousands of kilometres across continents and oceans,” WMO said. “Much of this is a natural process, but poor water and land management, drought and environmental degradation are increasingly to blame.”

The report also lands during a summer of extreme heat around the globe. June 2026 was western Europe’s hottest June on record and the second-warmest June globally, at 1.39°C above the pre-industrial 1850–1900 average, according to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

While dust storms are known to worsen air quality, so do heatwaves. When combined, they are a recipe for disaster, previous WMO reports show

“Sand and dust storms affect air quality and human health. They reduce agricultural productivity, disrupt transport and aviation, strain water and energy systems, and damage ecosystems. No country is immune to their impacts,” said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.

Natural process worsened by environmental degradation

Anomaly of the annual mean surface dust concentration (in μg m–3) in 2025 relative to the 1981–2010 mean.

Dust and dust storms are a natural process. Major deserts such as the Sahara in Africa, the Gobi in Asia, and the Arabian Desert in the Middle East are the largest sources of dust. Dust is known to travel across countries and continents.

The highest annual mean dust concentrations worldwide remained centred on the Bodélé Depression in Chad, one of the world’s most active dust source regions.

North Africa and the Middle East were hit by a series of major storms between March and May 2025 that harmed air quality and reduced visibility across the region.

In mid-April, a cold front crossing Iraq created hazardous conditions that shut down several airports and resulted in nearly 4,000 people seeking treatment at emergency rooms for respiratory problems, the bulletin said.

A late-April storm in Egypt was more intense still, with visibility in affected areas dropping to just 300 metres, forcing the government to suspend school and university classes.

In East Asia, dust swept from Mongolia across most of China from 10 to 14 April in the country’s most extensive sand and dust storm in a decade, ranked by intensity, reach and duration, WMO said.

The desert border region of Mexico and the United States saw exceptionally frequent, intense and prolonged storms. El Paso, Texas experienced 50 days of dust weather in 2025, more than double the annual average as its 12 dust storms were the most since 1935, at the height of the Dust Bowl.

At the storms’ peak, dust conditions ran for more than six hours — the longest such period in Texas in at least 25 years — with hourly dust pollution readings at the highest measured in the state since hourly monitoring began.

Schools, highways and airports closed, public events were postponed, and blowing dust contributed to multiple fatal road accidents, including a multi-fatality chain-reaction crash at Lordsburg Playa in New Mexico, one of the deadliest stretches of highway in the country for dust.

WMO hopes that having more data and deploying Artificial Intelligence (AI) models will help countries prepare better for dust storms. 

“Because sand and dust storms and droughts do not respect borders, international cooperation is essential,” Saulo said  “Strengthening shared observations, data exchange, and regional forecasting capacity allows all countries, especially the most vulnerable, to benefit from advances in science and early warning.”