EU climate monitor Copernicus maps highlight severe extreme weather and heatwaves across Europe in May 2026.
EU climate monitor Copernicus maps highlight severe extreme weather and heatwaves across Europe in May 2026.

Following a severe May heatwave, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued new global guidelines on Thursday in Berlin to accelerate climate adaptation and structurally overhaul health systems and urban spaces.

Over the past four years, extreme heat has claimed more than 200,000 lives across Europe, positioning it as the deadliest climate-related hazard. As new climate data reveals, global warming was pushed to 1.37°C above pre-industrial levels in 2025 – and is expected to breach the critical 1.5°C threshold within four years. WHO estimates the annual regional death toll could reach 120,000 by 2050 without effective intervention.

“Europe is warming faster than any other continent, and we are paying for it in lives,” said Dr Hans Henri Kluge, director of the WHO’s European Region (WHO/EURO), presenting the updated guidelines for Heat-Health Action Plans.

Rather than treating heatwaves as isolated emergencies, the updated WHO framework urges governments to fundamentally redesign their cities, workplaces and health systems. S

tructured around eight core elements – governance, warning systems, populations at risk, communication, resilience, reducing heat exposure, surveillance, and evaluation – the new approach shifts toward urgent, practical interventions that actively reduce thermal exposure across society.

Redesigning for cooler cities

From left to right: press spokesperson Christopher Stolzenberg, Berlin Senator for Health Dr Ina Czyborra, German Federal Environment Minister Carsten Schneider, and WHO Regional Director for Europe Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge.
From left to right: press spokesperson Christopher Stolzenberg, Berlin Senator for Health Dr Ina Czyborra, German Federal Environment Minister Carsten Schneider, and WHO Regional Director for Europe Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge.

Urban landscapes currently amplify extreme heat through dense infrastructure and heat-absorbing materials. “Large, densely built-up cities are particularly vulnerable to the dangers of summer heat,” noted Berlin Senator for Health Ina Czyborra at the launch.

To counter this, city planners are urged to embrace the “sponge-city” principle, replacing concrete with permeable surfaces, expanding tree canopies, and utilizing reflective materials to disperse accumulated heat. Beyond city limits, preserving natural ecosystems such as moors, forests, and floodplains provides a vital cooling buffer that actively retains water in the landscape for broader metropolitan areas.

“Nature can help us combat the heat if we let it,” emphasised German Federal Environment Minister Carsten Schneider.

Protecting workers and patients

WHO's Dr Kluge warns of the dangers of extreme heat.
WHO’s Dr Kluge warns of the dangers of extreme heat.

As extreme temperatures drive patient surges and disrupt supply chains, the updated WHO guidelines urge health administrators to build structural resilience and implement robust heat-health surveillance to track real-time morbidity. This includes backup power for cooling systems, protecting temperature-sensitive medication, and safeguarding digital infrastructure from heat-induced failures.

Simultaneously, the framework mandates that employers implement strict occupational protections to shield frontline medical staff, construction workers, and agricultural labourers from severe heat stress. Employers face new directives to enforce mandatory acclimatisation periods, provide shaded rest areas, and adapt personal protective equipment.

Crucially, the guidance states that supervisors must establish clear communication channels that empower workers to halt unsafe labour and seek immediate medical help without fear of reprisal.

Ensuring equitable survival

Because extreme heat disproportionately targets the isolated, the elderly, and the economically disadvantaged, WHO insists that survival cannot depend on individual resources alone.

The new guidance mandates that local authorities formally map vulnerable populations and link this data directly to heat-health warning systems, ensuring that official alerts instantly trigger targeted outreach, including proactive home visits and wellness checks during thermal spikes.

The framework also calls for public health messaging campaigns to be co-designed with affected communities to guarantee inclusivity and cultural relevance. Consequently, health authorities are instructed to utilize diverse dissemination channels to ensure that life-saving advice reaches transient populations, undocumented migrants, and those lacking digital literacy.

The cost of resilience

EU Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra discusses resilience.
EU Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra discusses resilience.

While the guidelines provide a clear roadmap for adaptation, executing this transformation requires authorities to explicitly identify sustainable financing mechanisms and establish embedded monitoring, evaluation, and learning systems to track their effectiveness.

As European Commissioner for Climate Wopke Hoekstra noted in his foreword, “The evidence is clear: investing in emission reductions is far cheaper than paying for climate damage.”

Yet, this remains a profound challenge amid the ongoing war in Ukraine and strained European government budgets due to increased defence spending.

Addressing questions on expiring adaptation funds during the Berlin launch, Schneider acknowledged the “poor financial situation” currently complicating national budget negotiations.

With even a wealthy economy like Germany struggling to secure this funding, the pressing question arises: which states and cities will actually be able to facilitate the investments urgently needed to prevent deaths from extreme heat and yield those future returns.

El Niño Conditions Will Lead to More Heatwaves, Droughts and Wildfires Over Next Few Months, Warns WMO

Image Credits: Luis Graterol via Unsplash, EU/Copernicus, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW.

A community health worker administers an HIV test. HIV experts are concerned about the drop in HIV testing since the US cut its funding.

Precipitous aid cuts are casting a huge shadow over the United Nations High-Level Meeting (HLM) on HIV on 22-23 June, with new research indicating that some countries could face almost total cuts in aid from the United States by 2030.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned last week that the world is far from achieving the 2025 targets set out in the Political Declaration adopted at the last HLM on HIV in 2021.

The 95-95-95 targets involve ensuring that 95% of people with HIV know their status; 95% of people with HIV are on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment, and 95% of those on ARVs are virally suppressed. 

“At the end of 2024, 9.2 million people could not access HIV treatment; there were 630,000 AIDS-related deaths (double the 2025 target); and 1.3 million people acquired HIV (3.5 times the 2025 target),” warned Guterres.

There is a global commitment to end HIV by 2030, but the lack of funds will impact the ambitions of the new Political Declaration, currently being negotiated ahead of the HLM.

Ahead of the HLM, HIV civil society organisations have called for “innovative financing mechanisms” including debt-relief instruments, refinancing of debt, health taxes, and better public financing management to address the funding gap.

US and Global Fund slash aid

Despite the 95-95-95 targets for 2025 not being met, progress was a steady 87-77-73 in 2024, according to UNAIDS – but then Donald Trump became president of the US in January 2025 and set about slashing global aid for health.

In 2024, the US and the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria together financed roughly 86% of all donor funding for HIV.  

In western and central Africa, 90% of treatment funding comes from external donors, while prevention programmes in sub-Saharan Africa rely on 80% external funding, according to UNAIDS.

The Trump administration plans to cut HIV funding to recipient countries by between 42% and 97% by 2030, according to a memorandum released this week by the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI). 

CHAI’s analysis is based primarily on data from 11 countries across sub-Saharan Africa and Asia that are home to approximately 25% of people living with HIV globally, and figures published by the US State Department.

The US has already excluded South Africa, the country with the biggest HIV positive population in the world, from any HIV funding based on political disputes.

The Global Fund – facing its own donor demise – is also cutting funding.

KFF analysis of US and Global Fund cuts

A wider analysis of 29 countries points to a decline in combined aid from the US and the Global Fund of some $4.3 billion (24%) through 2029, according to KFF. The US will reduce its aid by 29% and the Global Fund by 15%, respectively. 

KFF’s figures are based largely on the Memorandums of Agreement (MOU) signed between the Trump administration and 29 countries in terms of the America First Global Health Strategy. 

Funding in these 29 countries is estimated to decline from $11.3 billion (2024-2026) to $8 billion between 2027 and 2029 (a 29% decline).  

Countries facing the biggest cuts are Uganda ($370 million), Mozambique ($356 million), Nigeria ($280 million), and Malawi ($252 million), according to KFF. 

Reductions range from 1% in Honduras (off a very low base) to 82% in Senegal, with 12 countries experiencing reductions of 50% or more, KFF notes.

“In addition to these funding reductions, countries also face co-financing requirements, which could intensify fiscal impacts while offsetting some of the effects of the reductions on global health programs,” KFF notes.

Strain on domestic budgets

CHAI points out that in some of the 11 countries it engaged with, the combined co-financing requirements in their five-year MOUs with the US “exceed projected domestic health spending”.

Some areas of the HIV response face “major reductions”. Funding for frontline healthcare workers is projected to decline by 27-96% by 2028, and laboratory services funding declines by up to 66% over five years, depending on the country. 

“Governments are expected to absorb these costs over time, raising urgent questions about whether countries have the fiscal capacity to sustain essential HIV services,” CHAI notes.

Almost 41 million people are living with HIV, and 1.3 million people were infected with HIV in 2024, according to UNAIDS, which will release comprehensive global figures on Friday.

Impact on services

Impact of aid cuts on HIV services (Clinton Health Access Initiative).

HIV testing has dropped 12%, there are 15% fewer babies being initiated on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment and the total number of children on ARVs fell 11%, with 26,000 fewer children on treatment across nine countries, according to CHAI.

In addition, the number of people initiating pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) – ARVs taken by people at high risk of HIV to prevent transmission – has dropped by 42%.

“National-level data show declines across most key HIV service indicators, with little to no recovery to date,” the CHAI memo notes, contradicting upbeat claims of progress against HIV made by US State Department officials. 

This follows the closure of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), a key implementer of HIV support, and the reorganisation of the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) under the State Department.

“Following the initial disruption, the US introduced short-term bridge funding to keep essential HIV programs running through early 2026, but at roughly 40% less than the same period in 2024,” CHAI reports.

Silver lining: Lenacapavir

Members of the government of Eswatini, including Prime Minister Russell Dlamini (right) and Minister of Health Mduduzi Matsebula (centre), during the lenacapavir introduction ceremony at Hhukwini Clinic near Mbabane.

Despite the grim financial outlook, HIV advocates view the rollout of Lenacapavir, an injection given twice a year that almost completely prevents HIV transmission, as the most hopeful tool to end HIV.

“The innovations to transform prevention are within reach at the very moment they are needed most,” said Carolyn Amole, CHAI’s vice president for HIV, Hepatitis, and TB.

“The first [lenacapavir] injections were given in December and more than 20,000 people have now received their first injection. Last Friday in South Africa, the country with the largest global burden of HIV, President Cyril Ramaphosa officially launched lenacapavir to a nation fervently anticipating its arrival. 

“Generic entry is expected by early 2027, and pricing agreements have brought the cost to $40 per person per year. The US government and Global Fund have raised their combined procurement commitment to three million person-years.”

Image Credits: Sydelle Willow Smith/ UNAIDS, Flickr, KFF, Karin Hatzold /PSI..

Image Credits: Africa CDC , Africa CDC .

Africa CDC staff on the ground in the DRC to assist with the Ebola outbreak (May 2026).

As the Bundibugyo Virus Disease (BVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda reached 608 confirmed cases and 102 deaths, global health leaders called for “an end to the cycle of panic and neglect” in response to disease outbreaks.

Describing the Ebola outbreak as a “preventable disaster”, the leaders have written an open letter to governments calling on them to “make decisions that will prevent and stop infectious disease outbreaks from killing people, draining economies and further fraying societal trust”.

The letter is headlined by the four bodies involved in critical oversight of global pandemics: The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, Global Preparedness Monitoring Board, Panel for a Global Public Health Convention and the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics. It is also signed by key global health leaders.

Not ready for next pandemic

Despite 22 million people dying during the COVID-19 pandemic, the subsequent mpox, hantavirus and Ebola outbreaks have shown that the world is “not ready for a new pandemic threat”, the letter notes.

It points to the stalled Pandemic Agreement talks, the lack of new national outbreak and pandemic plans, and the world’s failure to “come close” to meeting the $15 billion per year needed for pandemic prevention and preparedness.

“There was a pledge to have diagnostics, vaccines and treatments ready within 100 days of a new threat being identified (100 Days Mission) – and while there has been progress, for Bundibugyo, that will not happen,” they note.

“At a time when humanity can sequence pathogens in hours, develop vaccines in months, and deploy artificial intelligence across entire economies, the world already has many of the tools it needs. 

“The question is whether leaders will choose to invest in and use them. We can no longer accept this cycle of panic and neglect.”

UN High-Level Meeting on pandemics

The upcoming United Nations High-Level Meeting on Pandemic Preparedness in September has been set for the last Friday of the UN General Assembly week –  “when many heads of state and government have already left New York, and those who remain have their minds on flights home”, the letter notes.

Nonetheless, it calls on world leaders to finalise and ratify the Pandemic Agreement “as rapidly as possible and implement it”. The next round of talks begins again on 6 July.  

They also call for “fair, predictable, and accessible financing for sustained prevention and preparedness investment, including for the 100 Days Mission, and for rapid emergency deployment when threats emerge”. 

Implementing a One Health approach and establishing an outbreak and pandemic risk and readiness monitoring framework are also urgently needed, they note.

Ebola: lack of resources, access and trust

Members of the Red Cross bury people who have died of Ebola in Ituri province in the DRC, guarded by military personnel after attacks on a treatment facility for Ebola patients.

Meanwhile, the lack of resources, access and community trust is severely hampering attempts to end the Ebola outbreak in the DRC and Uganda, according to a media release by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday.

On Monday, 45 new cases had been confirmed, all in the DRC’s Ituri province. Uganda’s case load remains at 19, with all cases linked to the DRC outbreak.

“The epidemic curve shows intense transmission, with a peak in late May. Contact tracing is uneven, with follow-up rates ranging from 78% in Bunia to 0% in some health zones, weakening containment efforts,” said the Africa CDC.

“The response is facing significant operational constraints. Health facilities in several affected areas are in poor condition and often lack potable water, incinerators, personal protective equipment and decontamination supplies,” it notes.

“Poor roads, insecurity and shortages of ambulances and hearses are slowing access and response operations. Staffing pressures are also growing, with some health workers unpaid or without incentives.”

Describing community trust as a “critical challenge”, Africa CDC said that misinformation and a viral audio message following the death of a doctor have fuelled people’s “fear and distrust of treatment centres”. 

Misinformation ranges from disbelief that Ebola exists to fears that people are being deliberately infected, according to Deutsche Welle.

“The immediate priorities are to strengthen community engagement and risk communication, fast-track multidisciplinary rapid response teams to high-risk areas, close infection prevention and safe burial gaps, improve surveillance and contact follow-up, and secure safe access for medical teams in insecure areas,” noted Africa CDC.

The European Union Commission (EU) announced on Monday that it has committed €11.5 million to support Africa CDC’s response to the Ebola outbreak.  

This includes €6.5 million to strengthen the Africa Pathogen Genomics Initiative, to help equip frontline teams train healthcare workers and improve surveillance through diagnostics and in-kind contribution of €5 million worth of testing equipment, including rapid diagnostic devices and lab test kits, to be deployed quickly where they are needed most.

Image Credits: Africa CDC, AP.

A young boy with type 1 diabetes gets his blood glucose level tested. Such new tests aren’t readily available in many countries.

The Global Diabetes Compact aims to improve diagnosis, care, and access to life-saving medications for those with diabetes. Already, countries in high-burden regions have improved along these key metrics. But as the number of people living with diabetes is projected to increase nearly 50% globally by 2050, much more needs to be accomplished. 

In a Toronto hospital 105 years ago, scientists racing against the clock injected a 14-year-old boy dying from diabetes with insulin. Leonard Thompson’s dangerously high blood glucose levels dropped to within normal levels–becoming the first person to receive a dose of the hormone–the result of medical innovations and decades of research. 

Despite this breakthrough over a century ago, some 40 million people still lack access to the life-saving medication, mostly in low-and-middle income countries. The South-East Asian region alone requires 170 million vials of insulin each year, yet with the least costly human insulin options ranging from $6 to $20 per vial, the medicine still remains unaffordable for the most vulnerable. 

“Science gave us insulin, and more than a century later, we still owe its promise to millions of people,” said Dr Catharina Boehme, officer-in-charge of the World Health Organizattion’s South-East Asia Regional Office. “And five years ago, the Global Diabetes Compact (GDC) was created to fulfil this promise and give what we owe people with diabetes.”

She was speaking at an event Monday on the margins of the World Health Assembly, marking five years since the Member State body endorsed the Global Diabetes Compact

The landmark WHO initiative aims to ensure several key diabetes targets by 2030. These include 80% diagnosis coverage of people with diabetes and 80% of those diagnosed have good control of glycaemia and blood pressure. The Compact also aims for 60% of people with diabetes 40 years or older to receive statins, and that 100% of people with type 1 diabetes have access to affordable insulin and blood glucose monitoring.

global diabetes compact goals
The Global Diabetes Compact marks several firsts for targets on diabetes diagnosis and control.

‘Brilliant’ goals

“Even if they sparked debate, they are brilliant goals,” said Professor Peter Schwarz, president of the International Diabetes Federation

He and other leaders in the global diabetes community gathered in Geneva to mark the fifth anniversary of the Global Diabetes Compact.

In particular, he is pleased that the Compact includes a target  that 100% of people worldwide with type 1 diabetes have access to affordable insulin and blood glucose self-monitoring by 2030. The present state of play, in which an estimated 43% of people with diabetes remain undiagnosed and without insulin, is a “severe ethical issue,” he observed. 

In the five years since the Compact was launched, awareness of the needs and access gaps is ”improving worldwide,” declared Schwarz, whose organisation, along with other civil society actors and WHO, acts as a voice for the global diabetes community. By 2030, he hopes to see big leaps forward in the implementation of the access goals. 

“We’ve succeeded in gathering stakeholders around a common agenda,” said Dr Bianca Hemmingsen, the WHO’s technical lead on the project. This means convening a diverse group of people in civil society groups, people living with diabetes, and governments. 

Hemmingsen was speaking at this week’s anniversary event staged in a modest garden cafe along a well-trod path between WHO and the Palais des Nations, where formal WHA debates are taking place.

A young patient with diabetes attends a check-up in Kigali, Rwanda.

‘First’ for global diabetes coverage targets 

The Compact marks the first time there has ever been global diabetes coverage targets and a clear operational agenda for access to essential diabetes medicines and technologies. 

The progress so far has included the progressive inclusion of comparatively newer insulin analogues into the WHO Essential Medicines List (EML) alongside human insulin, the backbone of treatment since that landmark discovery a century ago. The EML is a compilation of drugs which guides countries on treatments to include in national health services. Last year, the popular drug class GLP-1, which supports type 2 diabetes management, was also added to the EML.  

And in May, WHO invited manufacturers to submit generic versions of semaglutide and rapid-acting insulin products for review and approval in its prequalification process. The calls, following on from the inclusion of other insulin products over the past seven years, is part of a broader initiative to increase access to diabetes care in lower-and-middle income countries.

Since the GDC, there has also been stronger integration of diabetes services in primary health care in places like India. But even as the diabetes burden grows, most low- and middle-income countries have yet to integrate diagnosis and care into primary health care systems, and ensure access to treatment for the hundreds of millions of people who are living with diabetes without knowing it.  

A century after insulin discovery

Diabetes
The proportion of adults with undiagnosed diabetes, as per the latest data by the International Diabetes Federation.

The genesis of the Compact began during the COVID-19 pandemic in the lead-up to the 100th anniversary of the discovery of insulin – truly a “gift from science,” as Dr Bente Mikkelsen, World Diabetes Foundation board member and former WHO director for Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs) described it. 

But it took months of concerted effort by WHO and IDF, the World Diabetes Foundation, and other civil society groups to generate sufficient political momentum towards member state commitment of the Global Diabetes Compact.

Until very recently, the overwhelming focus in low- and middle-income countries has been  infectious disease killers like malaria, HIV/AIDS and TB, as well as neglected tropical diseases – although noncommunicable diseases increasingly represent a ‘double burden.’ 

The fact that diabetes is a complicated NCD to diagnose and treat made it an even bigger challenge, Schwarz said. “It’s not like with many infectious diseases, where you can provide a singular vaccine.” 

Critical moment for moving ahead 

Mikkelsen, who was head of the WHO’s NCD Department when the GDC was first approved, said she is “incredibly excited” to see the initiative live beyond the initial stage of the resolution’s approval and further into the implementation phase.

Bente Mikkelsen, former WHO director, Noncommunicable Diseases.

The anniversary comes at a crucial moment. The most recent WHO estimates hold that more than 830 million adults were living with diabetes in 2022. Although IDF has a more conservative estimate of 589 million, Schwarz attributes the differences to discrepancies between researchers in their definition of diabetes. Moreover, he believes that both are, in fact, underestimates of the true proportion of cases.  

Either way, the burden is particularly worrisome in lower-and-middle income countries, where 90% of the people with undiagnosed cases live.

Dr Bianca Hemmingsen Global Diabetes Compact
Bianca Hemmingsen, technical lead for WHO’s Diabetes Programme, at the fifth anniversary of the GDC.

And in terms of insulin production, while the number of generic producers has increased over the past few years, the world’s leading manufacturers have also begun to discontinue key products. Sanofi discontinued a line of its human insulin Insuman® in 2023, and more recently, Novo Nordisk will be withdrawing its Levemir® insulin. 

This worries WHO. As cases accelerate, the actual proportion of people able to access insulin products worldwide appears to be lagging. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), the authoritative body for global disease burden estimates, found only a single-digit percentage point increase in the number of people receiving diabetes care globally. 

Misdiagnoses, data gaps, and social stigma

insulin pens in egypt
An Egyptian village’s stash of insulin pens and glucose monitors- some of which comes from overseas donations.

Fundamental barriers to diabetes care and diagnosis continue to distort the true picture of the condition. For instance, data on the prevalence of type 1 diabetes, which is effectively an autoimmune disorder inhibiting the body from producing insulin, may appear much lower in the Global South. But this could be due to data gaps, Schwarz believes: 

“The prevalence appears much lower compared to the Global North. But when the health system improves, the prevalence increases to about the same levels as in Europe, the US and Middle America.

“The assumption is that children are dying young–they are not being diagnosed and not surviving to adulthood. We don’t have numbers or statistics to address this tragedy. This, again, is an ethical failure,” he said, expressing hope that in the coming years, more harmonized diabetes definitions, better access to diagnostics and health worker training can help change these hard realities. 

The stigma of diabetes and its risk factors – and sometimes lack thereof – also presents a challenge for quality patient care. In parts of Africa, for example, an obese person may often be perceived as someone without HIV (which untreated is associated with weight loss), which carries a larger stigma than obesity. “This is why education is such a key issue here,” said Schwarz. 

The lack of structured education is compounded by a lack of access to basic medicines like insulin, diagnostic tools, and logistical challenges like insulin storage.

Caring for the entire patient

A patient has his blood pressure tested. Experts gathered at the five-year anniversary of the GDC called for increased integration of diabetes control into primary care.

“It’s not just about high blood pressure or diabetes, it’s about the people living with these conditions,” said Dr Tom Frieden, president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives and a former CDC director. With an increasing number of innovations in chronic disease care–including SGLT-2 inhibitors and the hugely popular GLP-1 drugs–Frieden argued for collaboration to “get the basics right.” 

Yet the popularity of these innovations–especially for weight-loss in high-income countries–is in stark contrast with the lack of access to medicines in the rest of the world. 

A mere 1% of diabetes care investment is directed to the African region, IDF data reveals. The group predicts a more than 140% increase in the number of people living with diabetes by 2050, reaching 60 million people. Of all regions, the proportion of undiagnosed diabetes is also highest in Africa at an estimated 72.6%.

“Political ambition and commitment and targets are hugely important to drive the agenda forward,” said Sanne Frost Helt, a senior director at the World Diabetes Foundation. “But they become meaningless if we don’t have action on the ground.”

South East Asia- on a ‘shocking trajectory’

Diabetes prevalence change
The country-level change in diabetes prevalence from 1990 to 2022 (women aged 18 and older above; men, below). Per the Lancet’s worldwide trends in diabetes prevalence.

South East Asia is a particular area of concern with diabetes. Boehme, of the WHO, described the increasing number of those living with diabetes in the region as on a “shocking trajectory.” Already, one in five adults in the region lives with diabetes, or roughly one-third of the global total.

The number of people with diabetes in the region – which includes India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, among others – is expected to reach 320 million by 2030, according to WHO projections. Even now, only one in three adults with diabetes in the region receive treatment – and less than 15% have their blood glucose levels adequately controlled. 

“Health systems are just not geared to tackling such a surge in diabetes,” warned Helt of the  World Diabetes Foundation. “Not from a prevention point of view, not from an early detection point of view, and not from a care perspective.”

‘Tremendous innovation’

Minya, Egypt, diabetes access
A father shows his son the continuous glucose monitor they both need in their home in Upper Egypt.

Yet despite this spiking trend, Boehme is hopeful about the future. 

She describes the “tremendous ambition and innovation” in the region, such as the SEAHEARTS initiative, which integrates cardiovascular disease and diabetes care into primary health care systems, and has already enroled 43.5 million patients across 180,000 health care facilities. 

The goal of the initiative is to place 100 million on protocol-based diabetes management by 2030, with 50 million achieving glycaemic control. 

The endorsement by WHO member states of a 2024 roadmap for strengthening diabetes prevention and control, the Colombo Call for Action, is another bright spot. It provides guidance for the region’s member states to reduce type 2 diabetes risks from factors such as unhealthy diet and physical inactivity, as well as expanding access to diagnosis and care.  

And at the country level, diabetes care and education are improving due both to top-down initiatives and grassroots advocates. For example, the World Diabetes Foundation is working with Bangladesh to recruit religious leaders in the predominantly Muslim country to raise awareness of diabetes and provide community support.

“People seek advice from Imams about all sorts of matters and trust them with personal and family issues. There is a great opportunity to seek the influence of Imams in creating community awareness about the prevention of diabetes and other NCDs,” said Dr Bishwajit Bhowmik from a World Diabetes Foundation partner organization. 

Boehme credits partnerships like these with creating a space for change for those living with diabetes: “[This] is an opportunity not only to celebrate five years of partnership, but to renew our shared commitment to delivering diabetes care at scale, for everyone who still lacks access today.” 

Image Credits: UC Davis health, WHO, G Lontro/ NCD Alliance, International Diabetes Federation , E. Fletcher/ HPW, E. Fletcher/HPW, S. Samantaroy/HPW, WHO/A. Loke, The Lancet.

The ‘Kick Big Soda Out’ movement wants FIFA to drop Coca-Cola’s sponsorship of the Football World Cup.

Ahead of the kick-off of the World Cup football tournament on Thursday, global health advocates are demanding that FIFA, the international football federation, ends its partnership with Coca-Cola by 2030. 

Coca-Cola has sponsored the FIFA World Cup, the world’s most-watched sporting tournament, since 1978. Its sponsorship agreement, which makes up about 2% of FIFA’s income, is up for review in 2030.

The “Kick Big Soda Out” movement has written to FIFA president Giovanni Infantino, demanding that the federation publicly commits to ending its sponsorship agreement with the Coca-Cola Company and establishes a partnership policy that excludes sponsorship by ultra-processed food and beverage companies from 2030 onward. 

“During the 2026 tournament, up to six billion fans – many of them children – will see marketing that links football’s biggest stars with sweetened beverages linked to obesity, Type 2 diabetes and other diet-related diseases,” the letter notes.

“This is sportswashing: using the power of football to normalise unhealthy products. Football deserves better. Fans deserve better. Forty years ago, FIFA stopped accepting dangerous tobacco advertising. Sweetened beverages deserve the same treatment.”

Excess sugar consumption is one of the key drivers of the rising rates of obesity, Type 2 diabetes and heart disease. Type 2 diabetes is one of the fastest-growing global health threats, with an estimated 537 million adults living with diabetes today.

In 2020 alone, 2.2 million new cases of Type 2 diabetes worldwide were attributed to consumption of sugary beverages, with the highest proportion of cases in young adults aged 20-30.

Obesity has more than doubled among adults and quadrupled among children and adolescents since 1990.

‘Flouting co-hosts’ national regulations’

The World Cup is co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, and all three co-hosts are battling to address the health impacts of rising consumption of sodas and ultra-processed food.

“Canada and Mexico have enacted front-of-package warning labels on products with excess sugar, salt and fat – and Mexico has led the way on health taxes on sweetened beverages, along with the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador,” according to a media release from Kick Big Soda Out.

“These measures reflect years of deliberate public health advocacy to curb consumption of the unhealthy products Coca-Cola markets to millions of fans, especially children.”

Coca-Cola’s prominent presence at the 2026 World Cup “flouts national regulations designed to protect public health”, undercutting the work that countries are doing to reduce sugar consumption and improve the health of their citizens.

Sportswashing

“Big Soda has perfected a singular con: exploiting the greatest athletic stages to sportswash a product linked to rising rates of diet-related disease,” said Sandra Mullin, senior vice president at Vital Strategies, which is leading the campaign.

“Big Tobacco was banned from major sporting events because sponsorship legitimised harm. Big Soda deserves the same treatment. The World Cup should not launder Big Soda’s image. It’s time to put people before profits.” 

Coca-Cola is also the leading plastic global polluter, followed by PepsiCo, Nestlé, Danone and Altria. Approximately 21-34 billion plastic bottles from nonalcoholic drinks are polluting the ocean every year, primarily from carbonated soft drinks and water.

Kick Big Soda Out has amassed over 522,000 supporters and the backing of 97 organisations since its launch during the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Coca-Cola is also the leading plastic global polluter, followed by PepsiCo, Nestlé, Danone and Altria. Approximately 21-34 billion plastic bottles from nonalcoholic drinks are polluting the ocean every year, primarily from carbonated soft drinks and water.

DNDi, GARDP and MMV have signed a cooperation agreement to maximise efforts to develop low-cost medicines for neglected diseases.

Three leading Geneva-based non-profit organisations involved in the research and development (R&D) of “effective, affordable, and life-saving medicines” are pooling resources to address the growing unmet needs of the world’s most vulnerable patients.

The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP), and Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) announced the cooperation agreement on Monday to explore how to pool “expertise and resources to strengthen the efficiency and coordination” of their activities.

The cooperation will focus particularly on R&D, but also on joint policy advocacy and communications to raise awareness of non-profit drug development models. 

“The need for medical innovation is greater than ever. In 2024, an estimated 282 million people contracted malaria, and 610,000 died from it. Nearly five million deaths a year are now associated with drug-resistant bacterial infections. More than one billion people are affected by neglected diseases each year,” the organisations note in a media release.

“Recent health crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the ongoing Ebola outbreak in Central Africa, are also stark reminders that many much-needed life-saving innovations, including therapeutics, do not exist – and when they do, they too often fail to reach the most vulnerable populations.”

‘Leaving no patient behind’

DNDi executive director Dr Luis Pizarro said: “The global health environment is changing fast, but patients’ unmet needs remain. In a rapidly shifting environment, closer, smarter, more agile collaboration is essential to deliver life-saving health tools for millions in urgent need.”

He invited other non-profit research organisations “committed to equitable access and leaving no patient behind” to join the collaboration to accelerate the development of life-saving treatments for patients who need them most. 

“At a time of growing antimicrobial resistance and shrinking global health resources, collaboration is no longer optional – it is essential,” said Dr Peter Beyer, deputy executive director of GARDP, which works on develoing new drugs to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

MMV CEO Dr Martin Fitchet said that “partnership and collaboration are essential to maximising global health impact”.

“By working more closely with DNDi and GARDP, we can accelerate patient-centred innovation and ensure that life-saving treatments reach those who need them most,” said Fitchet’s whose group has been developing new paediatric malaria drugs as well as new drug combinations to combat growing parasite resistance to existing malaria treatments.  See related story. 

Can We Win the Malaria Arms Race?

The organisations have already cooperated for several years. DNDi and GARDP have an established joint Chemistry, Manufacturing, and Controls (CMC) platform to share their know-how in the design, development and scale-up of manufacturing processes of active pharmaceutical ingredients and drug products. 

This year, DNDi and MMV also plan to launch a joint regulatory science platform to shorten registration timelines, strengthen their regulatory strategies, and accelerate equitable access to medicines through collaboration and shared knowledge.

Image Credits: DNDi.

New malaria medicines are on the way. But drug resistance is spreading across Africa, funding is collapsing, and the parasite that causes malaria is once again outrunning the tools built to kill it.

GENEVA – Malaria has adapted and evolved for at least 30 million years. The oldest identified samples of the parasite were found in mosquitoes preserved in amber, from a family of insects ancient enough to have shared the planet with the dinosaurs.

How many millions of people it has killed across the roughly 300,000 years our species has existed is uncountable. What we do know is how many people it is killing now.

In the quarter-century since reliable global figures counts emerged in 2000, malaria has killed more than 15 million people. Last year alone it killed more than 610,000 and infected an estimated 282 million others, according to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) annual malaria report.

Roughly nine in ten of the dead were in Africa, and three-quarters were children under the age of five.

“We are losing over 1,200, mainly children under the age of five, mainly on the African continent, every single day,” said Dr Michael Charles, chief executive of the RBM Partnership to End Malaria, at a side event hosted by Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) during this year’s World Health Assembly.

“We’re in the 21st century,” he added. “I think you’ll all agree with me that that is unacceptable.”

The fight to outsmart the parasite is an arms race modern medicine very nearly lost before. In the 1990s the parasite developed resistance to chloroquine, then the cheapest and most widely used treatment, sending deaths soaring to more than double previous levels to more than a million a year before a new class of medicines arrived.

MMV was founded out of that crisis. Now a well-resourced organisation with an established innovation pipeline, it is gearing up for the next phase of the fight. Genomic surveillance shows the drugs that replaced chloroquine are showing the first signs of failing, and the parasite is once more beginning to outrun the technology built to kill it.

“Malaria is not a static disease. It’s a disease where you’ve got a parasite – think about it as your foe or your enemy – that’s adapting continuously,” Martin Fitchet, CEO of MMV, told Health Policy Watch. “That’s why I call it an arms race, because they keep adapting to overwhelm the tools that we have. We have to keep innovating and stay ahead of the parasite to beat it.”

The warning signs of the incoming resistance crisis are loudest in Africa. In the largest review of malaria drug resistance to date, scientists at the Wellcome Sanger Institute noted that the continent carries 94% of the global burden, with more than 233 million cases a year. Should resistance there break the drugs in use, they wrote, the consequences “could be catastrophic.”

Beyond resistance, the world is also losing ground in the wider fight against the virus. The malaria death rate roughly halved between 2000 and 2015, then stopped falling. Case incidence has since crept up more than 8% since 2015, leaving the world far behind its goal of cutting cases and deaths by 90% by 2030.

For a disease that kills 600,000 people a year, “It’s a whole generation lost”, Fitchet said.

“We are in an arms race against the parasite,” he told the Geneva meeting. “We have to develop weapons against it before it can develop weapons against us.”

An arms race on a microscopic scale

The world has slowly woken up to the same threat in bacteria: antimicrobial resistance, the quiet erosion of antibiotics that killed an estimated 1.27 million people in 2019 and is now mentioned in the same breath as climate change as one of the century’s gravest health threats.

Drug resistance in malaria is that same problem as AMR but in a different organism, and it is moving faster than the response to it.

“It’s exactly the same concept,” Fitchet said, “but with a parasite instead of a bacteria.”

The drugs holding the line are artemisinin-based combination therapies, or ACTs, which pair a fast-acting artemisinin compound with a slower partner drug that clears the parasites it leaves behind.

The WHO has recommended them as the frontline treatment since 2006, and they still work across most of Africa. But surveillance is already detecting the parasite’s response.

“The genetic composition of the parasite is adapting rapidly, particularly across East Africa, from the Horn of Africa,” Fitchet said. At first, treated infections take longer to clear: “Then eventually,” he said, “the drugs become useless.”

Pressed on when the drugs might fail outright, Fitchet would not give a date, but stressed the medicines must be ready for when the day arrives to avoid a repeat of the millions of lives lost in the 1990s resistance crisis.

“I can’t tell you how long that will take for the parasite to overtake the treatments we have,” he said. “But we know it will come.”

The biology of how the parasite outmanoeuvres the drug is now well understood. Mutations in a gene called kelch13 blunt the artemisinin, and as more parasites survive, the pressure shifts onto the partner drug. Once resistance to that follows, the treatment will fail altogether.

In the Greater Mekong — the Southeast Asian region spanning Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar — combined resistance had pushed the failure rate of some ACTs to 50% by the mid-2010s.

The damage there was contained rather than catastrophic: transmission across Southeast Asia is far lower than in Africa, and governments responded by switching drugs and racing to wipe the parasite out of the region altogether before resistance could spread. Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam are now closing in on elimination.

Africa, which carries the overwhelming majority of the world’s malaria and far more intense transmission, has no such escape route if treatments fail – and the same genetic markers have surfaced independently in East Africa.

In Rwanda, studies estimate 40 to 50% of parasites already carry the resistance mutation, and a December modelling study found the continent tracking the path Asia took 10 to 15 years ago.

If the partner drugs fail there, the toll would dwarf anything Asia saw: one economic model put the cost of widespread artemisinin resistance at some 116,000 additional deaths a year.

“We’ve been investing and inventing and expending energy and effort, but we’re not getting any further up the escalator,” Fitchet said, “because the downward force is the resistance of the parasite.”

Push and pull

Resistance is also a threat to the institutions that pay for the fight, and to the unusual double role they play in it.

The Global Fund buys most of the world’s malaria drugs, which makes its budget both the money that pays for treatment today and the demand signal that tells companies a new drug will have a buyer worth developing it for.

“What do we do if the tools that we currently have in our toolbox don’t work anymore?” said Françoise Vanni, the Global Fund’s director of external relations. With conflict, displacement and weak health systems in the mix, she warned, resistance “can even go further and faster.”

She is bracing for the next set of figures, for 2025, which are not yet published. Vanni said she was “already terrified” about trends that “we don’t have yet, but are probably going keep growing.”

The fund is trying to pull those new drugs through, she said, deploying “access funds and volume guarantees” to “de-risk early adoption, reduce price barriers, and send stronger, more predictable demand signals.”

New weapons, old problem

Ugandan health workers on the ground implement a clinical trial for malaria treatments.

The drugs arriving and approaching the clinic are the most promising in a generation.

The most important is GanLum, a combination of the new compound ganaplacide and a reformulated version of lumefantrine, and the first non-artemisinin antimalarial in 25 years – built on a compound the parasite has never encountered and has no resistance to.

“It works in resistant strains, it kills resistant parasites,” RBM’s Charles said, calling it “a drug for its time.”

Ganaplacide attacks the parasite through an entirely new mechanism, disrupting its internal protein transport. Developed by Novartis with MMV, it cleared its final trial in November and could be filed with regulators this year, with approval possible as early as the second half of 2027.

A triple ACT expected around 2028 goes further, folding an extra partner drug into a single pill so the others are never left exposed alone.

Those drugs still have to reach patients, and Fitchet would not say how long that will take. “This is to be determined,” he said. “It’s too hard to say.” He argued malaria’s toll makes these exactly the kind of tools that should be rushed through, with the aim of putting them in use within “a number of months versus a number of years.”

The other half of the strategy is to protect the drugs already in use. For now that means rotating different combinations across regions, Fitchet said, “so they take resistance pressure off each other.”

No shortcuts

Some advances have already arrived.

Weeks before the assembly, the WHO prequalified Coartem Baby, the first malaria medicine formulated for newborns and infants of two to five kilograms, closing a gap that had left the smallest patients on doses meant for older children.

“For centuries, malaria has stolen children from their parents, and health, wealth and hope from communities,” WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said of Coartem Baby’s approval by the UN health agency. “Today, the story is changing.”

What makes a malaria drug so hard to build is that all of this has to be cheap, easy to use and uncomplicated to transport. A malaria drug has to clear all three of these bars “no shortcuts,” Fitchet said, then surpass yet another hurdle: be safe for extremely vulnerable populations that make up the majority of the global caseload – sick children under the age of five.

Those constraints are “non-negotiables,” and MMV will not move a candidate into human trials unless it can meet them. “We build in access characteristics of a product at the first stage into humans,” he said. “We lose a lot on the way, but we learn from every one of those.”

“It has to be radically simple. But just because something is inexpensive, it doesn’t mean it’s not highly technically advanced,” he said.

Innovation without access

The gap is not only about new drugs. Treatments already on the shelf often fail to reach people, or fail once they do.

“We’ve had products that have been evaluated to be highly efficacious,” said Michael Makanga, who leads the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership. “And then when they’re introduced into the health system, their efficacy plummets to 20% from 90%.”

Rotating drug combinations region by region demands the surveillance, supply and training many of the worst-hit countries lack. It is “more complex, more expensive, more resource-intensive” than ordinary treatment, he conceded.

“It has to actually get into the mouth of a child to become a medicine,” Fitchet said.

Where delivery breaks down, the laboratory is rarely the reason. In Sudan, now one of 11 African countries that carry about two-thirds of the world’s malaria, three years of war have pushed the health system to the brink of collapse, with an estimated 80% of facilities in conflict zones no longer functioning.

By October 2025 the WHO had recorded 1.7 million malaria cases there, and warned the real number was higher.

Elsewhere the tools exist but miss the people who need them. Zimbabwe’s health minister told the meeting her country had been nearing elimination when erratic rains and flooding revived transmission, and a population the campaigns weren’t reaching emerged with it: resettled tobacco farmers who sleep in their fields while curing the crop, beyond the reach of nets and spraying.

“Most of them, they believe they can survive,” she said. “It’s only after they’ve started falling ill you actually identify they have been sleeping outside.”

Mali’s health minister, Assa Badiallo Touré, noted the economic toll lack of access to malaria treatment has on families. “The first sick child in a household means half a salary lost; by the second or third, the family’s whole livelihood,” she said.

The fight also cannot be won one country at a time, Touré added. “When it isn’t solved in my neighbour’s country, it isn’t solved in mine. Mosquitoes don’t care about borders.”

‘The little we had’

Preliminary data for 2025 and projections for 2026 reveal a steep, structural decline in total official development assistance, also severely affecting the fight against malaria.
Preliminary data for 2025 and projections for 2026 reveal a steep, structural decline in total official development assistance, also severely affecting the fight against malaria.

Malaria has long been one of global health’s best-funded causes, which left it the most to lose. The United States, historically the largest single donor, has proposed cutting its bilateral malaria funding from $805 million to $424 million. One Lancet analysis credited US aid with halving malaria deaths over two decades.

The Global Fund, the largest buyer of malaria drugs, raised $12.64 billion at its latest replenishment, about a third short of its $18 billion target.

“The little money we had is now less,” Touré said of the aid crisis.

When that funding was cut last year, Fitchet said, the first damage was to supply chains: “There was a lot of confusion, and there were logistic channels and supply chains that were taken away.”

For MMV and the fate of the drugs in its innovation pipeline, losing funding sporadically is not an option. MMV’s funding “is needed over years to develop and deliver drugs in three, four, six years’ time,” Fitchet said. “We can’t tolerate stop-start funding as an R&D organisation. You can’t just pause the clinical trials.”

“Choosing between access and innovation is a really false choice,” he said. “If you don’t fund access, people will die today. And if you don’t fund innovation, many more people will die tomorrow.”

“Innovation without access is not innovation,” Charles added. “Innovation without access is injustice.”

From the lab to the last mile

Even an approved drug faces a long route to a patient: a stringent regulator, WHO prequalification, treatment guidelines, approval in each country, then procurement and rollout. Run in sequence, Fitchet said, that can take six to eight years. “When you’ve got a serious disease killing lots of children, that’s not okay.”

Recent experience has shown faster approval of new innovations is possible. During the pandemic some products were prequalified within 48 hours of approval, and a recent HIV prevention drug took just over a month.

The trick, Fitchet said, is to run those steps in parallel rather than in sequence, and to begin two years before a drug is approved. WHO has agreed to do exactly that with GanLum, assessing it for prequalification and guideline inclusion at the same time rather than one after the other.

For now a new drug must be cleared nation by nation, waiting in a separate queue in each. The African Medicines Agency is meant to change that.

Still young and not yet ratified by every member state, it aims to harmonise the continent’s national regulators so that a single review can open many markets at once. “One application, one review, multiple markets,” its director general, Mimi Darko, told the meeting. “And we’re going fast.”

The parasite has had 30 million years of practice at staying alive. Whether the world can build, fund and deploy its newest weapons fast enough is the open question.

“Innovation is essential, but it achieves impact only when a country has the capacity and ownership to deliver it,” said Dr Fatimata Bintou Sall, a Senegalese researcher. “Malaria elimination will not depend only on innovation itself, but on our capacity to turn it into meaningful and lasting impact.”

Image Credits: MMV, OECD.

Africa CDC Director General Dr Jean Kaseya and WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus addressing a joint media briefing on Friday.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention launched a joint continental preparedness response plan to address the current Ebola outbreak on Friday, based on 11 pillars and a $518 million budget.

Earlier this week, the two groups reduced their Ebola case projections substantially after testing the backlog of suspected cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) Ituri province, the epicentre of the outbreak, explained Dr Jean Kaseya, Africa CDC Director General, at a media briefing on Friday.

The previous projection of over 1,300 suspected cases was based on the case definition given to health workers of Ebola Bundibugyo symptoms, some of which are similar to other diseases endemic in the region, such as malaria. 

Once samples from the 1000-plus suspected cases in Ituri had been tested, Africa CDC has been able to confirm a total of 397 cases, 63 deaths and a case fatality rate around 16%, said Kaseya. 

Reduced Ebola case projections based on testing suspected cases.

However, both Kaseya and WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus stressed at the media briefing that the outbreak is serious. The bodies of some 250 people suspected to have died of Ebola Bundibugyo still need to be tested, for example.

“My trip to the DRC also gave me real hope that together under the government leadership, we can bring this outbreak under control,” said Tedros.

“The only way we will do that is through government leadership, community ownership, and close partnership between the many actors on the ground today. WHO and Africa CDC are expressing that partnership by launching a joint continental preparedness response plan.”

Weak local health systems

WHO's Dr Roseline Belzaire (centre) and Africa CDC's Dr Yap Boum on the ground in Ituri in the DRC.
WHO’s Dr Roseline Belizaire (centre) and Africa CDC’s Dr Yap Boum (right) on the ground in Ituri in the DRC.

The outbreak also faces significant challenges, particularly given the weaknesses of the health systems at its epicentre.

Dr Roseline Belizaire, WHO Africa’s head of emergencies, said that an assessment of the infection prevention and control (IPC) ability of the 800-plus local health centres had rated them at 3-7%, “when you need 90% IPC to respond to Ebola”.

In response, the WHO and Africa CDC have prioritised 87 health centres, all of which had received personal protective equipment (PPE) and all their health workers had been trained in how to use it, said Belizaire.

She said that 34 healthcare workers had been infected in DRC, seven had died, and six have recovered so far.

Improved IPC, disease surveillance, laboratory testing and clinical care are key aspects of the “One Response” continental response plan, which complements the national response plans of the governments of the DRC and Uganda.

“The only way to beat this outbreak is through close partnership, working together under the leadership of the affected countries in one coordinated effort, guided by a simple principle: one plan, one budget, one team,” said Tedros. 

Dr Mohamed Janabi, WHO Africa’s regional director, stressed that “strong surveillance, rapid testing, timely care, infection prevention, and sustained community engagement” is what works to contain Ebola.

However, Janabi stressed: “Plans do not stop Ebola, people do: protected health workers, decisive leadership, communities that trust the response.” 

Where’s the money?

The Excel sheet of pledges shared by Dr Jean Kaseya.

However, Kaseya said that most pledges for financial support still had to turn into “real money” as less than $2 million had reached affected countries so far.

At a global meeting convened last Monday, pledges of around $498 million, “then some of our partners started to correct the figures”, said Kaseya, briefly sharing an Excel spreadsheet of these pledges, which showed that the United States had promised the most – $82 million.

“[This spreadsheet] is what partners they shared with us without changing this figure. Is it real money? No,” said Kaseya, adding that Uganda’s acting health minister had told him that she had not even received $2 million from partners so far and that the DRC’s health ministry is also struggling. 

“We’ll keep our partners accountable. You gave us figures, we want to know where this money, and how this [pledge] is becoming real money.”

Kenya’s US quarantine facility

Kaseya said that he had discussed the controversial US plan to quarantine its citizens suspected of Ebola in a facility in Kenya with senior Kenyan officials.

“We need to recognise the country leadership and the country sovereignty,” said Kaseya, adding that the proposal had developed in discussion between the two countries on how the US could support Kenya’s preparations in case Ebola spread to Kenya.

According to Kenya’s preparedness plan. Kenya, the government planned to set up 23 centres for isolation and treatment, and “then there was an offer made by the US that one of the 23 centres can be used [for US citizens] rather than sending people to Europe”, he added.

“This is the information that we have. We respect the Kenyan authorities for the decision they made. We are supporting them in their preparedness plan, and they know that if they need support from Africa CDC and the WHO on any issue, they can get it.”

The WHO has called for countries to address unsafe food through a One Health approach, integrating human, animal and environmental health.

Unsafe food causes 1.5 million deaths and 866 million illnesses each year – a burden similar to tuberculosis, according to World Health Organization (WHO) research published in The Lancet this week.

The research assessed 42 major foodborne hazards – including bacteria, viruses, parasites and chemicals – from 194 countries between 2000 and 2021. 

Foodborne diseases are caused by eating food contaminated with biological or chemical hazards. Diarrhoeal diseases cause the most illnesses, but chemical hazards are in fact the leading cause of foodborne deaths, the research found. 

More than one million people died from cardiovascular disease and cancer caused by inorganic arsenic and lead in 2021 – the first time this impact has been quantified. While those deaths are mainly among adults, childhood exposure to arsenic, mercury and lead also leads to lifelong intellectual and developmental disabilities.  

Food can be contaminated with chemicals such as inorganic arsenic, lead and methylmercury from natural sources and human activities. Once in the soil and water, they are absorbed by plants and eaten by people.

Lead from paint and gasoline has leached into the soil and water in several communities, while some fish have high levels of mercury.

“Cardiovascular disease kills about 20 million people every year. But the magnitude of the food-borne proportion was not fully recognised. It is about 5% of all cardiovascular disease,” said the WHO’s Luc Ingenbleek.

People in Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific regions are the worst affected by chemical contamination.

Lead author Dr Robert Lake, former chair of the WHO’s Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Group (FERG), described chemical hazards as a “profound challenge”.

Chemicals are very difficult to eliminate once in the food system, and the WHO called on governments to prevent contamination at the source through better agricultural practices, stricter industrial controls and stronger environmental regulations.

The top causes of foodborne deaths in people over the age of five in 2021. Chemical hazards top the list.

One Health

Many foodborne diseases can also be prevented through improved water, sanitation and hygiene; better food safety practices such as pasteurisation, and better health care for vulnerable populations. 

Yuki Minato, WHO technical officer for food safety and senior author of The Lancet report, warned that foodborne diseases “are not only persistent but are being made worse by climate change, which increases contamination risks, and by antimicrobial resistance, which makes infections harder to treat”. 

“A One Health approach – integrating human, animal, plant, and environmental health – is essential,” said Minato. “Countries must act urgently, using these estimates to target interventions, invest in surveillance, and break down the silos between health, agriculture and environment sectors.”

Children are the worst affected

Children under the age of five are the most vulnerable, particularly to diarrhoeal diseases, according to the research. They account for a third of all foodborne disease cases, although they are only 9% of the world’s population.

Despite being just 9% of the global population, young children suffer from nearly one third of all cases of foodborne diseases, particularly diarrhoeal diseases which can be deadly for this vulnerable age group. 

In addition, exposure to Methylmercury and lead in food can also harm children’s developing brains, causing lifelong neurological and developmental problems. Children and people living in poor communities in Africa and South-East Asia, the worst-affected regions, bore the highest burden.

Although the total foodborne disease burden has declined since 2000, major regional inequalities persist, with the greatest burden in Africa and South-East Asia. 

However, cases and deaths in the African region have improved due to improvements or reductions in diarrhoeal diseases, 

“Food safety is not an abstract issue – it touches every meal, every family, every day. Unsafe food has always been a major public health concern, but until now we lacked the bigger picture of its staggering human and economic toll. These new estimates change that.” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

“For the first time, countries have their own data to see where the burden is highest. With that knowledge, governments can prioritise the actions needed to protect people’s health.”

Image Credits: Michael Casmir/Pierce Mill Media, Pierce Mill Media.