All posts tagged: Global Health Security

Food poisoning kills more than 1.5 million people a year, new analysis shows

Food poisoning kills more than 1.5 million people a year, new analysis shows

Rice is particularly vulnerable to heavy metal contamination because it is grown in flooded fields and readily absorbs contaminated water. South-East Asia and Africa, where regulations on heavy metals in farming are far less stringent, are the worst-affected regions. It is thought that roughly 1 billion people are regularly exposed to heavy metals via their food.  Bacteria also remain a major cause of food-borne illness and death.  In 2021, around 250,000 people died after consuming food contaminated with harmful bacteria, mostly through diarrhoeal disease.  Among the most common bacterial pathogens are Campylobacter and E. coli, which are frequently found in undercooked poultry, raw milk, and unwashed fruit and vegetables. Listeria, which grows mostly in unpasteurised dairy products – products that have boomed in popularity in ‘wellness’ circles in recent years – poses a particular risk to pregnant women and newborns.  While infections are usually mild in healthy adults, the bacterium can cause miscarriage, stillbirth and severe illness in infants.  In 2021, Listeria was responsible for 5,280 deaths, the vast majority among newborn babies. Parasites are another major cause …

Nigeria’s war on the deadly fake drug trade

Nigeria’s war on the deadly fake drug trade

NAFDAC, established in the early 2000s, is Nigeria’s answer to the problem, responsible for ensuring the safety, quality, and efficacy of food, drugs, cosmetics, and other controlled products. The agency tests medicines in laboratories, inspects manufacturing facilities, monitors ports of entry, and runs public awareness campaigns urging consumers to check for NAFDAC registration numbers on packaging. It also works alongside the police, the Nigerian Army, and the Pharmacists Council of Nigeria to investigate and dismantle illegal supply networks. The agency rose to international prominence in the early 2000s under Dora Akunyili, a pharmacist who transformed it from a largely ineffective bureaucracy into one of Africa’s most respected regulatory bodies. During her tenure, the proportion of counterfeit drugs in circulation dropped from an estimated 60 per cent to around 16 per cent. “It has become a very prominent actor in debates about drug quality and also food quality, not just medicines, in Nigeria,” said Prof Gernot. “It’s a highly visible agency: people are generally aware that when buying medicines, they should check for a NAFDAC registration …

First human trials of locally-developed HIV jab begin in South Africa

First human trials of locally-developed HIV jab begin in South Africa

South Africa has begun the first human trials of a locally developed HIV vaccine to defeat a virus that still kills around one person per minute worldwide. Twenty HIV-negative volunteers have signed on for the new African-led trial in Cape Town. Researchers will be looking for signs that the new vaccine candidate stimulates the body’s own defences to defeat the notoriously elusive, shape-shifting virus. Teams hope the vaccine will activate ‘broadly neutralising antibodies’, which are potent germ-fighting proteins produced by the immune system. The antibodies are capable of identifying and vanquishing a broad range of variants of HIV. The research is being driven by the South African Medical Research Council, Wits University scientists and the Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation, under the Africa-wide Brilliant consortium. The consortium has scientists in South Africa, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Mozambique, and aims to find an African solution to the HIV/Aids pandemic. Source link

Landmines from Afghanistan’s war are still killing civilians – including children

Landmines from Afghanistan’s war are still killing civilians – including children

The biggest challenge at the moment for civilians is the unexploded ordnance lying on the ground, not marked minefields. “What was once a battlefield is now somebody’s orchard, or their route to school, or a ditch by a road or a hillside, these are the places killing people now.” While coalition forces did not lay any mines in Afghanistan, many Afghans are still being killed and injured by improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted and left by the Taliban. “The Taliban laid IEDs to target Nato and Afghan forces,” he said. “So areas where Nato operated, especially Helmand, are heavily contaminated with IED mines. That clearance work is still ongoing.” Mines and unexploded ordnance have killed an estimated 40,000 people in Afghanistan since 1979, according to the UN. Yet the clearance effort has slowed in recent years amid funding shortages – the mine action workforce has shrunk from about 15,000 people in 2011 to just 1,100 today. “Afghanistan is no longer high on the list of humanitarian priorities,” Mr Pond said. “That’s the reality. But the …

Nipah is a warning the world keeps postponing

Nipah is a warning the world keeps postponing

In the field of infectious disease epidemiology, the most dangerous pathogens are not always those that dominate newspaper headlines. Often, they are those that remain on the margins of attention, reappearing periodically without ever attracting sustained political or scientific investment. The Nipah virus is a prime example of this overlooked threat. The recent cases reported in India should not be interpreted as an isolated episode, nor as an unexpected development. Nipah has been causing recurrent epidemics for over twenty years, with a well-documented capacity for zoonotic spillover and human-to-human transmission. Its epidemiological profile is already deeply concerning: high mortality rates, frequent involvement of healthcare workers, and a lack of approved vaccines or targeted antiviral therapies. From a scientific point of view, Nipah is not an unknown enemy. Its reservoirs are identified, its transmission routes widely understood, and its clinical progression well described. What remains insufficient is the translation of this knowledge into lasting preparedness. Surveillance systems continue to be activated only once cases are detected. Research funding remains sporadic. The development of countermeasures proceeds slowly, …

Trump’s Board of Peace signals a new world order. Gaza is its first test

Trump’s Board of Peace signals a new world order. Gaza is its first test

“Obviously the explosions haven’t stopped,” she added, “there are still constant violations of the ceasefire and more than 110 children have been killed.” Palestinians living in Gaza have continued to experience strikes, food shortages and now, freezing winter conditions.  “[The weather in Gaza] is absolutely horrible. It’s wet, it’s cold. The wind rips through because you’re on the coast,” said Ms Ingram. In an effort to escape the conditions, many families are being forced to resort to the unstable shells of bombed buildings for shelter.  “It’s an impossible choice for a parent: Do you stay in an inadequate makeshift shelter or a tent – we know that 10 babies have died from hypothermia this winter – or do you try to find some semblance of a building knowing that it can crash down around you?” Despite reports on Israeli restrictions of aid into Gaza, Unicef have managed to make some progress, bringing in an average of approximately 300 per cent more pallets in than before the ceasefire. “We’ve brought in almost a million blankets, 300,000 sets …

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

Nigeria is a dangerous place to be a child – we must fix the system that repeatedly fails them

The family of renowned Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie has accused a private hospital in Lagos of negligence over the death of her 21-month-old son, who died tragically earlier this month. The hospital has denied wrongdoing, and investigations are ongoing. My daughter is also 21 months old, and I live in Nigeria, too. So, when I read about this loss it was not abstract, or distant. It was too close to home. Nigeria is among the most dangerous places in Africa to be a child. Roughly one in every ten children born in Nigeria dies before their fifth birthday, placing the country among the worst in Africa for child survival. This is not a natural disaster; it is a system failure. While I cannot prejudge the facts of this particular case, Nigeria’s health system too often enables negligence and impunity – what many Nigerians simply call “anyhowness.” Most Nigerian children do not die from rare or mysterious illnesses. They die from premature birth, infections, malaria, pneumonia, diarrhoeal disease caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation, …

Asian countries tighten borders over Nipah outbreak in India

Asian countries tighten borders over Nipah outbreak in India

Sri Lankan health officials said they were monitoring the regional situation carefully following the detection of the Nipah cases in India. In Britain, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is responsible for managing infectious disease risks at ports of entry into the country and is understood to be monitoring the outbreak. Like Thailand, the UK is a top destination for travellers from India, with the Delhi to Heathrow route alone accounting for approximately 164,000 seats per month, according to data from the Official Airline Guide. While the UK has not suffered an outbreak of Nipah before, it could theoretically be brought in and then spread from person to person. Health officials in India are continuing to investigate the outbreak, which is centred on the private Narayana Multispeciality Hospital in Barasat, West Bengal, 16 miles from the capital city Kolkata. Both nurses caught the virus while treating a patient with severe respiratory symptoms who later died before testing could be carried out, said a senior health official involved in West Bengal’s Nipah surveillance efforts. “That patient …

Detainees describe the horror of Maduro’s ‘torture prisons’

Detainees describe the horror of Maduro’s ‘torture prisons’

During interrogations, Mr Merino says, guards tried to force him to confess to a “script” they had prepared in advance. “The guards at Tocorón, and the regime they worked for, were malevolent,” he says. “They enjoyed every act of torture they inflicted. They enjoyed the suffering of their Venezuelan brothers and sisters.” Sexual violence, he says, was systematic. “The guards demanded favours in exchange for an extra plate or a glass of water. These weren’t favours of good behaviour; they were sexual favours,” he says. “One of the guards became infatuated with one of the boys, and on the nights he made his rounds, he would grab him and force him to perform oral sex.” Human Rights Watch has documented what it calls “the extensive use of torture” in Venezuelan prisons. “Constant beatings, electric shocks during interrogations, prolonged isolation in dark spaces without access to light,” said Juanita Goebertus Estrada, the group’s Americas director. In March 2025, a United Nations fact-finding mission concluded that the Venezuelan government had committed acts “constituting the crime against humanity …

UK loses measles elimination status as vaccine rates fall

UK loses measles elimination status as vaccine rates fall

Cases of the virus are also surging outside of Europe as global vaccination rates plummet. Canada lost its measles-free status in December, and it is expected that the US – which is currently battling its worst outbreak in over two decades, with more than 2,000 cases and three infant deaths recorded in 2025 – is expected to follow this month. In the Americas, the rise of the virus comes amid a backdrop of intensified vaccine hesitancy in the US. In June, US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr took an axe to the country’s top vaccine panel, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing top scientists with several figures who have publicly opposed vaccines. Measles spreads faster than almost any other virus, with a single infected child likely to infect between 12 to 18 others. For every 100 cases, up to 20 people will suffer some form of complication. As of the beginning of January, the NHS has replaced the MMR vaccine in Britain with the MMRV jab – a vaccine that also provides protection …