News Round Up

WORLD POPULATION:  8,015,936,000*

YEAR 2050 PROJECTION:  9,800,000,000**

YEAR 2100 PROJECTION:  11,200,000,000**

U.S.  POPULATION:  333,287,557*** 

*https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/

**https://www.un.org/en/desa/world-population-projected-reach-98-billion-2050-and-112-billion-2100

***https://www.census.gov/

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POLITICS & POLICIES

July 20, 2023: Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) will finally get a study of his proposal to do away with drug patents and other intellectual property protections in favor of rewarding inventions with prize money. Sanders has been pushing the prize approach since he was a House representative, many years ago. The measure directing the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine to study the idea was added to the Pandemic All-Hazards and Preparedness Act a day before Sanders’ health committee passed the bill. Three Republicans voted against the overall bill, which renews several federal biodefense and pandemic-preparedness programs. Though Democrats last year passed historic legislation to let Medicare negotiate drug prices and cap seniors’ annual out-of-pocket drug costs, Sanders is demanding more drug price controls. He is delaying President Biden’s pick for running the National Institutes of Health until the president releases a plan to control drug prices.

June 22, 2023: The Food and Drug Administration is ramping up its efforts to force vape shops and other retailers to stop selling unauthorized disposable vape brands that are increasingly popular with young people. The FDA recently issued 189 formal warning letters to shops selling two brands of vape products, Elf Bar and Esco Bars, the agency announced in a press release Thursday. The FDA has not authorized either brand, both of which are ubiquitous in gas stations and smoke shops around the country. They are therefore illegal to sell. “This latest blitz should be a wake-up call for retailers of Elf Bar and Esco Bars products nationwide,” said Brian King, the head of the FDA’s tobacco center in a statement announcing the blitz.

PROGRAMS, PROJECTS, CONFERENCES, GRANTS, AWARDS & EVENTS

July 17, 2023: On June 28, 2023, the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP) hosted the sixth installment of the Healthy People 2030 Webinar Series: Strengthening Resilience in Children and Adolescents. During this one-hour event, ODPHP and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics presented on the webinar’s three featured objectives, and Healthy People 2030 Champion Adaptive Sports Ohio presented on their efforts to increase participation in sports teams for children and adolescents with physical disabilities. You can view a recording of this webinar below. Be sure to visit ODPHP’s YouTube Channel for more Healthy People content, including recordings of past webinars.

https://health.gov/news/202307/strengthening-resilience-children-and-adolescents

July 18, 2023: The 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee’s work continues, and the Committee will hold its third meeting September 12-13, 2023. The U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Agriculture (USDA) invite the public to participate in this important event via livestream. Registration is required and will open on Thursday, August 10, 2023, at DietaryGuidelines.gov. The September meeting will include presentations by each subcommittee and deliberation by the full Committee on progress made since the last meeting, including draft protocol development, evidence review and synthesis, and plans for future Committee work. A meeting agenda will be published in advance of the meeting at DietaryGuidelines.gov.

https://health.gov/news/202307/third-meeting-2025-dietary-guidelines-advisory-committee-will-be-held-september-12-13-2023-and-will-include-oral-public-comments

HISTORICAL, REPORTS, DOCUMENTS, DATA & INDEXES

March 2, 2023: Australia’s My Health Record is a national, integrated electronic record, intended to overcome the problem of having personal health information “siloed” in different systems. People can access their own My Health Record via MyGov or an app. Any of their treating health professionals can access it, too. My Health Record can hold various past information, including a shared health summary, records of health conditions, allergies and medications, summaries of cancer treatment, test and scan results, hospital discharge notes, vaccination records, organ donation choices, and notes entered by patients themselves. But is the system actually being used? Why is it, when people access their My Health Record, they often find little helpful information? Earlier this year, Health Minister Mark Butler promised an overhaul as part of the Strengthening Medicare Taskforce. But what needs to happen for it to be finally fit for purpose?

https://theconversation.com/my-health-record-is-meant-to-empower-patients-but-with-little-useful-information-stored-is-it-worth-saving-199508

February 6, 2023: Cancer figures provide stark evidence of the gap between the health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and non-Indigenous people in Australia. The difference is confronting – and it’s increasing over time. Cancer is the leading broad cause of death for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, accounting for 3,612 deaths (23% of deaths). Indigenous Australians are 14% more likely to be diagnosed with cancer. They are 20% less likely to survive at least five years beyond diagnosis. While the likelihood of dying from cancer in the general population declined by 10% from 2010 to 2019, it increased by 12% for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. These figures highlight major challenges for the federal government’s stated aim to close the life expectancy gap in a generation. But data will also be critical to meeting this goal.

https://theconversation.com/the-cancer-gap-between-first-nations-and-non-indigenous-people-is-widening-but-better-data-could-help-199186

RESEARCH

July 24, 2023: A National Institute of Health-supported study found that statins, a class of cholesterol-lowering medications, may offset the high risk of cardiovascular disease in people living with HIV by more than a third, potentially preventing one in five major cardiovascular events or premature deaths in this population. People living with HIV can have a 50-100% increased risk for cardiovascular disease. The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine“This research suggests that statins may provide an accessible, cost-effective measure to improve the cardiovascular health and quality of life for people living with HIV,” said Gary H. Gibbons, M.D., director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a study funder. “Additional research can further expand on this effect, while providing a roadmap to rapidly translate research findings into clinical practice.” For the double-blinded phase 3 trial, known as Randomized Trial to Prevent Vascular Events in HIV (REPRIEVE) study, researchers randomized participants into either a treatment group, where they received a daily statin – in this case pitavastatin calcium – or a control group, where they received a placebo pill that contained no medication. The researchers followed participants for about five years, but ended the trial early when they discovered the treatment benefits outweighed potential risks.

https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/daily-statin-reduces-heart-disease-risk-among-adults-living-hiv

July 22, 2023: At the 12th International IAS Conference on HIV Science, WHO calls for countries to expand use of HIV self-testing (HIVST), to offer HIVST for initiation, continuation and re-starting pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and to promote testing through sexual and social networks to increase testing coverage and strengthen uptake of HIV prevention and treatment services for the general population in high-burden settings and in populations and regions with the greatest gaps in testing coverage. These recommendations are issued at a moment of unique opportunity, when self-care and self-testing are increasingly being recognized as ways to increase access, efficiency, effectiveness and acceptability of health care across many different disease areas, including HIV. Although HIV testing is offered routinely in some clinical settings such as antenatal services, there are many missed opportunities for testing among people who present themselves at health facilities, including men who are often not offered testing even in high-burden settings.  As of 2022, an estimated 5.5 million people with HIV still did not know their HIV status. 

https://www.who.int/news/item/22-07-2023-who-recommends-optimizing-hiv-testing-services

DISEASES & DISASTERS

July 25, 2023: BANGKOK (AP) — Countries in the Asia-Pacific region need to drastically increase their investments in disaster warning systems and other tools to counter rising risks from climate change, a United Nations report said Tuesday. The report by the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, or ESCAP, says nearly $145 billion is needed to set up systems to minimize deaths and damage from floods, earthquakes, drought and other disasters. Artificial intelligence, satellites, remote sensing and other technologies would help with forecasting, notifying the public during emergencies and providing other services, but telecommunications systems must be fortified to ensure that vulnerable communities get the information, the report states. Most countries have failed to spend even 10% of what is needed, according to the commission’s review, which was released to mark the U.N.’s Disaster Resilience Week. The U.N. has set a goal of having every person on Earth covered by early warning systems by 2027, yet half of all countries lack such systems and even fewer have ones that are linked to emergency planning, Doreen Bogdan-Martin, head of the International Telecommunications Union, said in a video message on Twitter.

https://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2023-07-25/asia-pacific-needs-disaster-warning-systems-to-counter-rising-climate-change-risks-report-says

July 25, 2023: ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Fires raging through forests, mountain villages and towns in northern Algeria have left at least 34 people dead — with 23 of them in the coastal region of Bejaia, according to authorities and a local radio station keeping track of the grim toll in Bejaia. Among those killed were 10 soldiers encircled by flames during an evacuation, the Defense Ministry reported Monday night. Bejaia, part of the Berber-speaking Kabyle region east of Algiers, was the hardest-hit area, with 23 deaths since Sunday, the local Soummam Radio reported on Tuesday. Counting the deaths from the wind-driven blazes that swept through villages to the seaside, the radio report said that 197 other people were injured in the flames. The official APS news agency reported Monday night that 34 people had died across several regions, or “wilayas.” Some 8,000 firefighters and 530 trucks, backed by military fire-fighting aircraft, fought the blazes in scorching heat, according to the latest update. The Algerian Defense Ministry said on Monday night that 10 soldiers died in the hardest-hit region of Bejaia. It added that 25 people were injured and evacuated to the closest hospitals.

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2023-07-25/wildfires-in-algeria-leave-at-least-34-people-dead-and-hundreds-injured

TECHNOLOGY

July 26, 2023: In April, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed limiting EtO emissions from sterilization facilities by 80% to minimize the risk of people developing cancer from exposure to the gas. AdvaMed has warned the limit could halve capacity at commercial sterilizing plants, and the FDA has cautioned that there is a lack of viable alternatives to EtO for many devices. The FDA is acting to support the transition to alternatives where possible. Earlier this year, officials began a pilot program to help companies change their sterilization sites or methods. Now, the FDA has moved to provide manufacturers with another sterilization option. Suzanne Schwartz, director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, called low-temperature vaporized hydrogen peroxide “an important alternative sterilization method” in a Monday statement. The method uses hydrogen peroxide vapor under vacuum and, according to a trade body, shows “low toxicity.”

https://www.medtechdive.com/news/fda-new-sterilization-standard-hydrogen-peroxide/688978/

July 24, 2023: Philips said Monday its second-quarter sales rose 9% to €4.5 billion ($5 billion) from a year ago as it continued to make progress addressing the recall of millions of sleep apnea devices. The Dutch medical device maker said the previously disclosed litigation and U.S. Justice Department investigation into the recall are ongoing, as are discussions on a proposed consent decree. “Completing the Philips Respironics field action remains our highest priority. The vast majority of the sleep therapy devices are now with patients and home care providers, and we are fully focused on the remediation of the affected ventilators,” CEO Roy Jakobs said in a statement.

https://www.medtechdive.com/news/philips-reports-9-sales-jump-rebound-from-sleep-device-recall-second-quarter/688758/

CLIMATE CHANGE & ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

July 17, 2023: CHICAGO — Donna Carpenter, co-president of the community-led coalition POWER PAC-IL, has lived in Chicago’s Englewood neighborhood for more than 10 years. She spends much of her time attending rallies and advocating on behalf of low-income families in her community, where she raised six children and three grandchildren. Since 2017, Carpenter said her natural gas service has been shut off twice by her utility provider, Peoples Gas, because she’s been unable to pay bills. Like her, many residents of Englewood, a predominantly Black and low-income neighborhood, are struggling to keep up with the city’s natural gas bills rising prices. In fact, nearly 49% of residents are behind on bills in the neighborhood, according to data filed by Peoples Gas with the Illinois Commerce Commission. Yet as rates continue to rise, Carpenter said utilities aren’t looking out for marginalized communities. https://www.ehn.org/rising-energy-costs-2661985726.html

July 25, 2023: PITTSBURGH — A few years ago, Dr. Michael Boninger was thinking of leaving healthcare to pursue a job that would help address what he saw as the most pressing health issue of our time: the climate crisis. “I want the planet to be a safe place for my kids and my grandkids and the next generation,” Boninger, who specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation, told Environmental Health News(EHN). He researched what jobs he might qualify for, but the answer was right in front of him: The healthcare industry takes a significant toll on the climate and human health. The sector accounts for an estimated 4.4% of total global greenhouse gas emissions and up to 9.8% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Health damages from the U.S. healthcare sector’s pollution – including greenhouse gasses, carcinogenic emissions and other toxic air pollutants – from 2003-2013 are estimated to have cost Americans more than 400,000 years of full health, defined as years lived free of disease or disability.

https://www.ehn.org/hospitals-sustainability-2662289794.html

EQUITY & DISPARITIES 

July 18, 2023: While there are numerous studies on male and female cases of melanoma, there is limited research on racial differences of this skin cancer, especially among males. To learn more, a team of researchers reviewed the National Cancer Database. They examined cases of primary cutaneous invasive melanoma among non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic Asian, non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native, and Hispanic males. Their findings demonstrated disparities in melanoma among racial and ethnic groups. For American Indian/Alaskan Native, and white individuals, the trunk was the most common area for melanoma. However, Black, Asian, and Hispanic males were diagnosed with melanoma in the lower extremity. Stage 3 or 4 melanoma was also most common among Black people (48.6%). The 5-year overall melanoma survival rates were highest for white males (75.1%) and lowest for Black males (51.7%). Researchers discovered that Black people diagnosed with melanoma were 26% more likely to die than white people with the same diagnosis. “We hope that this study lays the foundation for future research to explore the reasons for why there are different presentations and survival among men of diverse racial groups in melanoma,” Dr. Bianka Bubic, study author and a dermatology research fellow at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, told Medical News Today.

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/melanoma-more-deadly-among-black-men

May 1, 2023: Younger women who have had a heart attack have more adverse outcomes and are more likely to return to the hospital in the year following their heart attack than men of a similar age. That’s according to a study published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The researchers used data from the VIRGO study, which provides observational information on the treatment and outcomes of heart attacks in people 18 to 55. In this study, the researchers looked at the health information of 2,985 people – 2,009 women and 976 men. The average age was 47. They reported that for all-cause hospitalizations within one year of discharge, nearly 35% of women were hospitalized again, compared to 23% for men. The researchers used any hospital or observation stay longer than 24 hours. The most common cause of re-hospitalization was heart attack and chest pain. In addition, women who had heart attacks had more adverse outcomes than men.

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/young-women-more-likely-to-return-to-the-hospital-in-year-following-heart-attack-emb

WOMEN, MATERNAL, NEONATAL & CHILDREN’S HEALTH

July 24, 2023: Among nearly 10 million US infants born between 2016 and 2018, breastfed babies were 33% less likely to die during the post-perinatal period (day 7-364) than infants who were not breastfed, reports a new study. The findings build on previous US research with smaller datasets, which documented the association between the initiation of breastfeeding and the reduction of post-perinatal infant mortality by a range of 19% to 26%. Among nearly 10 million US infants born between 2016 and 2018, breastfed babies were 33% less likely to die during the post-perinatal period (day 7-364) than infants who were not breastfed, reports a new study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, published by Elsevier. The findings build on previous US research with smaller datasets, which documented the association between the initiation of breastfeeding and the reduction of post-perinatal infant mortality by a range of 19% to 26%. 

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230724122640.htm

July 22, 2023: New mothers can expect sleep deprivation in the first few years of baby’s life. But too little sleep can take a toll on the health of both mother and child. A new study looks at maternal and infant sleep patterns, identifying predictors and providing recommendations for instilling healthy habits. New mothers can expect sleep deprivation in the first few years of baby’s life. But too little sleep can take a toll on the health of both mother and child. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign looks at maternal and infant sleep patterns, identifying predictors and providing recommendations for instilling healthy habits.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230722004656.htm

POVERTY ALLEVIATION & ERADICATION

July 5, 2023: Social enterprises are organisations that promote social or environmental issues as their core business. They are useful to societies in lots of ways. They can help solve social and economic problems such as poverty and joblessness, among others. They can also help support the work of local, provincial and national government. Over the last decade a growing number of these enterprises have been started in many countries. South Africa has also seen an increase in social enterprises. But running a social enterprise isn’t easy. They need to pursue a social motive while also trying to remain sustainable with little funding. This often means that they need structures, processes and leadership acumen for both their operational success and sustainability.

https://theconversation.com/businesses-that-address-social-or-environmental-problems-often-struggle-to-survive-3-things-that-can-help-them-208712

April 7, 2023: Washington, DC: Yesterday, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) reviewed the resource adequacy of the Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PRGT), Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST), and Debt Relief Trusts including the Catastrophe Containment and Relief Trust (CCRT). The PRGT is the Fund’s main vehicle for providing concessional loans (currently at zero interest rates) to low-income countries (LICs). The RST delivers affordable long-term financing to low-income and vulnerable middle-income countries, as well as small states, to support reforms to reduce risks to prospective balance of payments stability from climate change and pandemics. The CCRT provides grants for debt relief for the poorest and most vulnerable LICs hit by catastrophic natural disasters or public health disasters, disbursing SDR 690 million across 31 countries during the pandemic, which left its cash balance almost depleted. 

https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2023/04/07/pr23112-2023-review-of-resource-adequacy-of-the-poverty-reduction-growth-trust

HUMANITARIAN, NONPROFITS, FOUNDATIONS & NGOS

July 25, 2023: Hundreds of millions of people around the world are affected by humanitarian crises, including natural disasters, armed conflict, forced displacement, and major disease outbreaks. The frequency, intensity, and cost of these crises has steadily increased over the past several decades, trends that are expected to continue with ongoing threats from climate change and emerging pandemics. These crises have direct and indirect impacts on health, disproportionately affect vulnerable populations, especially in low- and middle-income countries. However, conducting health research in these settings is very difficult and there is a limited amount of scientific evidence that can inform how governments, nongovernmental organizations and other humanitarian organizations respond to them. The Fogarty Center for Global Health Studies (CGHS) leads a project exploring the role of global health research in the context of humanitarian crises. The goals of the project are to: (1) catalyze timely, high-quality, ethical and actionable research in crisis settings; and (2) strengthen the capacity of scientists, especially from LMICs, to conduct health research in crisis settings. Key partners in this activity include NIH Institutes and Centers, other U.S. government agencies, academic researchers from the U.S. and abroad, nongovernmental organizations and international organizations involved in humanitarian response. This field of research can also benefit the U.S. as lessons learned from global humanitarian crises can improve the government’s ability to respond to disasters in the U.S.

https://www.fic.nih.gov/About/center-global-health-studies/Pages/health-research-humanitarian-crises.aspx

May 31, 2023: When I pull into the lot at the Harold Parker State Forest in North Andover at 8am, the early morning fog still burning off, people in camouflage and combat boots unload boxes alongside my car. Straight ahead is a roadblock erected out of boards, its scrawled, red-painted letters ordering passerby to stop and have their papers ready. I’ve arrived at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI)’s three-day field simulation, which provides humanitarian students and professionals the rare opportunity to fully immerse themselves in the experience of working in a humanitarian emergency. The simulation acts as a capstone for Harvard graduate students in the Interdisciplinary Concentration in Humanitarian Studies. It is also the final project for those enrolled in HHI’s two-week Humanitarian Response Intensive Course, offered annually to humanitarian professionals from around the world. SIM attendees spend two nights in the forest, learning to think on their feet as they engage in a complex conflict and disaster scenario. The simulation has taken place yearly since its first iteration in 2004, but due to the pandemic, this is the first in-person one since 2019. It is a massive undertaking in terms of operations, coordination, and planning, explains Irini Albanti, HHI’s executive director. In addition to basic supplies such as large tents and food for hundreds of participants and volunteers, staff need to organize costuming, dozens of tents, and technological and medical supplies akin to what one would find at a real disaster site. However, HHI is greatly supported by local and international organizations, which donate supplies and space for its activities every year, and donors who support both the simulation and Harvard’s Interdisciplinary Concentration in Humanitarian Studies.

https://hhi.harvard.edu/news/harvard-humanitarian-initiative%E2%80%99s-field-simulation-offers-students

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