Is One Health approach the gateway towards pandemic preparedness?
Think twice: Can we deliver on #HealthForAll without saving lives from viral hepatitis?
Capitalizing on the pandemic: Profiteering from human misery must be stopped
photo courtesy: ILO |
Stopping antimicrobial resistance is the bedrock for advancing universal health coverage
[हिंदी] Stopping antimicrobial resistance by promoting infection prevention, responsible and appropriate use of antimicrobial medicines in human health, livestock and food systems, is the bedrock for promoting universal health coverage. Failing this, the absence of efficacious antimicrobials will effectively return the world to the pre-antibiotic era before the 1920s when lives were lost at a far greater rate due to infection.
Leaders of cities in Asia Pacific commit for united local actions to meet global health goals
[हिंदी] Can we deliver on the promise of health for all unless we fix the gaping and widening punctures that are causing epidemic-proportion of preventable diseases and untimely deaths? No one needs to suffer from preventable illnesses or die from curable diseases. Tobacco use kills over 8 million people worldwide every year. While ‘Big Tobacco’ industries become richer, it is the governments and the people worldwide who are not only dealing with mountainous health crises but also becoming more vulnerable to fritter away whatever progress they have been able to make towards the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and targets.
Antimicrobial resistance is threatening global health security
Antimicrobial resistance occurs when microbes such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites no longer respond to medicines. This makes common infections harder to treat and increases the risk of disease spread, severe illness and death. That is why India and other countries worldwide are observing 18-24 November as World Antimicrobial Awareness Week.
When people with HIV can live normal lives then why 680,000 AIDS deaths in 2020?
Can we afford to lose effective drugs?
"Antimicrobial resistance is undermining a century of progress in medicine - infections that were previously treatable and curable with drugs, are becoming (or at risk of becoming) incurable" said Thomas Joseph, head of World Health Organization (WHO)’s Antimicrobial Stewardship and Awareness.
What's the link? Food, human health, livestock, environment, and antimicrobial resistance
Will new scientific breakthroughs spur the #endTB efforts?
Prioritising tobacco control amidst crisis, Myanmar adopts plain packaging
Global lung health meet opens with top three science announcements
What if TB, HIV medicines stop working? Experts unite against drug resistance
Malaria vaccine: Vital addition to toolkit for preventing malaria but no magic bullet
[हिंदी] It is indeed a breakthrough scientific achievement that we now have the first-ever and only malaria vaccine to prevent malaria in children. This is an important (and long-awaited) addition to existing range of scientifically proven effective methods to prevent malaria. While we celebrate this moment of yet another milestone scientific feat we must remind ourselves that this new and only vaccine is a complementary malaria control tool which needs to be added to the already proven measures for malaria prevention.
World Lung Day | Think twice, it is not another day in paradise: Air is deadlier than we thought it is!
Rich countries failed the global efforts to stop tobacco smuggling
photo courtesy: WHO |
Those nations home to the largest tobacco corporations need to contribute more if countries are to recoup the US$47 billion lost to the illicit tobacco trade each year. That is the message which rang out of talks around the Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products last month.
Call to register: Global Media Forum in lead up to World Antimicrobial Awareness Week
Call to register: Asia Pacific Regional Training on Gender Equality and Human Rights
Will India's 1 billion vaccination-dose-milestone be catalytic for vaccinating all?
Science must guide India, UK: Stoking vaccine nationalism will fail us all
UK's decision to consider vaccinated Indians as 'unvaccinated' stinks of apartheid, lacks scientific merit
Step up the pace globally if universal vaccination could lead us out of the pandemic
Will inclusion and accountability take centrestage at the Generation Equality Forum?
Moving HIV prevention and treatment tools from the lab to all those in need
Why is public transport not good enough to make private vehicle ownership unnecessary?
Shaping responsive health systems for people living with NCDs
Dr Tin Maung Htwe, Editor-in-Chief, Health Digest Journal, Myanmar
There are two major groups of diseases in the world: (i) Communicable or infectious diseases and (ii) Non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Communicable diseases are caused by pathogenic or disease-causing microorganisms (such as bacteria, viruses, etc.) that infect the human body and make it sick- for example malaria, tuberculosis, AIDS (Auto Immune Deficiency Syndrome). Some of them can spread from one infected human to another. On the other hand NCDs on the other hand are not caused by microbes and are not transmissible directly from one person to another.
Eliminate illicit trade in tobacco products
Uncovering asthma misconceptions
A bouquet of novel compounds: New treatment options for HIV
One size does not fit all: Expanding the buffet of choices for preventing HIV
Tale of two pandemics: Follow the science and do not forget one at the cost of the other
Covid-19 has posed innumerable health, economic, and social challenges for all, including people living with HIV. It has exposed the fragility of health systems around the globe and has diverted political attention and funding from other infectious diseases like TB and HIV. The opening session of the 11th International IAS Conference on HIV Science (#IAS2021) held virtually from Berlin, saw a lively panel discussing the tale of the two most horrendous recent pandemics in the history of our civilisation: Covid-19 and HIV/AIDS.
Are we hungry for change for genuinely transforming food systems?
Governments must adopt a strong political declaration that the global crisis mandates
Are some more equal than others?
Who should be held responsible for deaths due to negligence?
Were people the missing link in Covid response?
Putting people first is a critical cog in the wheel for responsive health systems
Imagine a world where no one was suffering from any of the preventable diseases, be it non-communicable diseases (NCDs) or infectious diseases, or had to die untimely due to diseases that were primarily avoidable! Also imagine a tobacco free world - imagine a world where healthy balanced nutrition for all was a reality - where health for all was not just a chant but a reality for everyone where no one was truly left behind.
#WorldLocalizationDay: Peasants rise up to demand genuine food-system reforms
When the health system became the cause of death
Peasants Rise Up: The oppression of small milk farmers
watch full episode of Peasants Rise Up here |
Aside from the pasteurisation law, the government has already introduced the Plant Breeders’ Rights Act in 2016 and the Seed (Amendment) Act in 2015. Pakistan, as a member of the WTO, is bound by the agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and is compelled to pass legislation that would protect the interests of intellectual property rights holders, which are mostly transnational corporations.