May 15, 2026

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

On Sunday, nearly 150 passengers and crew disembarked from the MV Hondius, a Dutch expeditionary ship now at the center of a hantavirus outbreak. Hantaviruses are typically spread by rodents, but this incident involves a species named Andes, which has demonstrated human-to-human transmission through close contact with an infected individual, generally through prolonged exposure.  

 

Although the World Health Organization (WHO) has assessed the outbreak as carrying a low risk to the public, it comes at a delicate moment for global health law. Next week WHO parties at the seventy-ninth World Health Assembly (WHA) will review negotiations for the Pandemic Agreement’s pathogen access and benefit sharing (PABS) annex. Alexandra L. Phelan from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health explains how the Hondius incident exposes the need for WHO member states to commit to the PABS annex with legally enforceable equity provisions and consider what nation withdrawal from the body means for collective health security. 

 

The pending U.S. and Argentinian withdrawals from the WHO will loom over WHA conversations. Sara Al Dallal, president of the Emirates Health Economics Society, explains how those moves threaten existing mechanisms for infectious-disease surveillance. Argentina’s situation, in particular, raises complex legal questions about treaty withdrawal and global health governance given that the country wants to remain in the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), which, among its roles, serves as the WHO regional office for the Americas.  

 

Maternal, infant, and young-child health is another WHA priority. Ahead of those discussions, New Zealand’s former Prime Minister Helen Clark and Executive Director of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Rajat Khosla urge governments to center women, children, and adolescents in their plans for equity, country ownership, and sustainable financing. Without that intention, they warn, hard-won gains against maternal and infant mortality could be reversed. 

 

Katherine Leach-Kemon, senior content strategist at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, continues the discussion of maternal mortality by deciphering a recent study in the Lancet Obstetrics, Gynaecology, & Women’s Health, finding that Canada’s maternal deaths rose 18% from 2015 to 2023. 

 

To wrap up, Tom Frieden, president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, debunks 10 misconceptions about health taxes.   

 

Until next week!—Nsikan Akpan, Managing Editor, and Caroline Kantis, Associate Editor 

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

People in hazmat suits and PPE stand near the cruise ship MV Hondius, affected by a hantavirus outbreak, after it docked at the port of Granadilla de Abona, Tenerife, Spain May 11, 2026. REUTERS/Borja Suarez

Hantavirus Outbreak Tests Global Health Law Amid WHO Crisis 

by Alexandra L. Phelan

As international negotiations stall around pathogen access and benefit sharing, the Andes virus outbreak exemplifies why the system is needed

      

Read this story

GOVERNANCE

Argentinian President Javier Milei speaks at an event, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on April 29, 2026.

Argentina, the WHO, and an Exit Door That Doesn’t Exist  

by Sara Al Dallal

Argentina’s proposed departure from the WHO raises complex legal questions about treaty withdrawal and global health governance  

      

Read this story

GENDER

Health workers attend to a mother and her infant, at the Mother and Child Hospital, in Kasoa, Ghana, on November 19, 2025.

Centering Women, Children, and Adolescents in Global Health Reform  

by Helen Clark and Rajat Khosla

In an era of fiscal pressure, omission does not produce neutrality; it can produce retrenchment by default 

 

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

A bar chart that shows changes in maternal deaths from 2015-2023 in United States, Australasia, high-income Asia Pacific, Canada, Southern Latin America, and Western Europe

Read this story

 

Recommended Feature

 

GOVERNANCE

A street vendor selects cigarettes for a customer, in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on May 27, 2024.

Busting 10 Myths About Health Taxes 

by Tom Frieden

Ahead of the World Health Assembly, Resolve to Save Lives CEO Tom Frieden discusses how health taxes can raise money and improve physical well-being

 

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

China Is Becoming Dangerously Overconfident (New York Times)

 

The Iran War’s Forgotten Front: Global Food Insecurity and the Limits of U.S. Aid (CFR)

 

Makary’s Time Atop FDA Over, Diamantas Named Acting Commissioner (Politico)

 

Trump Has a Proposal to Expand Fertility Benefits. Here’s How That Would Work (PBS)

 

A Deadly Bacterium Is Creeping Up the U.S. East Coast. How Worried Should We Be? (The Guardian)

 

PCOS Has a New Name. Doctors Hope It Will Improve Care for Millions (New York Times)

 

Extreme Heat Is Worsening Faster for Black Americans (STAT)

 

Israeli Attacks on Gaza Increased by 35% Since Iran Ceasefire: Report (Al Jazeera)

 

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