June 27, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

On Wednesday, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance culminated its latest replenishment cycle with a pledging summit in Brussels. The summit’s outcome reflects an unsteady moment in global vaccination and the diseases it helps prevent.

 

Gavi secured $9 billion to support its strategic plans for the next five years, falling $2.9 billion short of its intended goal. That shortfall was partially due to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who refused U.S. donations, making allegations over vaccine safety, which Gavi rebutted. The funding gap arrives as a new study in the Lancet shows vaccination progress has stalled or reversed in many countries since 2010.

 

The United States has long been one of Gavi’s largest financial supporters, but federal officials are reconsidering the U.S. stance on immunization policy. Kennedy’s announcement arrived the same day the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) convened its independent vaccine advisory committee, which Kennedy recently purged, alleging its members withheld conflicts of interest (COI).

 

For this week’s edition, former U.S. CDC Director Tom Frieden and medical student Yuexuan Chen refute those claims by examining the COI disclosures made by 30 current and former vaccine advisory committee members between 2000 and 2024. They write that recent vaccine policy changes and the clean sweep of CDC vaccine advisors threaten “to destroy the health protection network the United States has worked decades to build.” On Thursday, the new advisors concluded their latest session by rescinding recommendations for some flu vaccines.

 

Next, Girija Sankar, head of neglected tropical diseases at Christian Blind Mission, reflects on her 24-year career in global health by confronting the popular belief that “our job is to work ourselves out of a job." She questions what that expression conveys about power, inequity, and purpose in global health.

 

The newsletter concludes as Zimbabwe Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube opines on how Africa can grow health investments amid high public debt and a global drop in foreign aid.

 

Until next week!—Nsikan Akpan, Managing Editor

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. leaves the stage at the Department of Health and Human Services, in Washington, DC, on April 16, 2025. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

Transparency Misinterpreted: CDC Vaccine Policy and Conflicts of Interest 

by Tom Frieden and Yuexuan Chen

A former CDC director says the idea that the agency’s vaccine advisors profited from their recommendations is a fallacy

      

Read this story

 

GOVERNANCE

Patients wait for treatment as a USAID-funded health awareness poster hangs behind them, at the Hossainpur Upazila Health Complex, in Kishoreganj, Bangladesh, on February 10, 2025. REUTERS/Piyas Biswas

The Discomfort of Working Ourselves Out of Global Health

by Girija Sankar

After 24 years, a public health worker grapples with questions of power, inequity, and purpose in global health

      

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

A world map titled

Dive Into TGH Data Visualizations

 

Recommended Feature

 

TRADE

Researchers work on a microbe they say can protect mosquitoes from malaria, at the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology headquarters, in Nairobi, Kenya on, May 11, 2020. REUTERS/Jackson Njehia

Financing Health Innovation in Africa

by Mthuli Ncube

Zimbabwe’s finance minister explains how Africa can grow health investments amid high public debt and decreased foreign aid

 

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

June Is the New July: Why Intense Summer Heat Is Arriving Earlier (Washington Post)

To Challenge Big Tobacco’s Sales Pitch, Talk to Your City’s Residents (Global Health Now)

Deep, Wide, and Fast: Three Reasons Why Cuts to U.S. Supply Chain Aid Are So Harmful (Center for Global Development)

The World’s Only Twice-A-Year Shot to Prevent HIV Could Stop Transmission—If People Can Get It (Associated Press)

 

“I Feel Like I’ve Been Lied To”: When a Measles Outbreak Hits Home (New York Times)

 

Traffic, Crowds and Construction: India’s Hill Stations Swamped by Tourists Escaping Delhi Heat (The Guardian)

 

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