November 21, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

Across the globe, tobacco use is declining. From 2000 to 2022, 150 countries lowered their consumption of the harmful product. Yet certain regions are lagging. Southeast Asia reports the highest percentage of population using tobacco, at 26.5%. Driving that figure is Indonesia—one of the six countries worldwide where tobacco use is increasing.   

 

Recent efforts to control tobacco use in Indonesia, however, have stalled. To lead this week’s edition, journalist Miriam Bahagijo explores how Indonesian Minister of Finance Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa reversed a decision to raise the cigarette excise tax and the recommended minimum selling price of cigarettes, despite criticism from public health advocates and health economists. 

 

Next, TGH focuses on the United States, where eating disorders are rising. Sahana Srikanth, from the Youth Corps of the Strategic Training Initiative for the Prevention of Eating Disorders, describes how these conditions thrive in marginalized populations and the cultural barriers that discourage those people from seeking help. 

 

As Thanksgiving nears, the resurgent bird flu outbreak is still pummeling poultry across the United States. To round off the week, Managing Editor Nsikan Akpan gives an update on how turkeys are faring—and explains why consumers could experience some surprise relief as they shop for their Thanksgiving birds.  

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

POVERTY

People shop for groceries at a store in New York City, New York, on July 15, 2025.

Eating Disorders Rise Among Marginalized Americans

by Sahana Srikanth

In recent years, U.S. health visits for eating disorders have more than doubled for children 

 

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Figure of the Week

 

A world map showing the proportion of tobacco users in each country

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Recommended Feature

 

FOOD

A nurse administers polio vaccine to a child during her community outreach program, in Mushelusi village, in Bulambuli district, Uganda, on September 10, 2025.

Bird Flu Roars Back: An Update on Thanksgiving Turkey Prices

by Nsikan Akpan

Since September, turkey and egg farms have lost millions of birds, renewing pressure on food prices and biosecurity

      

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What We’re Reading

Recycling Lead for U.S. Car Batteries Is Poisoning People (New York Times)

China’s Massive Overseas Lending Portfolio Shifts Course, as Beijing Eyes the United States, EU, and Sensitive Industries (Aid Data) 

 

Farmers Face Prospect of Skyrocketing Health-Care Premiums (Civil Eats)

 

Texas Measles Strain Continues to Spread, Officials Say (New York Times)

 

First Ever Human Case of H5N5 Avian Flu Confirmed in Washington State (Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy)

 

MacArthur Foundation Awards $100 Million to Outbreak Surveillance Network, a Boost Amid Global Health Cuts (AP News)

 

Ultra-Processed Foods Are Danger to Global Public Health, Experts Warn (Reuters)

 

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