鶹ýվ

Dr. Joseph C. Wu Receives 2024 Louis and Artur Lucian Award for Research in Circulatory Diseases

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 10/22/2025 - 11:55

鶹ýվ is proud to present the 2024 Louis and Artur Lucian Award for Research in Circulatory DiseasesٴDr. Joseph C. Wu, Director of the Stanford Cardiovascular Institute.

View Previous Recipients
Categories: Global Health Feed

Dr. Joseph C. Wu Receives 2024 Louis and Artur Lucian Award for Research in Circulatory Diseases

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Wed, 10/22/2025 - 11:55

鶹ýվ is proud to present the 2024 Louis and Artur Lucian Award for Research in Circulatory DiseasesٴDr. Joseph C. Wu, Director of the Stanford Cardiovascular Institute.

View Previous Recipients
Categories: Global Health Feed

Global Health Now - Wed, 10/22/2025 - 09:30
96 Global Health NOW: Anti-Science Bills Sweep U.S; Azithromycin Trial Has No Impact on Infant Deaths; and ‘Gut-Healing’ Food Treats Malnutrition October 22, 2025 Crates of freshly bottled raw milk at the Lolans Farm stand. Middleborough, Massachusetts, March 17. David L Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Anti-Science Bills Sweep State Legislatures     A wave of legislation aiming to weaken or roll back public health protections has been introduced in U.S. states this year, , which of 420+ bills, and found that ~30 such bills have already been adopted in 12 states.     Most of the laws focus on three categories—vaccines, raw milk, and water fluoridation—and cover a range of directives, including:  
  • Anti-vaccine bills: Make it easier to get vaccine exemptions; prohibit vaccine requirements; place more restrictions on certain vaccines or programs.  
  • Raw milk: Remove restrictions on raw milk sales.  
  • Fluoride: Ban fluoride in drinking water or make fluoridation a ballot measure.  
Organized effort: While campaigns behind such legislation typically frame themselves as grassroots, found that most are backed by well-funded national organizations tied to HHS Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and include members benefiting politically and financially.    Conspiracy-to-policy pipeline: The trend signals the normalization of an anti-vaccine movement that has already led to falling vaccination rates and the comeback of preventable diseases like measles and whooping cough.  
  • “The march of conspiracy thinking from the margins to the mainstream now guiding public policy should be a wake-up call for all Americans,” said Devin Burghart, president of the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights. 
GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES The Latest One-Liners   DRC’s cholera outbreak has spread to 20 of the country’s 26 provinces, with 58,000+ suspected cases and 1,700+ deaths so far this year, Médecins Sans Frontières reports; separately, the UN issued a warning that incidents of rape and conflict-related sexual violence in the country have surged by a third compared to last year. ;  
Ambulances supplied to Malawi by the UK Aid Match Maternal Health program from 2015 to 2018 were sold off to fund repairs for officials’ cars, drawing outrage from locals and civil society groups; one official defended the move, claiming that the vehicles “were faulty and would be costly to fix.”  
A hepatitis A outbreak in the Czech Republic is among the worst the country has seen in decades, with 21 deaths and 1,842 cases recorded earlier this month; centered in Prague, the outbreak has begun to spread to other regions.  
  Men who use plastic tableware have a higher accumulation of microplastics in their semen and lower sperm counts, that studied samples from ~200 men of reproductive age in Chongqing, China.   U.S. and Global Health Policy News   The Pentagon Retreats from Climate Fight as Heat and Storms Slam Troops –  

It’s been a month. And we still don’t know much about Kennedy’s long COVID consortium –      Government shutdown means many CDC experts are skipping a pivotal meeting on infectious disease –     The Deceptive Phrase Behind Trump’s Medicaid Purge – INFANT MORTALITY Mass Azithromycin Trial Has No Impact on Infant Deaths    A major trial in Mali that aimed to help reduce infant mortality through mass antibiotic distribution had no impact on infant death rates, —findings that could change WHO-recommended intervention tactics.     Background: After a 2018 trial showed that administering the commonly used antibiotic azithromycin 2X per year reduced deaths in 1–5-year-olds, the WHO recommended the intervention for infants.     The study: 149,000+ infants ages 1–11 months received either a placebo every three months, or azithromycin, distributed 2X or 4X per year.  
  • Mortality rates were nearly identical across all groups.  
Implications: Researchers suggest that broader age groups may need to be targeted to see a benefit—though that could raise antibiotic resistance risks.          Related: ‘I fear we are sitting on a time bomb.’ Scientists debate mass distribution of antibiotics in Africa –    GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES MALNUTRITION The Growing Impact of a ‘Gut-Healing’ Food    A food supplement for undernourished children that also seeks to repair the gut microbiome is gaining recognition after .    Feeding the body—and bacteria: Severe childhood malnutrition can lead to the maldevelopment of digestive bacteria critical for growth and immunity.  
  • The new food formulation, dubbed MDCF-2 (microbiome-directed complementary food), blends chickpea, soybean, and peanut flours with green banana into an affordable combination that nourishes this microbiome.  
  • The therapeutic food was the result of a collaboration between researchers studying malnutrition at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b) and those studying the gut microbiome at Washington University in St. Louis.  
Global reach: Studies of MDCF-2 are currently underway in India, Mali, Pakistan, and Tanzania.       OPPORTUNITY Community Reporters from ICFP and the Family Planning News Network (FPNN) interview Indigenous activists in Riohacha, Colombia, in August 2025. Courtesy of ICFP It’s Not Too Late to Register for ICFP    The fight for sexual and reproductive health and rights is happening now—and you can be part of it.    Join the International Conference on Family Planning 2025 virtually to connect with advocates, learn from global leaders, and add your voice to a movement shaping the future of health and equity worldwide. 
  • November 1–6, 2025
  •  
QUICK HITS Dangerous or life-saving? Why drug programs that stop disease are under fire. –     More Europeans are dying from HIV now than 15 years ago –  
Eight countries added to methanol poisoning warning list –     WHO warns $1.7bn funding shortfall threatens polio eradication efforts –     More people are freezing their eggs — but most will never use them –      How one Michigan town is putting partisanship aside in pursuit of clean water –     Bird flu hiding in cheese? The surprising new discovery –   Issue No. 2809
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Morgan Coulson, Kate Belz, Melissa Hartman, Jackie Powder, and Rin Swann. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on and follow us on Instagram and X .

Please send the Global Health NOW free sign-up link to friends and colleagues:

Want to change how you receive these emails? You can or . -->



  Copyright 2025 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All Rights Reserved. Views and opinions expressed in Global Health NOW do not necessarily reflect those of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health or Johns Hopkins University.


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can or .
Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Friends, parks and brain wiring predict whether people exercise after a cardiovascular diagnosis

鶹ýվ Faculty of Medicine news - Tue, 10/21/2025 - 10:32
Findings could help tailor interventions to encourage physical activity in older people with heart and blood flow conditions

A diagnosis is often a cue for people to change the way they live. For people diagnosed with cardiovascular conditions such as heart disease or diabetes, it is often a motivator to get more physical exercise, which can improve long-term health. However, the rate of physical activity increase after diagnosis varies widely depending on the individual.

Categories: Global Health Feed

Pages

鶹ýվ GHP Logo (鶹ýվ crest separated by a vertical bar from a purple globe and a partial arc with "鶹ýվ Global health Programs" in English & French)

鶹ýվ is located on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous Peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg Nations. 鶹ýվ honours, recognizes, and respects these nations as the traditional stewards of the lands and waters on which peoples of the world now gather. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous Peoples from across Turtle Island. We are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land.

Learn more about Indigenous Initiatives at 鶹ýվ.

Back to top