Everyone working in health needs to prepare for and be equipped to respond to the health consequences of the climate crisis.
The number of adults living with diabetes worldwide has surpassed 800 million, more than quadrupling since 1990, according to new data released in The Lancet on World Diabetes Day.
The G20 Leaders’ Summit in Rio de Janeiro on Nov 18–19 will address global health, but uncertainty over multilateralism under a new US President looms large. John Zarocostas reports.
The air quality index is alarmingly high in Pakistan and India. This week, smog has drastically reduced visibility, obscuring ...
Climate change undermines the fight against HIV, TB and malaria. Integrating health into climate policy is crucial to ...
Researchers using machine learning discovered that variations in microbial load in the gut, influenced by age, sex, diet, and ...
With emissions stabilizing in Europe and the Americas yet rising in Asia and Africa, the following chart underscores the economic turnaround ... High income countries with elevated emissions, such as ...
The following is a summary of “Epidemic preparedness and response capacity against infectious disease outbreaks in 186 countries, 2018–2022,” published in the November 2024 issue of Infectious Disease ...
According to the Global Tuberculosis Report 2024, India had the highest tuberculosis (TB) burden in 2023. Over half the cases ...