The coronavirus pandemic has wiped out progress on lofty goals such as ending world poverty and hunger in the next decade, ...
Tara Kirk Sell, second left, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore, speaks at the Global Health Security Forum in Vancouver on Nov. 5. Dr. Sell said ...
High levels of inequality are making the world more vulnerable to pandemics and the unhealthy cycle between the two must be broken, global leaders have warned.1 A report by world leading public health ...
The report called on world leaders to increase pandemic preparedness by investing in "social protection mechanisms" within their countries while also tackling global inequality, including through debt ...
High levels of inequality, within and between countries, are making the world more vulnerable to pandemics, making pandemics more economically disruptive and deadly, and making them last longer; ...
More children could be pushed into joining armed groups in conflict zones as families face increasing poverty due to the ...
Launched by UNAIDS in 2023, the council describes a vicious cycle: Inequality — within nations and between them — accelerates outbreaks. If an outbreak hits, inequality undermines countries’ responses ...
Proven actions can break the cycle, say experts South Africa is not treating its G20 presidency as ceremonial. It is using ...
Strong, well-functioning health systems are as vital as advanced weaponry, military strategy, and intelligence for global security, writes former CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
While the budget does not give details of the cuts, it cites Canada’s spending on global health programs as an example, ...
Seth Berkley, former CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and co-founder of COVAX, discusses his new book “Fair Doses” and the ...
Inequality is undermining national and global efforts to combat pandemics, making them more disruptive, deadly, and longer in ...
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