European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announces Olivér Várhelyi as Commissioner for Health and Animal Welfare.

Hungary’s Olivér Várhelyi has been announced as the new European Commissioner for Health, in a portfolio that now includes animal welfare.

He succeeds Cyprus’s Stella Kyriakides, whose portfolio was health and food safety.

Várhelyi has been the European Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement since 2019, leading efforts to increase membership of the European Union.

“He will be responsible for building a European health union and continuing the work of beating cancer and on preventive health,” said Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen, announcing his appointment as part of her new European Commission College on Tuesday.

However,  before assuming office, all appointees still face questioning by Members of the European Parliament (MEPs), need the  support of two-thirds of the MEPs on their respective committees and the college has to be voted in by the Parliament.

Várhelyi was nominated by right-wing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. He has a legal background and has served in various positions in the Hungarian public administration, including in trade and industry and foreign affairs. 

Prior to becoming a commissioner, he was Hungary’s Ambassador to the EU. Hungary is one of the least democratic EU members, restricting NGOs, media and women’s and LGBTQ rights.

In July 2022, the European Commission referred Hungary to the Court of Justice of the EU for its 2021 amendments to the Child Protection Law “which included unjustified restrictions on LGBT content, with the excuse of protecting children”, according to Human Rights Watch.

In September 2022, the Hungarian Ministry of Health issued a decree making it mandatory for pregnant women seeking abortions to listen to the foetal heartbeat before terminating the pregnancy.

As Commissioner in charge of enlargement, Várhelyi was accused of not paying enough attention to aspirant EU members’ records on democracy and human rights. In particular, he was accused of “pushing” Serbia’s EU membership despite its failure to make progress on key democratic and human rights issues, according to a report by Politico.

His predecessor, Kyriakides, who describes herself as a human rights advocate on X, comes from Cyprus’s Democratic Party, a centre-right Christian democratic political party

Unlike Várhelyi, she has a background in health and worked in her country’s Ministry of Health between 1976 and 2006, as a clinical psychologist in the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

She also championed efforts to combat cancer, serving as president of the First Breast Cancer Movement in Cyprus and then president of the European Breast Cancer Coalition, Europa Donna

Open plastic trash burning
Burning waste in a rural town in Egypt. 30 metric tonnes of plastic waste are open burned globally each year. Nearly 60% of plastic waste is burned, yet the issue has “not formed a central part” of the current Plastics Treaty negotiations.

Royda Joseph, a 32-year-old mother of three lives in a community next to the PuguKinyamwezi dump in Tanzania. “The dump is on fire every two days,” Royda told the UK NGO TearFund. “Sometimes, when it is on fire, the smoke is so dark and huge that you can’t see the person in front of you or the house next to you. Because of that smoke I get breathing problems and coughing, and eye problems too. The kids also get a lot of breathing problems: they cough a lot.”

In developing cities, from Lagos, to Cairo and New Dheli, air pollution generated by the burning of plastic waste is a daily reality – a 30 metric tonne a year reality according to a new Nature study from researchers at the University of Leeds in the UK. The study found that some 52 metric tons of plastic waste are improperly disposed of every year. And of that, some 57% of that waste is burned openly, launching a slew of toxic chemicals into the air, and disproportionately affecting communities in the Global South. 

The findings have particular meaning for health, which are not well understood. The resulting smoke is a complex mixture of chemicals – including known or suspected carcinogens like bisphenols, phthalates, and dioxins, and a less-understood threat, microplastics. 

The Nature study comes as negotiators gear up for the next round of discussions over an international treaty  on plastic pollution in November in Busan, South Korea. So far, the focus of negotiations has mainly been on the disposal of plastics in landfills and waterways – and not health-harmful air pollution exposures from incineration. 

Model estimated improper waste disposal across 50,000 municipalities worldwide

Graphic description of the sources of air, water and land-based ’emissions’ from unmanaged plastics debris.

Using artificial intelligence to model and estimate plastic waste across 50,000 municipalities worldwide, the researchers identified Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and South-East Asia as “hotspots” for improperly burned or disposed of plastics. India, followed by Nigeria and Indonesia, tops the list as the largest pollution emitter, producing one -fifth of global plastic pollution at 9.3 metric tonnes of plastic waste. China, Russia, Pakistan, Cambodia, and Brazil also ranked as high pollution producers.  Some 1.5 billion of the world’s 8 billion people, mainly in the Global South, live without any waste collection services or with highly inadequate services. 

As a result, low- and middle-income countries in the Global South emit roughly two-thirds of the world’s unmanaged plastic waste, defined as un-contained debris that winds up in open landfills, along fields and roadsides, or in waterways – or conversely as incinerated microplastics. Altogether, uncollected waste in lower-middle income countries accounts for 38% of total global plastics incineration emissions and 51% of plastic debris. 

While in developed countries, plastics incineration occurs in high-temperature, high-tech industrial burning sites, with controlled emissions release, in developing countries most of this unmanaged plastics waste is burned in open pits or piles in neighborhoods and streets of cities, towns and villages, or on their periphery, the study notes.

Burning plastics release microplastics, other hazardous chemicals

Plastic waste sorting
Over 30 metric tonnes of plastic are burned each year, mostly in lower and middle income countries, leaving millions exposed to toxic air pollutants.

The resulting smoke is a complex mixture of chemicals – including known or suspected carcinogens like bisphenols, phthalates, and dioxins, and a less-understood threat, microplastics. 

The health effects can be severe, Gauri Sanjeev Pathak, an Associate Professor at Aarhus University in Denmark, told Health Policy Watch

Such emissions have been tied to cancer, respiratory problems, immunological issues, and birth defects, among a host of other human and planetary health issues,” she said. 

“Both open burning and degradation of plastics entering the environment as unmanaged solid waste can produce microplastics,” added Katrina Smith Korfmacher, Professor of Environmental Medicine at the University of Rochester and co-director of the Lake Ontario MicroPlastics center. “Open burning poses well-known threats to human health,” she said.

One study estimated that humans may inhale up to 22 million particles of micro- and nanoplastics annually. Inhaling these pollutants can cause breathing problems, exacerbate existing respiratory conditions, and contribute to air pollution-related diseases.

Gaps in knowledge about the health effects of plastics air pollution exposures

Despite the growing number of studies on the health risks of microplastics, the World Health Organization (WHO) notes that “many gaps remain in the current scientific knowledge of the health impacts of different types of plastics and added chemicals and their breakdown in the environment,” in a December 2023 report to the WHO Executive Board

Along with the direct exposures to humans from incineration smoke, tiny particles of carcinogenic chemicals like dioxins and furans, eventually settle on cropland and in waterways, where they enter the food chain. Dioxins are potentially lethal persistent organic pollutants that can cause cancer and disrupt thyroid and respiratory systems, according to the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)

Pollution hotspots – South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, South-East Asia

Plastic pollution map
Estimate of plastics ’emissions’ for the year 20202, referring to how much plastic ends up improperly incinerated or dumped on land or in waterways.

Just nine countries account for more than half of mismanaged plastics pollution emissions to the air, land and water, in absolute terms. But some countries with low absolute emissions rank high in per capita terms. For example, China, the world’s fourth largest emitter of plastics pollution has a very low per-capita emission rate, while South Sudan has high per-capita rates but low overall emissions. 

In Latin America and the Caribbean, hotspots for per-capita emissions include municipalities in Paraguay, Belize and Haiti.

The study anticipates that Sub-Saharan Africa will become the world’s largest source of plastic pollution within the next few decades as absolute and per-capita emissions continue to climb. Several megacities stand out as key hotspots, including Lagos, Nigeria; Juba, South Sudan; and Nouakchott, Mauritania.

“Across the continent, there is barely any plastic treatment infrastructure in place,” said a WHO Africa Region article on plastic waste.

Waste scavengers on the front lines of exposures

A woman scavenger looks on as two colleagues burn plastic e-waste to recuperate metal wiring

In lieu of government waste collection, “waste-pickers” in the informal sector generally collect and sort plastics – burning much of it to recuperate valuable metals, including wire and other materials that they can then sell or reuse. 

Globally, nearly 60% of all plastic waste globally is collected by waste scavengers in the informal sector. Over 20 million people around the world earn an income in the informal waste sector, collecting, sorting, and selling materials for recycling or reuse, according to the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP). Around 20% of waste scavengers are women, and an uncounted number are children, a 2021 WHO report estimates. The job is hazardous and exposures to the toxic soup of chemicals, directly and through airborne pathways, can cause respiratory illnesses and skin infections, as well as cancers. In addition, women and children are at risk from adverse reproductive and developmental health effects. 

Advocates for safer conditions urge governments and companies to accept Fair Circulatory Principles so that the human rights of waste pickers and other informal workers are recognized. 

The estimates highlight the huge disparities in how countries are able to grapple with plastic waste.  For much of the Global South, waste mismanagement drives pollution, while the Global North’s robust waste collection and management means that a much smaller fraction of plastic waste ends up in the local environment.

Raising awareness about plastics air pollution exposures – and hopes for consideration in a treaty

Managing plastic waste
With more robust waste management systems, wealthier countries are able to keep plastic waste from contaminating the air, soil, and water, leading the UNEP to advocate for more waste management investment.

The updated estimates of pollution from plastics waste, and particularly from incineration, comes just a few months before the next round of negotiations at the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution in Busan, South Korea, 25 November-1 December.

The study authors hope negotiators will consider the burden of openly burned plastic, a topic that has “not formed a central part of discussions.”

Pathak stressed that “plastic pollution awareness campaigns or policies that focus only on plastic litter can often lead to increased open plastic burning, as communities and local officials engage in clean-up activities to care for their spaces or to meet waste management goals.

“Given low levels of awareness regarding the harms and the persistence of the toxicants from open burning and a lack of real alternatives to deal with collected wastes, communities often end up burning them. This is why it is crucial that policies and interventions to target plastic pollution, especially global interventions designed in the Global North, take a comprehensive view of the plastic problem and pay attention to local constraints and capacities.”

Korfmacher also echoed the need for research and awareness into “how plastics enter the human body and what effects different sizes, shapes, and types of plastics have on human health.” 

Image Credits: S. Samantaroy, Nature , SweepSmart, Nature/Cottom et al, 2024, WHO,2021.

Around 20,000 delegates took part in the European Respiratory Society (ERS) conference in person and online

Long-term exposure to air pollution and lack of green spaces significantly increases the risk of hospitalization for respiratory conditions, according to new research presented at the European Respiratory Society (ERS) International Congress in Vienna this week.

Researchers from the University of Bergen, Norway, found that even in Northern Europe, where air pollution levels are relatively low, exposure to particulate matter, black carbon, and nitrogen dioxide increased the risk of respiratory hospitalization by 30-45% for each measured increase in these pollutants.

The team analyzed data from 1,644 people across five Northern European countries, using the European Community Respiratory Health Survey. They examined respiratory hospitalizations from 2000 to 2010 and evaluated their connection to long-term exposure to air pollutants and green spaces between 1990 and 2000. 

Researchers considered particulate matter, black carbon, nitrogen dioxide, ozone and “greenness” — a measure of vegetation near homes.

 “Air pollution causes persistent inflammation and oxidative stress in the respiratory system,” explained Shanshan Xu, lead researcher from the University of Bergen. “These harmful processes contribute to the development and exacerbation of chronic respiratory diseases, which can escalate into severe health episodes requiring hospital care.”

While access to green spaces led to a decrease in hospitalizations, researchers found it also increased emergency room visits, primarily among people with hay fever.

“It is also likely that long-term exposure to air pollution could lead to a decreased tolerance or increased sensitivity to these pollutants, explaining why even moderate or low levels might cause severe health effects in certain populations,” Xu said.

Traffic and air pollution

A second study led by researchers at the University of Leicester revealed a strong connection between traffic-related air pollution and the progression from asthma to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The study also found that higher exposure to nitrogen dioxide increases this risk, especially in individuals with a genetic predisposition.

“For every 10 micrograms per cubic meter higher exposure to particulate matter, the risk of developing COPD was 56% higher among asthmatic patients,” said lead author Dr Samuel Cai.

“People with asthma should always be aware of air pollution around them and, if necessary and resources allow, take measures such as wearing masks, use an indoor air purifier and reducing outdoor activities when air pollution is at high levels.”

The findings underscore the critical need for effective clean air initiatives and regulations, according to Professor Zorana J. Andersen, Chair of the ERS Health and Environment Committee.

“Air pollution affects everybody, but most people are very limited in the actions they can take against it to protect their health,” she stated. “It falls to policy-makers to come up with some bold actions to tackle air pollution in our cities.”

The power of laughter and genetics

The ERS Congress, which welcomed nearly 20,000 delegates onsite or online over five days, covered a wide range of respiratory health topics. Notable presentations included studies on genetic risk factors for asthma, the impact of medical clowns on pediatric pneumonia patients, and the effects of fine particulate matter on respiratory immune responses.

Researchers presented a new method for calculating a person’s genetic risk of developing asthma. The study, involving about 12,000 participants, successfully predicted asthma-related conditions, with particularly strong results for childhood-onset asthma.

“Using the power of genetics, we were able to predict asthma and asthma-related outcomes in individuals by generating polygenic risk scores,” Bernard S. Striker, the lead author, explained. “We also showed distinct, genetically driven pathways underlying asthma pathophysiology, which could contribute to personalized treatment approaches and risk mitigation.”

In an unconventional study showcasing the congress’s diverse research, scientists found an unexpected aid for children’s respiratory illnesses: laughter. The research on pediatric pneumonia treatment showed that medical clowns significantly reduced hospital stays for young patients.

Dr Karin Yaacoby-Bianu, a pediatric pulmonologist from the Carmel Medical Center in Israel, reported that children with pneumonia who received twice-daily visits from medical clowns during their first 48 hours of hospitalization had shorter hospital stays – 43.5 hours on average compared to 70 hours.

“Laughter and humor may also have direct physiological benefits by lowering respiratory and heart rates, reducing air trapping, modulating hormones, and enhancing the immune function,” Yaacoby-Bianu said.

The results also showed children supported by clowning required fewer days of intravenous antibiotics. While the study didn’t investigate specific mechanisms, Yaacoby-Bianu suggested that by alleviating stress, medical clowns may indirectly support the body’s natural defense mechanisms, potentially reducing the need for antibiotic interventions.

“We proved that laughter is good for health,” Yaacoby-Bianu told Bloomberg. “Every procedure you try to do with a clown is much easier, much nicer. The child forgets that he is in a hospital.”

The conference also highlighted growing concerns over fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and its impact on respiratory health. A comprehensive review examined how PM2.5 affects the respiratory immune system, suggesting that exposure significantly impairs immune cells’ response to microbial infections, potentially contributing to the development of severe respiratory diseases.

Among the hundreds of presentations in Vienna, other cutting-edge topics included the unique health dangers of wildfire smoke, AI-supported respiratory illness diagnoses and lung disease, and the effect of asthma on miscarriages.

COP29 Presidency is looking to make health a permanent issue at this and future COPs.

Health will be an important focus of the upcoming annual United Nations (UN) climate conference taking place in November in Baku, Azerbaijan, according to the COP29 Presidency and the World Health Organization (WHO).

Like the previous COP, there will be a health day and there is a slew of health-focused initiatives, according to Elmar Mammadov, co-lead of the COP29 Global and Regional Initiatives and Action Agenda Team.

The COP29 Presidency and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have launched the Harmonia 4 climate resilience initiative to empower farmers, villages, and rural communities.

Then there is the ‘Baku Initiative on Human Development for Climate Resilience’, which is a multi-sectoral initiative on health, education, jobs, green skills, and youth.

In addition, the COP29 Presidency is exploring a coalition along the lines of Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate and Health (ATACH) that came out of COP26. ATACH is an informal voluntary network to share information-sharing and for cooperation administered by WHO.

“We would like COP29 Presidency to prioritize health on a permanent basis, to make it a long-term, sustainable topic to all COPs in the future,” Mammadov said. He added that the COP29 Presidency would like to bring together all the Presidencies since COP26, along with the WHO, and form a climate and health coalition.

The announcements were made during a webinar jointly organized by the COP29 Presidency and the WHO.

“It will be a very strong legacy on health, starting with the ATACH in COP26 and making sure that we have, every year, a more impactful presence on climate change and health,” said Dr Maria Neira, WHO’s Director of Environment, Climate Change and Health.

Neira hailed the plans for collaboration between COP29 Presidency and other UN agencies like FAO, apart from the WHO to liaise on various issues that affect health.

Elmar Mammadov, Co-Lead of the COP29 Global and Regional Initiatives and Action Agenda Team.

Integrating health into city planning

It has become increasingly clear that the national governments have been slow to move on climate policies despite public rhetoric. And hence the focus has shifted to local administration as they have shown to be more willing to act.

“One of the key topic is integration of health into city planning,” Mammadov said. There will be several events and round tables that would focus on this topic.

“And one round table will be dedicated to nature, healthy cities and urban agriculture. This round table also will produce communicable call to action, [and] particularly will address urban agriculture, healthy cities and nature, because afforestation, reforestation also is one of the key topic for cities,” Mammadov said.

The Presidency has introduced the ‘Resilient and Healthy Cities’ initiative that will keep a track of the healthiest cities and address urban health issues. The World Heart Federation also began ranking cities based on the response to cardiovascular health this year, along similar lines.

COP29 is looking at health through food security, gender equity and environment, among others.

Focus on making COP29 inclusive

The location, high cost of attendance, visa issues and the allocation of time at COPs has usually meant that many groups are excluded.

“We would like to make COP29 inclusive. We would like to hear all voices, all proposals,” Mammadov said. He added that the goal would be to incorporate health into global initiatives to ensure it is a central theme in climate action.

Meanwhile, the Presidency will encourage multilateral development banks and multilateral climate funds to invest in each of these areas, so they get the required climate finance.

Image Credits: Unsplash.

Dealing with dementia (illustrative)
Most caregivers of people with dementia in low-income countries are female relatives.

NAIROBI – Africa can harness community care, traditional health, exercise and digital tools to treat dementia as its population ages, according to experts on the second day of Nature’s “Future of Dementia in Africa” conference,.

The conference, the first of its kind in Africa, was presented in conjunction with the Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative and Aga Khan University and ran from 11-12 September in Nairobi.

A key focus of the two-day event was the use of traditional, complementary, and alternative medicine in Africa and how it could be integrated with modern healthcare practices.

Razak Gyasi
Razak Gyasi

Razak Gyasi, an associate research scientist at the African Population and Health Research Centre, pointed out that by 2050, 2.1 billion people worldwide will be over the age of 60, with 80% of them living in Africa.

Ageing populations face numerous challenges, including financial loss, social isolation, and decreased mental and cognitive capacity, including dementia.

But addressing mental health in older adults doesn’t have to rely solely on Western medicine, said Gyasi.  Physical activity, for example, can improve mental health in old age, social inclusion increases a sense of belonging, and good sleep quality benefits brain function.

In his study on Ghanaians’ perceptions of traditional medicine, Gyasi showed that community members already use various alternative methods to support healthcare, from physical activity and social inclusion to massage therapy, herbal remedies, prayer, music, and aromatherapy.

The study focused on how people in the Sekyere South District of Ashanti in Ghana, perceive traditional medicine and its role compared to modern medicine. It explored key factors such as the accessibility of traditional medicine, the conditions it treats, its safety, effectiveness, and how it interacts with modern medical systems.

Gyasi’s research used a descriptive cross-sectional survey, collecting data at a single point from 120 participants: 70 traditional medicine practitioners, 30 healthcare users, and 20 modern practitioners.

Data was gathered through questionnaires, interviews, and observations of practitioners’ work environments in nine communities. Both qualitative (interviews and observations) and quantitative (survey) methods were used for data analysis.

The results show that alternative medicine has been effective in treating numerous medical conditions, including malaria, typhoid fever, arthritis, jaundice, infertility, strokes, broken bones, boils, piles, HIV/AIDS, and mental illness. However, there are risks due to the lack of formalised, coordinated interactions between allopathic and traditional healthcare providers.

Gyasi identified what he called “pull factors” that draw people toward traditional medicine and “push factors” that keep them away from modern healthcare.

People are drawn to alternative medicine because it takes a holistic approach and treats the “entire human system,” Gyasi showed. Traditional methods are also deeply rooted in people’s cultural upbringing. Many people believe in the spiritual connection between health’s physical and mental aspects, which draws people toward alternative care.

As one study participant asked, “How can I be cured with a treatment regimen that I do not understand?”

Allopathic deterrents

There are also deterrents within the mainstream health system. Some participants reported that they felt doctors lacked professionalism or embarrassed them during treatment.

Others cited the stigma associated with visiting “White man’s” practitioners. Additionally, many allopathic therapies have side effects that people are unwilling to endure, even if the treatment is effective. Finally, the cost of care is often prohibitive, making modern treatments inaccessible for many.

“The traditional system of medical practice is embedded in our culture and tradition,” Gyasi said. “If you ask any older African, whether from an urban or rural setting, this is what they grew up with. Trying to separate family traditions from the Western system isn’t right. Cooperation should be encouraged.”

He suggested that Africans should be able to benefit from both systems. For example, they might visit a clinic for a diagnosis but rely on traditional remedies within their communities for treatment.

“All of us need to come together and address these issues holistically,” he said.

Care for the Caregiver

Wambui Karanja
Wambui Karanja raised the burden placed on caregivers.

Another significant aspect is the unique role of caregivers in Africa. Wambui Karanja, a project manager at the Brain and Mind Institute at Aga Khan University, said that almost all those with dementia in low- and middle-income countries (96%) live at home.

This places a heavy burden on caregivers and greatly impacts the global distribution of caregiving time, particularly for women who contribute 71% of the global hours of informal care, with the highest proportion in low-income countries. These caregivers need better tools and support to care for those they look after.

Karanja highlighted the efforts of the Alzheimer’s Dementia Organisation of Kenya, which has been working to build caregiver capacity at all levels and equip them with the skills to provide basic care for people with dementia.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the organisation partnered with the Alzheimer’s Society of Ireland to offer online support from both peers and professionals. A training program helped caregivers improve their understanding of dementia patients, practice self-care, and enhance communication.

Feedback from the program was overwhelmingly positive. Caregivers expressed relief that they finally had someone to listen to them and provide support, making them feel less isolated. The program also provided better insight into what to expect for those caring for loved ones in the early stages of dementia.

While some other African local organisations offer similar programs, Karanja emphasised that there aren’t enough resources or partnerships to adequately support caregivers, particularly in Kenya. She said more investment and collaboration are needed to provide the necessary assistance.

Digital tools

Edem Adzogenu, vice chair of the Nigeria Digital Health Initiative, discussed how digital tools could support the dementia community in general.

“A low-resource continent like Africa, where the kinds of investments that are required to go into clinical trials, etc., might not be available, early diagnosis and intervention is the smartest strategy,” Adzogenu said.

He explained that in Africa, dementia diagnosis typically begins only after significant memory loss but digital tools have the potential to change this.

As many people have access to smartphones, Adzogenu stressed that promoting digital health is more about education than training. He noted that digital tools can collect basic health information and conduct simple screenings to help identify early signs of dementia.

Even if elderly individuals struggle with the tests, younger caregivers or relatives can assist, he said.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, a digital health wallet was implemented in 22 African countries to ensure care continuity. Kenya was the first country to adopt it.

“With that platform, we can now build many other things on top of it, and we are using it for brain health as well,” Adzogenu said.

He again highlighted the widespread use of digital tools in Africa, particularly in areas like fintech and social media.

“It would be remiss to say the valuable aspect of our existence on this planet, our health, is not taking advantage of digital tools,” he concluded. “The question is … how do we create the frameworks to make it possible in health?”

Image Credits: rawpixel.com, Maayan Hoffman.

Polio campaign gets unmderway in northern Gaza on 10 September, the third phase of the staged outreach.

Over half a million Gazan children have been vaccinated against the deadly polio virus over the past 12 days, WHO said on Thursday, on the final day of a campaign that began 1 September, and which officials said appears to have attained the goal of reaching over 90% of the population of children under 10 years of age – at least in its first phase. 

But the longer-term health challenges faced in the war-torn enclave were underlined by a new WHO report, stating that some 22,500 Gazans who have sustained ”life-changing” injuries in the grinding 11-month Israel-Hamas war, will need long-term rehabilitation services that are unavailable from a shattered health system. 

Brief humanitarian ‘pauses’ against grim background of conflict

Dr Rik Peeperkorn, WHO representative to the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), speaking from Gaza.

The polio vaccine campaign has unrolled in the shadow of new Israeli military evacuation orders and aerial bombings in parts of Gaza where displaced Palestinians were sheltering, along with the Israeli military’s discovery of six dead Israeli hostages in a tunnel under the southern city of Rafah, reportedly shot dead by Hamas shortly before the army’s arrival. 

Even so, brief lulls in fighting due to a series of ‘humanitarian pauses’ agreed to by all sides enabled local medical teams, coordinated by WHO, to conduct the three stage polio immunization drive across the central, southern and northern regions of the 365 square kilometre Palestinian enclave. The campaign, involving hundreds of local medical staff, was planned and launched after the initial discovery of poliovirus in Gaza sewage in July, followed by the confirmation of an active polio case in a 10-month old baby in August. 

The case was traced to a vaccine-derived strain of poliovirus, which is commonly emitted in feces, but can mutate and infect other under-immunized children, particularly in degraded sanitation conditions like those faced in wartime Gaza today.      

“So far in the north we have reached 105,909 children under ten years of age. In the middle area: 195,722 and in the south 250,820,” said Dr Rik Peeperkorn, WHO coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT), in a WHO press briefing on Thursday. 

“This brings the total number of children vaccinated as of yesterday to 552,451. Numbers for today are still awaited,” he said. 

While the original 90% target involved reaching 640,000 children, that estimate of the under-10 population is being revised downward, in light of actual findings during the campaign, Peeperkorn stated. The same outreach must be repeated in a month’s time to deliver a second polio vaccine dose. 

‘Heartening to see response’

“It has been heartening to see the response to the campaign,” Peeperkorn told reporters at a briefing, broadcast from Gaza. “Everywhere the team has gone, parents are doing all they can to ensure their child does not miss vaccination. Many vaccination sites received more than expected crowds. Special coordinated missions were also conducted to reach children in insecure and hard to reach areas.

“I think that it’s amazing what has happened and what is possible where you have specific humanitarian policies, especially for the children, for the families, for everyone. 

“I don’t want to use that word, but it has even a bit of a ‘festive’ environment. Children came out [to be vaccinated] very well dressed. Many children on the streets …were.so joyful, joyful on the which haven’t been the case for the last 11 months. 

“So if this is possible in polio, why can’t we not translate this for other areas?”

Need to extend the polio ‘bubble’ to other humanitarian response efforts

“We are, and we were, and we are a little bit in a polio bubble,” Peeperkorn continued. 

“But we need to extend that, of course, to all the other humanitarian priorities,” he stressed, adding that food, fuel and medical supply distribution remain extremely difficult, while the area also faces looming winter cold and rain, after the scorching heat of the past summer. 

“We still face all of the same challenges we have for the last 11 months, if you talk about security, about getting the right goods and supplies humanitarian goods into Gaza,distributing those humanitarian goods across Gaza, and a deconfliction mechanism.  A lot of our humanitarian missions are still canceled.

“Over the last three weeks, we probably have nine missions to the North, many of those critically essential fuel missions for hospitals. Only four happened. 

“So if it is possible with polio, why can’t we do that in in a much broader area, and make sure that you establish these proper humanitarian corridors, even in a time of conflict?” 

Rehabilitation needs are huge and entirely unmet

Gaza doctor checks amputated limb of a young man.

Along with the constant interruptions in daily humanitariana relief efforts, the rehabilitation needs for injured Gazans constitute a huge, unmet need, for which almost no health services currently exist.

Without quick access to rehabilitation, many injuries will rapidly become even worse, noted Peeperkorn and other WHO experts at the briefing, citing the examples of spinal injuries that can cause knock-on bladder dysfunction, if not treated in time.

The new WHO report estimates trauma injury rehab needs using data from 8,878 injured patients, who were treated by Emergency Medical Teams (EMTs) between January and May, 2024. Based on that data, it extrapolates that at least one quarter of the esetimated 95,000 Palestinians injured in Gaza since the start of hostilities on 7 October, 2023, are estimated to have “life changing injuries that require rehabilitation services now and for years to come.”

Some 13 455 -17 550 people are estimated to have undergone severe limb injuries, which constitute “the main driver of the need for rehabilitation,” Peeperkorn stated, quoting the report. Many of those injured have more than one injury, the analysis found. The most common injury is to a major extremity,  followed by amputation, burn, spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury. Between 3105 and 4050 limb amputations have been conducted.

The analysis does not distinguish between injured combatants and non-combatants – a distinction the Hamas-controlled Gaza Ministry of Health also has avoided in its 11 months of reporting on injuries and deaths – the latter now estimated at more than 40,000 lives lost.

The WHO analysis also made no estimate of the distribution of such injuries between men, women and children – despite the detailed breakdown in injury types and needs. Asked why age and gender were not at least considered, a WHO spokesperson cited the “limited availability of data” as noted in the report.

Gaza rehab services decimated

At the same time needs are mounting, Gaza’s pre-war rehab services have been decimated, the report underlines.  The enclave’s only limb reconstruction and rehabilitation center, located in Nasser Medical Complex and supported by WHO, ceased operations in December 2023, due to a lack of supplies and the flight of specialized health workers.  The hospital was further damanged during bitter fighting in February. Additionally:

  • The three pre-existing inpatient rehabilitation units (Al Amal, Sheikh Hammad, Al Wafaa) are not operational.
  • The only 2 prosthetic centres were located in Gaza city. One was damaged, one has been inaccessible throughout the war. Some basic repair services have newly restarted at one and a new service is being established in the South.
  • At least 39 rehabilitation professionals are reported killed. Many others are displaced.

Currently, only 17 of 36 hospitals remain partially functional in Gaza, while primary health care and community-level services are frequently suspended or rendered inaccessible due to insecurity, attacks, and repeated evacuation orders, WHO noted.

“The huge surge in rehabilitation needs occurs in parallel with the ongoing decimation of the health system,” said Peeperkorn. “Patients can’t get the care they need. Acute rehabilitation services are severely disrupted and specialized care for complex injuries is not available, placing patients’ lives at risk. Immediate and long-term support is urgently needed to address the enormous rehabilitation needs.” 

Image Credits: WHO, HPW, WHO.

George Vradenburg, founding chairman of the board of the Davos Alzheimer's Collaborative
George Vradenburg, founding chairman of the board of the Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative

NAIROBI, Kenya – Dementia is rapidly becoming a significant public health concern across the globe, with projections estimating 150 million people will be affected by 2050.

“Dementia is a health, financial and social problem of almost unimaginable proportions,” said George Vradenburg, founding chairman of the board of the Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative (DAC). “It may prove to be the sinkhole of the 21st Century.”

Sub-Saharan Africa is facing its own alarming rise, where 2.13 million people were living with dementia in 2015, a number expected to more than triple to 7.62 million by mid-century.

By 2050, Africa is expected to have the largest population of people over the age of 60. At the same time, some African countries, such as Kenya, will also have the highest number of individuals under 20.

According to Zul Merali, director of the Brain and Mind Institute at Aga Khan University, this presents not just a challenge but a significant opportunity. By studying the aging brain, dementia, and Alzheimer’s in Africa’s diverse population, researchers may gain valuable insights into risk factors and develop earlier interventions for these diseases that could help individuals worldwide.

“With 80% of the people with dementia likely to be in the Global South by 2050, it’s imperative that we bring the high-resource communities and the Global South together to solve the problem,” said Vradenburg.

More than 200 people gathered in Nairobi on Wednesday for Nature’s first-ever two-day conference on brain health and dementia in Africa, driven by the need to unite the Global North and Global South in tackling the dementia epidemic, as Vradenburg described.

The event, titled “The Future of Dementia in Africa: Advancing Global Partnerships,” brought together researchers, industry leaders, local government, policymakers, and individuals with lived experience.

The conference is focusing on key challenges, the latest research on dementia’s epidemiology, risk factors, genetic breakthroughs, clinical trials, early detection and diagnosis.

DAC and the Aga Khan University Brain and Mind Institute are co-sponsors of the event. In a joint statement with Nature, they described the event as a pivotal moment for Africa, providing an opportunity to unite efforts, exchange knowledge, and create strategies specifically designed to address the continent’s unique challenges in tackling dementia.

Merali said that Africa is largely unprepared for the spike in people with dementia.

“If you look at the world literature, you will see that most of the information comes from the Global North as it pertains to dementia and Alzheimer’s disease,” Merali explained. “The data from Africa is less than 1%, so there is a huge gap. We don’t know what’s going on or how to get ready for it.”

From left: George Vradenburg, Zul Merali and Vaibhav Narayan
From left: George Vradenburg, Zul Merali and Vaibhav Narayan

Which risk factors are relevant to Africa?

Many dementia risk factors have been identified in the Global North, but understanding which are most relevant in Africa is crucial, Vaibhav Narayan, executive vice president for strategy and innovation at DAC, told Health Policy Watch.

He noted two possible scenarios: the same risk factors exist in the Global North and Global South but are more prevalent in Africa, leading to a more significant impact, or some risk factors are unique to the continent.

“I would call this an emerging field,” Narayan told Health Policy Watch. “Larger and larger studies are being done.”

Narayan suggested that some risk factors, particularly climate change-related ones, could be more significant in Africa.

“What most people don’t realize is that the stressors caused by climate change are both physiological—your brain may be exposed to higher temperatures for longer, you may be breathing in pollutants—but also psychological.

The stress of impending crop failure, for example, can accelerate cognitive decline and push toward dementia,” Narayan said.

He also highlighted migration patterns, especially forced migration for work or safety, as another potential stressor unique to Africa.

Merali added that another unique risk factor in Kenya may be the many people who ride motorcycles, often without helmets. Young individuals involved in motorcycle crashes could face a higher risk of developing brain disorders, including dementia and Alzheimer’s, later in life.

“We want to ensure we understand these risk factors, their impact on brain health and cognitive decline, and, perhaps most importantly, how to reduce them,” Narayan added. “What are the interventions at the policy, individual, community, societal, and national levels? That will take time.”

Dr Chi Udeh-Momoh, a translational neuroscientist affiliated with Imperial College London, the Karolinska Institute, and Bristol University, is already focused on understanding these risk factors.

She told Health Policy Watch that her team is working on developing “normative data” to better understand the causes of dementia in the Global South, particularly in Africa, which has a vast diversity.

Udeh-Momoh is researching the molecular and biobehavioral factors contributing to resilience in African populations — how individuals cope with and adapt to extreme stress while still thriving.

Udeh-Momoh and her team’s mission goes beyond identifying the causes of dementia; they aim to detect it early using cutting-edge tools and innovative approaches. These include advanced neuroimaging, retinal imaging, digital cognitive assessments, and traditional tests like paper-and-pencil exams and brain games designed to establish a baseline for memory and cognition in the local population.

How can dementia be prevented?

A peer-reviewed article in The Lancet has revealed that up to 45% of dementia cases could be prevented by addressing a small number of key risk factors.

While the Global North has primarily focused on treating Alzheimer’s at its later stages, Africa, with its younger population, has the potential to focus on modifiable risk factors and lead the way in developing pragmatic and scalable prevention programs.

“Lifestyle changes are critically important and just as important as pharmacological or drug treatments,” Merali said.

New treatments are becoming available. The first FDA-approved drugs for Alzheimer’s, such as Leqembi for mild dementia and Kisunla for adults with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s, are now on the market. However, these medications were primarily tested in clinical trials in the Global North and are prohibitively expensive, making them inaccessible to many communities.

Narayan suggested that, instead of focusing on Alzheimer’s drugs, doctors in Africa could treat identified risk factors, such as  hypertension or obesity.

Vradenburg, meanwhile, has concentrated his efforts on developing vaccines for dementia.

“We know that the Global South is experienced in administering vaccines, which are generally low-cost,” he said, adding that if researchers can identify and diagnose those at risk of dementia in the next decade, vaccines could be available by 2030. These vaccines could even achieve widespread adoption to prevent the disease and its symptoms, he said.

Man with dementia (illustrative)
Man with dementia (illustrative)

 

Why is there a stigma around dementia in Africa?

Finally, another essential factor to consider in Africa is the stigma surrounding dementia.

Merali explained that many people in Africa do not know what dementia is. Often, they believe it is a normal part of aging, and when symptoms become more severe or unusual, some attribute them to witchcraft or evil spirits.

“As a result, individuals with dementia can become targets, frequently ostracized, and in some cases, even beaten or lynched,” Merali said. “We need to educate the population.”

He emphasized that understanding dementia as a medical condition would lead to people being treated with more compassion and respect.

Narayan echoed these concerns: “Today, many people think dementia is just a part of aging. The key to removing the stigma around not only dementia but also mental health disorders like depression is to show the world that these are actual biological diseases.”

He added that the work being done by DAC and the Aga Khan University to develop objective medical tests, such as blood or imaging tests, will help people recognize that dementia is a disease and not the individual’s fault.

Vradenburg shared a historical perspective: “I’m old enough to remember when cancer was a word no one dared to say—it was referred to as the ‘big C,’ and it took decades to move past that.”

He pointed out that over time, the medical community learned that early detection, catching cancer at stage one instead of stage four, was crucial to survival.

Vradenburg said he believes dementia is undergoing a similar transition today.

Image Credits: Pexels, Maayan Hoffman.

Kenya
Antibiotic use in agri-food production is driving AMR.

Targets that aimed to reduce the use of antimicrobials in the livestock industry have been dropped from the latest version of the draft UN Political Declaration on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR), reportedly as a result of pressure from major meat-producing nations and the veterinary drug industry. 

The draft declaration, which aims to curb growing pathogen resistance to leading antibiotics, antiviral and antiparasitic drugs, was distributed amongst UN member states on 9 September ahead of the United Nations High-Level Meeting (HLM) on 26 September.

 The May version of the declaration had a target of “at least 30%” reduction in “the quantity of antimicrobials used in the agri-food system globally” by 2030, as reported earlier by Health Policy Watch.  The latest, near final, draft, includes only a vague commitment to “strive meaningfully” to reduce use.

By far the biggest use of antibiotics worldwide is agriculture, and particularly the livestock industry, with an estimated 80% of antibiotics in the US alone administered to animals, not people.  Drug resistant bugs, meanwhile, are estimated to kill nearly 5 million people a year. 

With regards to reducing the use of antibiotics in livestock production, Dr Holy Teneg Akwar from the World Organisation on Animal Health (WOAH) told a media briefing on Wednesday that “countries will develop their own targets taking their respective contexts into consideration”.

“There were a lot of sensitivities around the commitments on antimicrobials in farm animals,” added Javier Yugueros-Marcos, head of AMR at the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH).

The media briefing was convened by the “Quadripartite” group managing AMR globally – the World Health Organization (WHO), Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) UN Environment Programme and  WOAH.

The targets were dropped as a result of pressure from the US as well as other meat-producing nations in the developed world, including Australia, New Zealand and Canada, according to a report by the US-based non-profit, Right to Know..

“The massive overuse of antibiotics on factory farms in the United States is a serious threat to public health,” US Senator Cory Booker said in a statement on the outcome of the final UN draft.

“Federal agencies have a troubling history of deferring to corporate interests on this issue, and I am very concerned about any role that the United States played in weakening international commitments to reduce antibiotic use in farm animals,” said the Democratic Party Senator, who is campaigning for improved control of antibiotics in food-producing animals in the US.

 Animal vaccination plan

The declaration does direct countries to use antimicrobials in animals and agriculture “in a prudent and responsible manner in line with the Codex Alimentarius AMR Standards” and WOAH’s “standards, guidance and recommendations”.

It also commits to a global animal vaccination plan by 2030, based on WOAH’s list of priority diseases to reduce antibiotic use.

The declaration directs the UN FAO to develop further global guidance to also prevent and reduce antimicrobials in plant agriculture – another source of AMR risk.

“The misuse of essential drugs in food production, whether in livestock farming, aquaculture or crop production, accelerates the emergence and spread of resistance,” Junxia Song, FAO senior animal health officer, told the media briefing.

Some “common [animal] bacterial infections have become harder, and sometimes impossible, to treat”, she added.

“These resistance strains can transfer from animals to humans through direct contact or through the agri-environment or the food chain, creating a cycle that worsens the AMR crisis.”

AMR threatens the livelihoods of 1.3 billion people who depend on livestock, said Song. 

“The World Bank  projects that in a high AMR impact scenario, livestock production in low income countries could decline by 11% by 2050, raising costs for farmers and driving up food prices,” she added.

Reducing mortality by 10% and raising $100 million

Two key targets for reducing AMR-related mortality, as well as raising funding to combat AMR, did survive member state negotiations into the present draft. There is a commitment to reducing global AMR deaths by 10% by 2030 against the 2019 baseline of an estimated 4.95 million deaths associated with AMR every year.

A target of raising $100 million “from international cooperation” has also been set to ensure that 60% of countries develop and implement national AMR action plans by 2030.

Aitziber Echeverria, UNEP’s AMR co-ordinator, warned that drug resistance was being developed and transmitted in the environment.

“Global attention to AMR has been dominated by a focus on human health,” said  Echeverria. “But there is a widespread agreement that tackling it requires a multi-sectoral One Health approach that considers the health of humans, animals, plants and the wider environment, including ecosystems, as interconnected and interdependent.

“The most important sources of microorganisms with antimicrobial-resistant genes in the environment is the human waste that ends up in sewage, wastewater or landfills,” she warned.

WHO priorities

Dr Yvan Hutin, director of the WHO AMR division

Dr Yvan Hutin, director of  the WHO AMR division, told the media briefing that resistance to antibiotics was often rapid, often happening within 10 years.

“Every time we are smart at inventing an antibiotic, nature is quite fast in evolving and finding a counter-measure. 

The speed of AMR resistance

“The problem is that our pipeline is dry. Our capacity to actually even add some more antibiotic on this graph is not what it used to be. Resistance is emerging and the pipeline is running out.”

The WHO has proposed four steps to address AMR: preventing infection (through ensuring access to clean water and sanitation, immunization and infection prevention control); universal access to affordable, quality diagnostics and appropriate treatment of infection; strategic information science and innovation (guided by science); and effective governance and finance. 

The WHO has also developed “stop light” characterisation of antibiotics, with “green antibiotics” for common infections that have the lowest resistant potential; orange antibiotics  that have higher resistant potential and are for less common infections, then “red” reserve antibiotics only to be used when they’re absolutely necessary. 

The Quadripartite leaders expressed their “cautious optimism” about the political declaration and the expected outcome of the HLM. The last HML was held in 2016.

Progress since the last UN HLM on AMR in 2016

Image Credits: International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies / The Kenya Red Cross Society, Yvan Hutin/WHO.

Violence against women and girls is set to triple by 2060 due to climate change, according to a latest report by UNFPA.

Tens of millions of women and girls in sub-Saharan Africa will experience “catastrophic levels” of intimate partner violence because the world is failing to make progress on the climate crisis, according to new projections by UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency.

The report, jointly produced by UNFPA, the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), and the University of Vienna, found that rising global temperature is increasing rates of intimate partner violence.

“Extreme heat threatens the safety and well-being of the most vulnerable women and girls all across Africa,” said UNFPA Executive Director Dr Natalia Kanem. “Heat stress can put the health of pregnant women and their babies at risk, increasing the chance of preterm birth and stillbirth,” she added.

This report is part of the growing body of evidence linking climate change and intimate partner violence. In June 2022 a review that looked at existing literature on the subject was published in The Lancet, but for many regions the evidence base is severely limited.

Climate change is known to exacerbate existing stressors like economic ones. In regions where women are already vulnerable, worsening household economic situation and rising frustration led to a rise in violence against women, the research has so far established.

For those working in disaster management, this is already a well-known phenomenon where violence against women and young girls tends to rise in the aftermath of a disaster. With climate change leading to a rise in disasters, a rise in violence against women is also being noted globally.

“The climate crisis has also led to shocking levels of violence in the home – an impact often overlooked by policymakers,” Kanem said.

Climate action can limit damage.

Violence set to triple in sub-Saharan Africa

The number of people experiencing intimate partner violence in sub-Saharan Africa will nearly triple from 48 million in 2015 to 140 million in 2060, in the worst-case scenario where emissions rise and temperatures warm by more than 4°C by the end of the century. This number also takes into account the stalling of socioeconomic development in the region.

Studies show that extreme temperatures and heat waves can drive up aggression and intimate partner violence. The collapse of agriculture, water scarcity and housing insecurity is a further trigger — leading to increased conflict and risk of women and girls suffering physical and emotional abuse. Natural disasters linked to warming temperatures trigger forced displacement, which is associated with higher levels of intimate partner violence.

In parts of sub-Saharan Africa, which is on the frontlines of the climate crisis, more than half of women and girls reported experiencing intimate partner violence in the previous 12 months.

Climate action can limit harm

This spike in violence can be averted if countries work to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, as outlined in the Paris Agreement, and pursue the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the report said.

At present, the world is off track on both these goals. Global temperatures have breached the 1.5 degrees Celsius for an entire year now, and without drastic changes, the temperatures will continue to rise.

In addition, policymakers currently look at SDG and climate action as either/or choices rather than complementary ones.

The best-case scenario will see the share of women affected by violence in sub-Saharan Africa decline from 24% in 2015 to 14% in 2060. Overall, the difference between climate action success and failure is 1.9 billion preventable cases of intimate partner violence between 2015 and 2060, according to the report.

Scenario

Temperature increase

IPV cases 2015

IPV cases 2060

Percentage change

Best case

1.5°C

48 million

48.95 million

2 per cent

Worst case

4°C

48 million

140 million

192 per cent

“UNFPA’s new research points the way forward: decisive climate action needs to build resilience in affected communities, which starts with putting the needs of women and girls first,” Kanem said.

Women and girls who experience intimate partner violence will need access to climate-resilient health care, including medical and psychological support.

UNFPA has asked countries to invest climate finance in health and protection systems that work for women and girls in the future, in the face of increasing climate shocks and displacements.

Countries have also been asked to include the sexual and reproductive health and rights of women and girls –  including the risk of gender-based violence –  in their national climate plans.

Image Credits: Climate Change Impacts and Intimate Partner Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa .

Antibiotic manufacturing water pollution
Waste from antibiotic manufactoruring causes some of the highest levels of environmental antibiotic pollution.

Manufacturers of antibiotics are dumping waste into waterways that is driving antimicrobial resistance (AMR), warns the first-ever guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO) on waste water management and AMR.

Antibiotic pollution is “largely unregulated” and a “neglected” issue,  according to the WHO guidance, which explains how to mitigate liquid and solid waste during the formulation of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). 

High levels of antibiotics in waterways downstream from factories have been “widely documented,” according to the guide, which notes that the highest concentrations of antibiotics in the environment come from manufacturing plants.

Resistant pathogens can be traced back to discharge from pharmaceutical manufacturing plants, hospitals, farms, or sewage systems. Even properly functioning wastewater treatment systems may not fully remove resistant pathogens and their genes, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) fact sheet notes. 

“Pharmaceutical waste from antibiotic manufacturing can facilitate the emergence of new drug-resistant bacteria, which can spread globally and threaten our health. Controlling pollution from antibiotic production contributes to keeping these life-saving medicines effective for everyone,” said Dr Yukiko Nakatani, WHO Assistant Director-General for AMR said in a recent press release

Manufacturing steps

The guidance, which covers each manufacturing step from the formation of APIs to the finished product, provides a framework for policymakers, antibiotic procurers, investors, wastewater management, industry, and other stakeholders to set targets for pollution mitigation.

It sets targets based on predicted no-effect concentrations (PNECs) for antibiotic resistance and for ecological effects (PNECeco). Two further levels “enable progressive improvement to methods that provide a greater degree of certainty that discharges are not leading to harmful effects.” It also includes best practices for risk management, public transparency, and how to progressively implement these policies. 

Given the urgency and danger AMR poses, several organizations – including the WHO Executive Board, G7 health ministers and the UN Evironmental Program (UNEP) – have called for the creation of guidelines to regulate antibiotic manufacturing..

AMR claimed 1.27 million lives in 2019, surpassing deaths from HIV and malaria. Deaths are projected to reach 10 million annually by 2050. Despite AMR’s burden on public health, the issue remains underfunded, with little innovation and talent to produce new lines of antibiotics. 

Once antibiotic residues enter the environment, especially aquatic ecosystems, they exert pressure on bacteria -both pathogenic and non-pathogenic – to adapt and become resistant. Yet quality assurance criteria “typically do not address” antibiotic pollution, says the guidance. 

The WHO’s awareness campaign earlier this year highlighted patient stories and experiences with AMR. 

Reducing unnecessary risk

Globally, there is a lack of accessible information on the environmental damage caused by manufacturing of medicines, and the potential risks of AMR. Although research is still ongoing on the extent of manufacturing pollution and the rise of resistant pathogens, the experts behind the guidance operate under the assumption that progress can be made to limit the risk.

“The guidance provides an independent and impartial scientific basis for regulators, procurers, inspectors, and industry themselves to include robust antibiotic pollution control in their standards,” said Dr Maria Neira, WHO Director of the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Health, in a press release.

“Critically, the strong focus on transparency will equip buyers, investors and the general public to make decisions that account for manufacturers’ efforts to control antibiotic pollution.” 

Hopes for political commitment

Causes of AMR
The UN General Assembly will host a high-level meeting on AMR September 26.

The guidance comes just a few weeks before diplomats descend on New York City for the United Nations General Assembly High Level Meeting on AMR on 26 September. The last HLM on this issue was eight years ago.

Experts, like Wellcome Trust’s Jeremy Knox, head of infectious disease policy, expressed hopes that the HLM will spur “some commitments which are steps in the right direction,” in earlier Health Policy Watch coverage

Advocating more stringent regulation may close loopholes that allow antibiotic pollution to end up in the environment in the first place.

“The role of the environment in the development, transmission and spread of antimicrobial resistance needs careful consideration since evidence is mounting,” said UNEP’s Jacqueline Alvarez. 

“There is a widespread agreement that action on the environment must become more prominent as a solution.”

Image Credits: Janusz Walczak, FAO.