Current Picks
Health

UK Type 2 Diabetes Remission Data Outpace GP Referrals to Weight Management

By Min Park / Jun 10, 2026

Evidence shows type 2 diabetes remission is achievable, but GP referrals to NHS weight management programmes lag. We explore the gap and what drives it.
Health

UK Asthma Inhaler Prescribing Varies Tenfold Across GP Practices by Region

By Raphael Andriamanjato / Jun 10, 2026

Asthma inhaler prescribing rates vary tenfold across GP practices in England, even after adjusting for demographics. Experts disagree on the ideal ratio of reliever to preventer inhalers, and the variation has safety and cost implications for the NHS.
Health

UK NHS Insulin Prescription Rules Split Care Between Type-1 and Type-2 Patients

By Elena Vargas / Jun 10, 2026

NHS insulin prescribing rules create a two-tier system: type-1 patients get pumps and analogues, while type-2 patients face restrictions. This gap affects outcomes and equity.
Health

UK NHS Talking Therapy Wait Times Double for Ethnic Minority Referrals

By Raphael Andriamanjato / Jun 10, 2026

NHS data shows ethnic minority patients wait twice as long for talking therapy as white patients, even with similar depression scores. The gap persists across England, raising questions about equity in mental health care.
Health

UK Medicare Part D Insulin Copay Cap Reduces Hospitalizations for Low-Income Type 2 Patients

By Min Park / Jun 10, 2026

A UK pilot capping insulin copays at roughly £30/month for low-income type 2 diabetes patients led to an estimated 18% drop in hospitalizations in the first year, offering a rare US-style policy experiment within the NHS.
Health

UK NICE Rejects Low-Dose Ketamine for Treatment-Resistant Depression Trials

By Elena Vargas / Jun 10, 2026

NICE rejects low-dose ketamine for NHS treatment of treatment-resistant depression due to small, short trials. Experts split on whether evidence bar is too high.
Health

UK GP Depression Care Splits Along Patient Wealth Lines

By Raphael Andriamanjato / Jun 10, 2026

Depression care in UK general practice diverges sharply by patient income. Wealth buys faster therapy, drug choice, and continuity, while NHS patients face long waits and rigid protocols. This is a system divide, not a disease gradient.
Health

India Generic Insulin Procurement Rules Force Public Hospital Patients to Miss Doses

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

In Tamil Nadu, India, frequent insulin brand switches from lowest-price tenders lead to dose-skipping, hypoglycemia, and rising emergency visits. The cost-saving policy strains patients and clinicians.
Health

South African Gold Miners Develop COPD Twice as Fast as Urban Nonsmokers

By Elena Vargas / Jun 10, 2026

Gold miners in South Africa lose lung function twice as fast as urban nonsmokers due to silica dust. This article explains the biology, epidemiology, and policy gaps behind occupational COPD.
Health

UK Measles Vaccine Exemption Clusters Link to Resurgent Outbreaks in London Schools

By Min Park / Jun 10, 2026

Measles outbreaks in London schools are linked to clusters of vaccine exemptions in affluent areas, where MMR uptake falls below 90%. Public health teams struggle to reach private schools, and unvaccinated children spread the virus to others.
Health

Kenya Rural Stroke Patients Arrive Too Late for Guideline Clot-Busting Drugs

By Esther Okello / Jun 9, 2026

In rural Kenya, most stroke patients arrive at hospitals after the 4.5-hour window for clot-busting drugs has closed. Experts debate whether guidelines should be adapted for low-resource settings.
Health

Kenya Rural Hypertension Patients Reach Clinic Only After Heart Wall Thickens

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

In rural Kenya, hypertension is often diagnosed only after the heart wall thickens—a sign of long-uncontrolled pressure. This feature explores the mechanism, the delays, and system fixes that could change the trajectory.
Health

Philippines Public Clinic Insulin Vials Sit Expired as Patients Buy Vials Privately

By Min Park / Jun 9, 2026

In Manila's public clinics, insulin vials expire on shelves while patients buy the same insulin at private pharmacies, paying 15–25% of minimum wage monthly. A look at the gap between supply and access.
Health

Malawi Public Hospital Doctors Train on Budget IV Supplies as Private Colleagues Use Infusion Pumps

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

In Malawi, public hospital staff train with basic IV supplies while private counterparts use advanced pumps. The gap reveals a policy blind spot affecting patient safety across the wealth divide.
Health

UK NHS Weight Loss Surgery Wait Lists Outpace Diabetes Remission Evidence

By Elena Vargas / Jun 10, 2026

Long waits for NHS weight loss surgery clash with weak long-term remission data. This feature examines the evidence-practice gap, regional inequities, and what clinicians should do now.
Health

Nigeria Public Health Insurance Reimburses Facility Births but Not Skilled Home Attendants

By Raphael Andriamanjato / Jun 10, 2026

Nigeria's NHIA covers facility deliveries but excludes skilled home attendants, deepening rural inequity. Evidence supports home birth safety. Reform options exist.
Health

Indian Beedi Rollers Develop Chronic Cough as Tobacco Dust Blocks Small Airways

By Raphael Andriamanjato / Jun 9, 2026

Women rolling beedis in West Bengal inhale fine tobacco dust that lodges in small airways, causing chronic cough and irreversible lung damage. Spirometry can detect decline early.
Health

US Emergency Room Visits for Panic Attacks Surge After Prior Authorization Denials

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

Prior authorization denials for mental health drugs are driving a surge in ER visits for panic attacks. Patients describe acute distress and costly emergency care.
Health

Tuberculosis Drug Resistance Traced Through South African Mining Shifts

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

How a bacterium learns to outsmart antibiotics, traced through the silica-laden tunnels of South African gold mines and the migrant circuits that carry resistant strains across borders.
Health

South Africa Coal Mine Dust Monitoring Misses Early COPD in Contract Workers

By Esther Okello / Jun 10, 2026

South Africa's coal mine dust surveillance relies on chest X-rays, missing early COPD in contract workers. Spirometry could detect obstruction years earlier, but policy gaps leave thousands undiagnosed.