July 25, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

Earlier this week, a new study in Nature found that people’s brains aged faster during the COVID-19 pandemic, whether or not they reported infections. People who were infected showed reduced cognitive skills. Those findings suggest that increased stress could be behind brain aging and add to a growing list of long-COVID symptoms.   

 

Yet chronic conditions stemming from infections are not new. To lead this week’s edition, medical anthropologist Emily Mendenhall and journalist Philip Finkelstein describe the history of postviral illness, recounting events from ancient Greece to the present day. The authors remind readers that “the lessons of the past serve those still living rather than remain buried beneath all the bodies.” 

 

Next, TGH showcases a pair of articles about water disputes in South Asia. Bangladesh’s Senior Assistant Secretary for Global Health Ministry of Foreign Affairs Zakaria Bin Amjad proposes a planetary makeover of the Ganges Water Treaty between his country and India to strengthen regional health security and ensure both nations are on track to meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals. 

  

Next, Cleveland State University’s Neda Zawahri and Melissa McCracken from Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy illustrate how India’s decision to suspend the Indus Waters Treaty has the potential to worsen Pakistan’s domestic water shortage, contribute to the spread of waterborne disease, damage Pakistan’s economy, and deteriorate geopolitical relations between the states.  

 

To wrap up, Johns Hopkins University graduate student Nabilah Kusuma Wardhani outlines how Indonesia’s move to the Western Pacific Region of the World Health Organization (WHO) can strengthen alliances, namely with Papua New Guinea, to eliminate malaria.  

  

Until next week!—Nsikan Akpan, Managing Editor, and Caroline Kantis, Associate Editor 

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

Leticia de Souza Soares, who suffers from pain and health problems caused by long COVID-19, stands on the balcony of her home, in Salvador, Brazil, on December 8, 2023.

From Long Flu to Long COVID: A Brief History of Postviral Illness 

by Emily Mendenhall and Philip Finkelstein 

Despite centuries of examples, long-term maladies after flu and other viruses remain absent from mainstream policy 

      

Read this story

ENVIRONMENT

A man pours water on the polluted banks of the Ganges River, in Kolkata, India, on October 20, 2010.

The Ganges Water-Sharing Treaty Needs a Climate Makeover

by Zakaria Bin Amjad   

Set to expire in 2026, the 30-year treaty could be remade to safeguard environmental and human health

 

Read this story

ENVIRONMENT

Fishermen row their boats as they catch fish on the Indus River, in Sukkur, Pakistan, on March 19, 2017.

The India-Pakistan Water Dispute: Unpacking the Health Consequences 

by Neda Zawahri and Melissa McCracken  

Suspending the Indus Waters Treaty could disrupt Pakistan’s ability to handle floods, droughts, and pollution  

      

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

Line chart with six lines showing U.S. measles outbreaks in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025
 

Recommended Feature

 

GOVERNANCE

Children watch and play near a worker who is using the traditional method of chemical fogging to kill mosquitoes, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, on February 5, 2016.

Indonesia’s Move to Eliminate Malaria 

by Nabilah Kusuma Wardhani 

By joining the WHO’s Western Pacific Region, Indonesia can strengthen alliances to eliminate mosquito-borne illnesses

 

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

America’s Pill Problem (Foreign Affairs)

 

Blue Carbon Ecosystems Are Key for Protecting the Philippines From Climate Shocks (Mongabay)

 

Obesity Prediction Could Be Guided by Genetic Risk Scores (New York Times) 

 

The World Keeps Millions of Vaccines on Ice. Is It Worth It? (NPR’s Goats and Soda)

 

Uganda’s Refugees Turn Food Waste Into Clean Fuel (SciDevNet)

 

Israeli Strikes Hit WHO Site After Military Expands Gaza Offensive (New York Times) 

 

Kentucky’s Campaign to Improve Rural Cancer Care Is a National Model. Federal Cuts Threaten Its Progress (STAT)

 

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