December 26, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

In mid-November, the leadership of the U.S. National Institutes of Health argued that the best pandemic preparedness playbook is one that prioritizes making populations healthier and more resilient to novel pathogens by reducing the burden of chronic disease.

 

This week, Thomas J. Bollyky, Chloe Searchinger, and Elena Every from the Council on Foreign Relations and Joseph L. Dieleman and AJ Mitchell from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation assess where and how noncommunicable disease–focused programs could contribute to a broader strategy of pandemic preparedness and response.   

 

Next, 1 in 4 people worldwide live in fragile contexts, primed to devolve into humanitarian emergencies. Maryada E. Vallet and Erin M. Sorrell from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Arush Lal from LSE Health offer recommendations for buoying local preparedness to reduce gaps in global health security.  

 

Last, as the calendar year draws to a close, TGH revisits several 2025 developments that could shape the global health landscape for decades to come. Of paramount importance was a sizeable drop in global aid funding, which disrupted health and food systems in the most vulnerable communities and compounded challenges in conflict zones. Still, bright spots remain: Countries that have traditionally received foreign assistance have used the moment to build health resilience without donors. Artificial intelligence offered new avenues for diagnostics and surveillance across high-, middle-, and low-income countries, and the World Health Assembly turned long-awaited momentum into the adoption of the Pandemic Agreement. To cover those developments, TGH published nearly 200 articles this year—a selection of which our editorial team has highlighted in our Best of 2025 feature.

  

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

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

A nurse from Save the Children prepares vaccinations for internally displaced Somali children, in Baidoa, Somalia, on June 25, 2025.

Repairing Global Health Security at the Humanitarian Frontline

by Maryada E. Vallet, Erin M. Sorrell, and Arush Lal

Reorienting the global preparedness system to include humanitarian settings requires conceptual and operational shifts

 

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

A series of line charts showing the greatest health risks in low- and middle-income countries between 1990-2023

Read this story

 

Recommended Feature

 

GOVERNANCE

Turkana women sit under a tree as community health workers screen their children for malnutrition, in Aposta village, Turkana County, Kenya, on October 30, 2025.

Best of 2025

by TGH Editorial Team

Think Global Health editors pick their top 25 articles for 2025

      

Read this list

 

What We’re Reading

State Department Scrambles to Rebuild Foreign Aid Workforce (Devex)

CDC Awards $1.6 Million for Hepatitis B Vaccine Study by Controversial Danish Researchers (Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy)

 

New Flu Strain Sweeping Europe Says WHO; but Vaccines Remain Effective, ECDC Finds (Health Policy Watch)

 

Seven Feel-Good Science Stories to Restore Your Faith in 2025 (Nature)

 

Exclusive: HHS Planning to Overhaul Childhood Vaccine Schedule to Recommend Fewer Shots, Source Says (CNN)

 

Five Big Global Health Wins in 2025 That Will Save Millions of Lives (The Guardian)

 

U.S. Senator Asks Science to Provide Its Coronavirus Manuscripts, Emails (Science)

 

Older Americans Quit Weight-Loss Drugs in Droves (New York Times)

 

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