February 27, 2026

Image

Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

On Tuesday, the Russia-Ukraine war completed its fourth year. Since the full-scale invasion in 2022, Russia has suffered nearly 1.2 million casualties and Ukraine more than 500,000. Their combined losses could reach 2 million by the spring. In addition to injuries and lives lost, the war has forced 5.9 million Ukrainians to flee the country as of February 2026, and another 3.7 million Ukrainians remain internally displaced.  

 

Those causalities and mass displacements have spawned a demographic crisis in Ukraine where in 2025 the death rate outpaced by the birth rate by nearly 3 to 1. Leading this week’s edition, journalist Nataliia Bushkovska describes how, amid that population loss, Ukrainian officials and policymakers are devising plans to encourage refugees to return and have children. 

 

Over the past year, the Trump administration has slashed budgets and jobs at health agencies, contracting the labor market for public health students. Journalist Rachel Nuwer interviews seven public health schools and three national education organizations to gauge how that tumult is affecting enrollment in public health programs and the students’ professional outlooks.  

 

This week’s newsletter concludes by considering health themes from President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. Recent TGH pieces offer context to his statements about public health coverage, most-favored-nation drug pricing, pharmaceutical onshoring, and health-care fraud.   

 

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

 

This Week’s Highlight

 

GOVERNANCE

Bohdana Zhupanyna, a 30-year-old mother-to-be, stands inside her apartment that was damaged by a Russian drone strike, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 23, 2025.

Reversing Ukraine’s Population Loss After Four Years of War  

by Nataliia Bushkovska

Ukraine is facing demographic erosion and devising plans to encourage refugee returns and the birth rate 

      

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

A table showing the change in public health graduate program enrollments from 2023-24 to 2024-25

Read this story

 

State of the Union

 

GOVERNANCE

A patient receives treatment in the Emergency Room at OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, in Peoria, Illinois, on November 26, 2013.

How Medicaid Policies Shape County Health-Care Performance

by Allison Krugman

A study explores the factors shaping strong health systems in the United States, including Medicaid expansion

 

Read this story

 

TRADE

A boy holds a handful of antiretroviral pills before taking his medication at Nkosi's Haven, in Johannesburg, South Africa, on November 28, 2014.

Executive Order to Lower U.S. Drug Prices Could Hurt the Poorest Countries

by Prashant Yadav

Cascading adoption of most-favored-nation drug pricing could erode affordable access to essential medicines

 

Read this story

 

GOVERNANCE

Employees train to be cell therapy specialists at Gilead unit Kite's manufacturing facility, in Frederick Maryland, on March 14, 2024.

Tracking Pharma’s Progress on U.S. Onshoring Efforts to Avoid Tariffs

by Prashant Yadav and Chloe Searchinger

To avoid tariffs, drug giants committed more than $480 billion to U.S.-based production. Two indicators gauge whether the pledges are real

 

Read this story

 

GOVERNANCE

Makoto Kitada, MD, demonstrates a telemedicine application service called 'CLINICS,' in Tokyo, Japan, on July 8, 2020.

Protecting Physicians From AI Impostors

by Sunny Jha and Michael Suk

Name, image, and likeness protections, such as those for college athletes and actors, could help physicians fight AI scammers

 

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

South Africa Regulator Backed by the Food Industry Blocks Ad on Sugar’s Health Risks (The Examination)

 

Trump Touts Lower Drug Costs and Anti-fraud Measures in Lengthy State of the Union (STAT) 

 

Beyond Conventional Aid: Institutionalizing Public-Private Partnership in Ukraine’s Humanitarian Response (CFR)

 

How a University Is Using Board Games to Teach Health–Climate Policy Trade-Offs (Health Policy Watch)

 

The Longevity Scam (The Atlantic)

 

China and the United States Alter Foreign Aid Strategies (NPR)

 

Zimbabwe Ends $367 Million Health Funding Talks With the United States Over “Sensitive Data” Sharing Concerns (Reuters)

 

Afghans “Desperate” as Aid Cuts Bring Mass Hunger Crisis (Devex)

 

Interested in submitting?

Review our Submission Guidelines

Image
Twitter Bluesky

An initiative from the Council on Foreign Relations

58 East 68th Street — New York, NY 10065

Unsubscribe

View in Browser

Manage Your CFR Email Preferences