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Think Global Health

Defunding Science due to COVID Lab Leak

May 30, 2025

 

Editors' Note

In mid-May, a Senate committee minority report announced that in the first three months of 2025, the Donald Trump administration had removed $2.7 billion from the National Institutes of Health. That decision, among other cuts to science funding, is spurred in part by the COVID-19 lab-leak theory, asserts Johns Hopkins University's Gigi Gronvall.

To lead this week's coverage, Gronvall interrogates the lab-leak theory, noting that it does not explain core moments of the disease's rise in Wuhan, China, such as why two versions of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus were present in early cases. She also reminds readers that, without science, the United States will not be ready for disease threats such as measles and that the country is losing its biotechnology edge to China.  

Next, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation's Erin DeGraw describes how artificial intelligence (AI) could be used to fill gaps in data on gender-based violence, help survivors safely document their experiences, and inform targeted, proactive interventions.  

Traveling to the Middle East, physicians Julia Yarkoni and Mohammad Saeed Gharaati Jahromi analyze the factors driving tobacco use in Iran and Israel. Although the countries differ politically, they are both experiencing a rise in the number of young adults who smoke. That trend is fueled by common factors including stress over the war in Gaza, economic hardship, and overexposure to social media. 

On Tuesday, as the seventy-eighth World Health Assembly drew to a close, many celebrated the adoption of the Pandemic Agreement. Although the agreement is a milestone, Founder of Geneva Health Files Priti Patnaik emphasizes its fragility and explains that, in a world of diminishing international solidarity, continued cooperation among member states is needed to effectively address transnational health challenges.  

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

 

This Week's Highlights

GOVERNANCE

Research assistant Marion Hong, of RNA medicines company Arcturus Therapeutics, conducts research on a vaccine for COVID-19, in San Diego, California, on March 17, 2020.

Gain of Fiction: How COVID Origins Motivated Defunding of U.S. Science 

by Gigi Gronvall

Defunding scientific research in the United States has halted disease-cure studies amid multiple infectious crises 

Read this story

 

GOVERNANCE

A member of the Iranian army smokes as he rests at a park, in central Tehran, Iran, on April 9, 2009.

Where Iran and Israel Align: Youth Tobacco Use 

by Julia Yarkoni and Mohammad Saeed Gharaati Jahromi

Despite efforts to curb tobacco use in both countries, smoking rates among children and teenagers are on the rise 

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

A gradient world map showing countries with data sources for gender-based violence. Countries with 15 or more sources are the deepest shade of gray and countries with less than 5 sources are light gray.

Read this story

 

Recommended Feature

GOVERNANCE

Ana Marcela Rojas Fonseca Hial, MD, who volunteered in COVID-19 vaccine trial for AstraZeneca, poses for a photograph, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on December 10, 2020.

World Health Assembly: Why Multilateralism Needs More Than Solidarity 

by Priti Patnaik 

World Health Organization member states should cooperate to address health challenges and preserve the institution without the United States 

Read this story

 

What We're Reading

WHO Climate Change and Health Action Plan Approved After Saudi-Led Effort to Shelve It Fails (Health Policy Watch)

Bill Curbing the Flow of Abortion Pills Into Texas Likely Dead (Texas Tribune)

Deforestation and Fires Persist in Indonesia's Pulpwood and Biomass Plantations (Mongabay)

"A Funeral for Our Careers": Trump's Science Cuts Spill Onto Canadian Turf (Nature)

RFK Jr. Threatens Ban on Federal Scientists Publishing in Top Journals (The Guardian)

Death, Sexual Violence and Human Trafficking: Fallout From U.S. Aid Withdrawal Hits the World's Most Fragile Locations (ProPublica)

 

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