7 days in healthcare (May 18th-24th, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Mental health research is too invisible; it’s time to change that.
  • Global Health: The Lancet editorial: the need to change the humanitarian system.
  • International Health Policy: Donald Trump tries to reshape foreign aid with a transactional pay-for-data system.
  • National Health Policy: Strong statement from the Spanish Medical Association with harsh criticism of the Ministry regarding the medical conflict.
  • Business: Generic drug manufacturer Sandoz warns the EU about Chinese dumping.

Biomedicine

  • Mental health research is too invisible; it’s time to change that. More than 1 billion people (one in seven worldwide) live with a mental illness, according to the WHO. One might think that a problem of this scale would deserve an immediate response, but this is lacking.
  • Experimental drug produces significant weight loss. Retatrutide is Lilly’s new drug that leads to a 28% weight loss after 80 weeks.

Global Health

  • The Lancet editorial: Transforming the humanitarian system.  2022 was the most conflict-ridden year in 20 years, with more than 123 million people forcibly displaced by the conflicts in Sudan, Gaza, and Ukraine. This year, 239 million will need humanitarian assistance, which the current system cannot meet. A fundamental shift in the aid system, largely rooted in colonialism, is proposed.
  • The world faces its greatest risk of pandemic damage, following six health alerts and the COVID-19 pandemic in 11 years. New report from the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board (GPMB), an initiative supported by the WHO and the World Bank.
  • The health crisis in a Cuba in the dark: surviving without operating rooms, chemotherapy, or incubators.

International Health Policy

  • Donald Trump seeks to overhaul foreign aid with a pay-for-data system. After dismantling USAID, it is trying to impose a pay-for-data system, which some label as neocolonial.
  • NHS Online: What we know and don’t know about this new NHS modernization initiative.
  • Sexually transmitted infections reach record levels across Europe. The EU’s public health agency urges countries to reverse the upward trend in cases, which has been relentless for a decade.
  • Europe unlocks the agreement with the USA on the 15% tariff cap for medicines. The European Parliament and the Council reach a provisional agreement to implement tariff commitments with the United States.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Strong statement from the Spanish Medical Association with harsh criticism of the Ministry regarding the medical conflict. The document begins: “The Spanish medical profession is experiencing one of the periods of greatest institutional, professional, and healthcare decline in recent decades. The escalating tension surrounding the reform of the Framework Statute, the absence of a genuine regulatory framework that recognizes the unique nature of medical practice, and the progressive breakdown of dialogue between the Ministry of Health and the legitimate representatives of the profession have led to a conflict that demands responsibility, a real willingness to reach an agreement, and a course correction from the Government.”
  • The Galician Health Service (Sergas) will incentivize family doctors who sign sick leave certificates that do not exceed the “standard duration.” The new Galician Management Agreements include, for the first time, the period of temporary incapacity as a factor in calculating the productivity bonus for physicians.
  • Catalonia: Health will receive a 21.3% budget increase this year, following the agreement reached between Health Minister Illa and the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), with the support of the Sánchez government.

Companies

  • International
    • Generic drug manufacturer Sandoz warns the EU about Chinese dumping. China’s overcapacity threatens Europe.
  • National
    • The new Ascires Valencia hospital promotes a high-precision healthcare model. The center integrates Europe’s first advanced precision hybrid operating room and is committed to minimally invasive medicine, AI, and patient-centered care.

Biomedicine

  • Mental health research is too invisible; it’s time to change that. More than 1 billion people (one in seven worldwide) live with a mental illness, according to the WHO. You would think that a problem of this scale would deserve an immediate response, but it’s lacking (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01550-4).
  • Prostate cancer screening can save lives, but the absolute benefit is small. Although blood tests can save the lives of 2 out of every 1,000 patients screened, many could undergo unnecessary treatment (https://www.theguardian.com/society/2026/may/15/prostate-cancer-screening-save-lives-benefit-small-study). Access the original Cochrane study (https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD004720.pub4/full/es)
  • Experimental drug produces significant weight loss. Retatrutide is Lilly’s new drug that leads to a 28% weight loss after 80 weeks (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/21/science/retatrutide-weight-loss-drug.html)
  • Juan Carlos Ispizúa presents clues about how to reverse aging. “Aging,” he says, “is a loss of identity at the cellular level”; and it is possible to recover it with experimental treatments. This means that aging can be reversed and many of the diseases associated with it can be stopped. I co-found Altos Labs, dedicated to the study of aging (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2026-05-24/juan-carlos-izpisua-presenta-indicios-de-como-revertir-el-envejecimiento-es-una-perdida-de-identidad-a-nivel-celular.html)

Global Health

  • The Lancet Editorial: Transforming the humanitarian system. 2022 was the most conflict-ridden year in 20 years, with more than 123 million forcibly displaced people due to the conflicts in Sudan, Gaza, and Ukraine. This year, 239 million will need humanitarian assistance, which the current system cannot provide. A proposal is made to change the foundations of the aid system, largely rooted in colonialism (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01017-2/fulltext)
  • The world is at the greatest risk of pandemic damage, following six health alerts and the COVID-19 pandemic in 11 years. A new report from the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board (GPMB), an initiative supported by the WHO and the World Bank (https://gpmb.org/news/news/item/18-05-2026-the-world-is-on-the-edge-of-even-greater-pandemic-damage)
  • 200 million people live with mental health disorders. Teenagers between 15 and 19 years old and women of all ages are the worst affected, especially by anxiety and depression (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-05-22/radiografia-de-la-salud-mental-en-el-mundo-1200-millones-de-personas-viven-con-trastornos-psiquiatricos.html)
  • Why the Brazilian government is obsessed with vaccines. Brazil is making a huge investment in industrial biomedical development, trying to regain “medical sovereignty” (https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2026/05/21/why-brazils-government-is-obsessed-with-vaccines)
  • The hantavirus outbreak is a tragedy—and a valuable source of information, even though the global risk remains low (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/05/20/the-hantavirus-outbreak-is-a-tragedy-and-a-valuable-data-source)
  • How to stop the Ebola outbreak. The problem is that there is still no vaccine for the virus in the latest outbreak. That’s why it’s important to incentivize research to quickly develop a vaccine (https://www.economist.com/leaders/2026/05/21/how-to-stop-the-ebola-outbreak)
  • A new Ebola outbreak could be the worst in a decade. Aid cuts, war, and the lack of a vaccine are complicating the fight (https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2026/05/19/a-new-ebola-outbreak-could-be-the-worst-in-a-decade)
  • Deadly measles outbreak with thousands sick in Bangladesh. The outbreak, with 8,000 confirmed cases and over 60,000 suspected cases, has triggered emergency vaccination (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/22/world/asia/bangladesh-measles-outbreak-vaccines.html)
  • The largest diphtheria outbreak in decades in Queensland, Australia (https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/may/19/diphtheria-outbreak-australia-spread-vaccine-northern-territory)
  • The WHO raises the risk level in the Democratic Republic of Congo to “very high” due to the Ebola outbreak. To date, there are 750 suspected cases and 177 deaths under investigation, in addition to 82 confirmed cases and 7 deaths (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/22/6a10615221efa0bc708b4575.html)
  • The health crisis in a Cuba in the dark: surviving without operating rooms, chemotherapy, or incubators (https://www.vozpopuli.com/internacional/el-drama-sanitario-de-una-cuba-a-oscuras-sobrevivir-sin-quirofanos-quimioterapia-o-incubadoras.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Are Trump’s drug pricing policies saving anyone money? Experts doubt the effectiveness of Trump’s policies in lowering drug costs in the USA (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01021-4/fulltext)
    • Donald Trump tries to overhaul foreign aid with a pay-for-data system. After dismantling USAID, it is trying to impose a pay-for-data system, which some label as neocolonial (https://www.ft.com/content/f5e1335c-40d1-4bb4-bf8d-d017a95e3b7e?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • The CDC says green card holders who have been in countries with Ebola cannot return to the US (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/22/cdc-ebola-green-card-congo-sudan-uganda-00934869)
    • What the hantavirus and Ebola outbreak is revealing about the American public health system. Although neither hantavirus nor Ebola currently poses a threat to the US, public health policies can weaken the capacity to respond to another threat (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/21/ebola-hantavirus-maga-public-health-00930368)
    • What’s behind Trump’s new child savings account system? It’s a savings account opened for all newborns. There are doubts about its effectiveness (https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/2026/05/trump-child-savings-accounts/687261/)
    • Hospitals identified as responsible for the large increase in healthcare spending. Everyone points to hospitals as largely responsible for the increase in healthcare spending (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/17/hospitals-affordability-drugs-insurers-health-care-00924303)
  • United Kingdom
    • NHS Online: What we know and don’t know about this new NHS modernization initiative (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj.s856)
    • What the disappearance of NHS England has meant (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/blogs/five-tests-for-the-nhs-modernisation-bill)
  • France
    • Lung cancer screening, a pilot program in five regions. 20,000 smokers and ex-smokers can benefit from the initiative (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/05/18/depistage-du-cancer-du-poumon-un-programme-pilote-gratuit-lance-dans-cinq-regions_6691031_1651302.html)
    • Report on measles cases in France in 2025 (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/05/18/les-cas-de-rougeole-plus-nombreux-en-france-en-2025-rapporte-sante-publique-france_6691080_3224.html)
  • European Union
    • Sexually transmitted infections reach record levels across Europe. The EU’s public health agency is urging countries to reverse the upward trend in cases, which has been relentless for a decade (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-05-21/las-infecciones-de-transmision-sexual-alcanzan-niveles-record-en-toda-europa.html)
    • Europe unblocks the agreement with the USA with the 15% tariff cap on medicines. The European Parliament and the Council of the European Union reach a provisional agreement to implement tariff commitments with the United States (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/20/europa-desbloquea-el-acuerdo-con-ee-uu-con-el-tope-arancelario-del-15-para-farmacos)
    • Europe moves towards its goal of adding 500 multinational clinical trials before 2030 (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/europa-meta-sumar-500-ensayos-clinicos-multinacionales-2030/)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Ministry of Health is expanding breast cancer screenings to women aged 45 to 74. The autonomous communities have three years to implement the measure, which will cost €534 million. Experts support the expansion, although they admit there is no solid evidence (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-05-20/sanidad-amplia-los-cribados-de-cancer-de-mama-a-mujeres-de-entre-45-y-74-anos.html)
    • Government, industry, and healthcare professionals launch a platform to expedite patient access to clinical trials (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260520/gobierno-industria-sanitarios-lanzan-plataforma-agilizar-acceso-pacientes-ensayos-clinicos/1003744251332_0.html)
  • Regional governments
    • Osakidetza finalizes the creation of an Advisory Council for Health Transformation. The body will be chaired by the Deputy Minister of Health and Digital Transformation, Gontzal Tamayo (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/pais-vasco/osakidetza-ultima-la-creacion-del-consejo-asesor-de-transformacion-en-salud-4523)
    • Sergas will incentivize family doctors who sign sick leave certificates that do not exceed the “standard duration”. The new Galician Management Agreements include, for the first time, the period of temporary incapacity as a factor in calculating the productivity bonus for physicians (https://medicinaresponsable.com/actualidad-sanitaria/sergas-incentivar-medicos-familia-firmen-bajas-excedan-duracion-estandar)
    • Catalonia: Health will have a budget increase of 21.3% this year, following Illa’s agreement with ERC, with the support of the Sánchez government (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/cataluna/illa-tendra-su-primer-presupuesto-sanitario-con-el-apoyo-de-erc-y-comuns-9781)
    • Cantabria formalizes its adherence to the centralized drug purchasing system (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/19/cantabria-formaliza-su-adhesion-al-sistema-de-compra-centralizada-estatal-de-farmacos)
  • Framework Statute and Medical Strike
    • Doctors will intensify the strike and mobilizations starting in October if the health ministry doesn’t take action (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260523/medicos-intensificaran-huelgas-movilizaciones-partir-octubre-sanidad-no-mueve-ficha/1003744255891_0.html)
    • Strong statement from the General Medical Council with strong criticism of the Ministry regarding the medical conflict. Opening of the document: “The Spanish medical profession is experiencing one of the periods of greatest institutional, professional, and healthcare decline in recent decades. The escalating tension surrounding the reform of the Framework Statute, the absence of a genuine regulatory framework that recognizes the unique nature of medical practice, and the progressive breakdown of dialogue between the Ministry of Health and the legitimate representatives of the profession have led to a conflict that demands responsibility, a real willingness to reach an agreement, and a course correction from the Government” (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/duro-comunicado-omc-ministerio-defensa-dignidad-etica-profesion.html)
  • WAIT Report
    • Spain continues down the path of reducing waiting periods, but maintains restrictions. The average implementation time after EMA approval is 537 days in 2024, compared to 616 days in 2023 (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/19/wait-espana-continua-la-senda-de-bajada-de-plazos-pero-mantiene-las-restricciones)
  • Diariofarma’s 2026 Annual Report on Pharmaceutical Policy
    • Diariofarma publishes the eleventh edition of its annual report on pharmaceutical policy, with contributions from more than 50 experts (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/21/df-publica-la-politica-farmaceutica-en-2026-con-aportaciones-de-mas-de-50-expertos)

Companies

International

  • Health Affairs Study: Venture Capital Acquisitions in Primary Care in the USA: Changes in Utilization, Spending, and Staffing. Preliminary results show increased productivity, more activity, and a larger number of physicians (https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2025.01703)
  • Generic drug manufacturer Sandoz alerts the EU about Chinese dumping. China’s overcapacity threatens Europe (https://www.ft.com/content/9c830f87-01aa-4315-8920-78c517c2bf6a?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • CVC makes a €10.9 billion bid for Italian pharmaceutical company Ricorditi (https://www.ft.com/content/b16a0afe-d017-465e-94a3-c20e449d82b1?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • Brookfield among private equity firms vying for fertility company Gulf (https://www.ft.com/content/175d7014-a61a-499f-860b-a69b6b1d470c?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • Novartis cuts staff again in its biomedical research division (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/internacional/novartis-vuelve-a-recortar-plantilla-en-su-division-de-investigacion-biomedica.html)

National news

  • Hefame presents iaFarma, the largest network of cooperative pharmacies in Spain. It is the only network in the country where all member pharmacies work with all the group’s projects and tools (https://www.abc.es/salud/hefame-presenta-iafarma-mayor-red-farmacias-cooperativas-20260514164942-nt.html)
  • The new Ascires Valencia hospital promotes a high-precision care model. The center integrates Europe’s first advanced precision hybrid operating room and is committed to minimally invasive medicine, AI, and patient-centered care (https://www.consalud.es/industria/sanidad-privada/el-nuevo-hospital-ascires-valencia-impulsa-un-modelo-asistencial-de-alta-precision-con-tecnologia-pionera-en-europa.html)
  • Sacyr and ACS win two hospitals in the UK for £3.5 billion (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/inmobiliario/2026/05/20/6a0cc77de5fdeaee6c8b458b.html)
  • Quirónsalud boosts research with nearly 1,500 clinical trials. The Oncology area accounts for 73% of the phase I and II studies launched in the last year (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/privada/quironsalud-impulsa-la-investigacion-con-cerca-de-1-500-ensayos-clinicos-8456)

7 days in healthcare (May 11th-17th, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: From genetic scalpel to cell shredder: this new CRISPR “annihilates” cancer.
  • Global health: A WHO worth fighting for: the need for targeted reform.
  • International health policy: Wes Streeting, the British Health Minister, has resigned after a brilliant tenure, in the battle to replace Starmer.
  • National health policy: Green light given to limit public/private collaboration in healthcare to “exceptional cases”.
  • Business: Bid for the UK’s largest private operator: Spire.

Biomedicine

  • From genetic scalpel to cell shredder: this new CRISPR “annihilates” cancer. The Cas12a2 protein is a programmable system capable of identifying infected or cancerous cells and destroying them completely without damaging healthy tissue. This finding, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, is based on the use of a recently discovered protein called Cas12a2.
  • Princess of Asturias Award for the developers of DNA sequencing technology: British chemists David Klenerman and Shankar Balasubramanian, and French biophysicist Pascal Mayer. These methods have boosted clinical diagnosis and research in biology, biomedicine, forensics, and ecology, according to the jury’s statement.
  • A fiber optic laboratory for diagnosing cancers in vivo. These multifunctional sensors will allow for minimally invasive, real-time cell analysis.
  • A drug nearing approval, daraxonrasib, is the first to substantially extend the lives of patients with pancreatic cancer. It works by acting on a cellular protein that activates not only pancreatic cancer, but also lung and colon cancer. These are the most frequent causes of cancer deaths.

Global Health

  • A WHO worth fighting for: the need for targeted reform. According to an article in The Lancet, the WHO needs reform to address its lack of agility, insufficient transparency in key processes and decision-making, and the absence of a clear narrative about the benefits the Agency offers the world. These reforms are urgent, or the WHO risks decline and irrelevance.
  • A group of experts warns the WHO about the climate crisis as a major public health emergency. The climate crisis should be declared a global emergency by the WHO, or millions of people will die unnecessarily.
  • A new Ebola outbreak in Congo leaves more than 65 dead: the WHO mobilizes its experts. The main public health agency on the African continent confirmed on Friday a new Ebola outbreak in the remote Ituri province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, with 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths recorded so far.

International Health Policy

  • Wes Streeting, the British Health Secretary, has resigned in the battle to replace Starmer, following his electoral defeat. The King’s Fund analyzes his tenure, portraying him as a major reformer. Under the guidance of Alan Milburn, former Health Secretary during Blair’s administration, he launched the “10-Year Health Plan for England,” with the aim of “buying time,” as the NHS’s problems have no short-term solution.
  • NHS hospitals met their waiting list targets during Wes Streeting’s tenure.
  • The White House cuts $1.3 billion from Medicaid funding in California due to a dispute over the management of nursing homes.
  • The Supreme Court allows the sale of abortion pills by mail indefinitely, overturning a previous federal judge’s decision.
  • The head of the US FDA resigns following pressure from Trump to allow flavored e-cigarettes.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Green light given to the bill limiting public-private partnerships in healthcare to “exceptional cases.” The law, which faces significant challenges, seeks to place every possible obstacle in the way of public-private collaboration.
  • The Ministry of Health is reforming the pharmaceutical co-payment system with six income brackets and new monthly limits. The system introduces maximum spending limits for low- and middle-income patients with chronic illnesses.
  • Professional associations are expected to evaluate the healthcare qualifications of foreigners, according to a Decree currently in the public comment phase at the Ministry of Universities, Science and Innovation.
  • The new Hospital Clínic and the Girona Health Region’s Campus Salud are strategic national projects (Catalonia). The Catalan Government will declare the construction of both projects to be of general interest next Tuesday, giving them absolute priority.
  • The People’s Party (PP) has registered a non-legislative motion (PNL) urging the government to activate three key measures within six months to address public health emergencies: approve the Preparedness and Response Plan, activate the Public Health Agency, and boost the strategic reserve following the hantavirus crisis.

Companies

  • International
    • Offer for Spire, the largest private hospital operator in the United Kingdom. Spire’s shares rise to $1 billion following the takeover bid.
  • National
    • Fenin promotes a major Ibero-American healthcare technology corridor to Europe in Madrid.

Biomedicine

  • Princess of Asturias Award for the developers of DNA sequencing technology. British chemists David Klenerman and Shankar Balasubramanian and French biophysicist Pascal Mayer. These methods have boosted clinical diagnosis and research in biology, biomedicine, forensic medicine, and ecology, according to the jury’s statement (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/investigacion/premio-princesa-asturias-desarrolladores-tecnologia-secuenciacion-adn.html).
  • Following the psychedelic renaissance, the US president has signed an executive order stimulating research into psychedelics for mental illness (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00969-4/fulltext). Access the executive order here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/04/accelerating-medical-treatments-for-serious-mental-illness/
  • A fiber optic laboratory for diagnosing cancers in vivo. These multi-function sensors will allow for minimally invasive, real-time cell analysis (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/05/15/un-laboratoire-sur-fibre-optique-pour-diagnostiquer-les-cancers-in-vivo_6689432_1650684.html)
  • Research into the origins of cancer will be key to improved prevention. Research into the origins of cancer will change how we prevent and screen for the 20 million new cancers diagnosed worldwide each year. Forty percent of cases are preventable, with the causes being tobacco, infectious diseases, and alcohol (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/05/14/la-recherche-sur-la-genese-des-cancers-sera-la-cle-d-une-meilleure-prevention_6689086_3232.html)
  • How an impossible idea led to a breakthrough in pancreatic cancer. A drug about to be approved, daraxonrasib, is the first to substantially extend the lives of patients with pancreatic cancer. It works by acting on a cellular protein that activates not only pancreatic cancer, but also lung and colon cancer. These are the most frequent causes of cancer deaths (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/12/health/pancreatic-cancer-daraxonrasib-kras.html)
  • A single infusion can suppress HIV for years. A study of a few patients, to be presented this week, shows the promise of a type of therapy that has already cured some hematological cancers (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/11/health/hiv-infusion-immunotherapy.html)
  • A profound limitation in modern medicine. The kind of magic bullet many doctors seek is ill-equipped to address most of their patients’ problems. Many patients who exhibit pain, fatigue, and brain fog do not fit the patterns of modern medicine (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/05/medicine-magic-bullet/687145/)
  • From genetic scalpel to cell shredder: This new CRISPR “annihilates” cancer. The Cas12a2 protein is a programmable system capable of identifying infected or tumor cells and destroying them completely without harming healthy tissue. This finding, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, is based on the use of a recently discovered protein called Cas 12a2. (https://www.abc.es/salud/bisturi-genetico-trituradora-celulas-nuevo-crispr-aniquila-20260506170000-nt.html)

Global Health

  • Hantavirus: Surprise, complacency, and danger. According to The Lancet, this episode prompts reflection on whether the lessons of COVID-19 have been adequately assimilated by political leaders and even public health authorities. (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00963-3/fulltext?dgcid=raven_jbs_etoc_email)
  • A WHO worth fighting for: The need for targeted reform. According to an article in The Lancet, the WHO needs reform to address its lack of agility, insufficient transparency in key processes and decision-making, and the absence of a clear narrative about the benefits the Agency offers the world. These reforms are urgent, or the WHO risks decline and irrelevance (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00805-6/fulltext?dgcid=raven_jbs_etoc_email)
  • Why measles is returning to Latin America. Vaccine coverage failures are causing the deadly virus to return (https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2026/05/14/why-measles-is-returning-to-the-americas)
  • A group of experts warns the WHO about the climate crisis as a major public health emergency. The climate crisis should be declared a global emergency by the WHO, or millions of people will die needlessly (https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/16/who-should-declare-climate-crisis-global-public-health-emergency-experts-say). Access the original document: https://www.who.int/europe/groups/pan-european-commission-on-climate-and-health
  • A new Ebola outbreak in Congo leaves more than 65 dead: the WHO mobilizes its experts. The main public health agency on the African continent confirmed on Friday a new Ebola outbreak in the remote Ituri province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, with 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths recorded so far. (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/15/6a074b67e85ece7f4d8b457c.html)
  • The WHO declares a public health emergency due to the new Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda. The office of the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a declaration of a “public health emergency of international concern” on Saturday due to the new Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus, which is affecting the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/17/6a0958d8e85eceeb408b4577.html)
  • Initial genetic analysis of the hantavirus from the cruise ship confirms that it is the Andes variant and rules out mutations. The hantavirus from the MV Honius has been sequenced from samples taken from one of the infected individuals. The results confirm that it is the Andean strain, the most virulent and contagious, but rule out that the virus has mutated. (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2026-05-11/un-primer-analisis-genetico-del-hantavirus-del-crucero-confirma-que-es-de-la-variante-andes-y-descarta-mutaciones.html)
  • The WHO downplays the possibility of a larger hantavirus outbreak (https://elpais.com/expres/2026-05-13/se-suceden-las-dudas-sobre-el-hantavirus-con-el-recuerdo-de-la-covid-de-fondo.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The Trump Administration cuts the CDC’s global program to stop HIV. The Administration will send the money directly to countries, which can then pay the CDC fees for the assistance (https://www.science.org/content/article/trump-administration-cuts-cdc-s-key-role-global-program-stop-hiv)
    • With Trump as a friend, the tobacco industry secures a lucrative initiative. After meeting with a group of tobacco executives at one of his golf clubs, they complained about FDA regulations, and after a phone call, the FDA director resigned and flavored vapes were authorized (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/13/us/politics/trump-vapes-cigarettes-big-tobacco.html)
    • The White House cuts $1.3 billion for Medicaid in California due to a dispute over nursing home management (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/13/white-house-cuts-billions-california-medicaid-00919351)
    • The Supreme Court allows the sale of abortion pills by mail indefinitely, which had been blocked by a federal judge (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/14/us/politics/supreme-court-abortion-pill.html)
    • RFK, Jr. pushes for a broad study on vaccines, despite his silence (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/11/health/kennedy-vaccine-safety.html)
    • US FDA chief resigns after Trump pressures to allow flavored e-cigarettes (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-05-12/el-jefe-de-la-agencia-del-medicamento-de-estados-unidos-dimite-tras-las-presiones-de-trump-para-autorizar-los-cigarrillos-electronicos-con-sabores.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • Wes Streeting, the British Health Secretary, has resigned in the battle to replace Starmer after his electoral defeat. The King’s Fund analyzes Wes Streeting’s tenure, portraying him as a great reformer. Under the guidance of Alan Milburn, former Health Minister under Blair, he launched the “10-Year Health Plan for England,” with the aim of “buying time,” as the NHS’s problems have no short-term solution (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/blogs/wes-streeting-has-gone)
    • NHS hospitals meet waiting list targets during Wes Streeting’s term (https://www.ft.com/content/61d8217a-1e30-4a96-9fbe-e8536827a3f9?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • France
    • Why the Senate has rejected the new assisted dying bill for the tenth time (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/05/13/pourquoi-le-senat-a-rejete-a-nouveau-le-texte-sur-l-aide-a-mourir_6688635_3224.html)
    • Asthma, a trivialized disease, still kills, despite the therapeutic arsenal. Between 700 and 1,000 people die each year in France from this respiratory condition. Preventable deaths with available treatments (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/05/11/l-asthme-cette-maladie-banalisee-qui-tue-encore-malgre-l-arsenal-therapeutique_6688143_1650684.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • Green light for the bill limiting private healthcare management to “exceptional cases.” The law, which faces significant challenges, seeks to place every obstacle in the way of public-private partnerships (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-05-12/luz-verde-a-la-ley-que-limita-la-gestion-privada-de-la-sanidad_4353875/)
    • The Ministry of Health reforms the pharmaceutical co-payment system with six income brackets and new monthly limits. The system introduces maximum spending limits for low- and middle-income working patients with chronic illnesses (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/12/sanidad-reforma-el-copago-farmaceutico-con-seis-tramos-de-renta-y-nuevos-topes-mensuales)
    • Professional associations are expected to evaluate the healthcare qualifications of foreigners, according to a Decree currently in the public comment phase from the Ministry of Universities, Science and Innovation (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260516/gobierno-planea-colegios-profesionales-evaluen-titulos-sanitarios-extranjeros-homologacion/1003744246472_0.html)
    • The Ministry of Health has opened the reference pricing order for 2026 to public consultation. For the first time, it includes a specific annex with medications. Exempt from the Reference Pricing System (RPS) by decision of the Interministerial Commission on Drug Prices (CIPM) (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/sanidad-audiencia-publica-orden-precios-referencia-2026-claves/)
  • Regional Administrations
    • Madrid launches the bidding process for the new Neurorehabilitation Center at Isabel Zendal Hospital (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/c-madrid/madrid-inicia-la-licitacion-para-construir-el-nuevo-centro-de-neurorrehabilitacion-del-hospital-isabel-zendal.html)
    • This is how the Asturian healthcare system is preparing to manufacture its own immunotherapy drugs (https://www.elcomercio.es/asturias/prepara-sanidad-asturiana-fabricar-propios-tratamientos-inmunoterapia-20260516182605-nt.html)
    • The new Clínic Hospital and the Girona Health Region’s Campus Salud, strategic projects for the country (Catalonia). The Catalan government will declare the construction of both hospitals to be of general interest next Tuesday, giving them absolute priority (https://elpais.com/espana/catalunya/2026-05-17/el-nuevo-hospital-clinic-y-el-campus-salud-de-la-region-sanitaria-girona-proyectos-estrategicos-de-pais.html)
  • Healthcare spending
    • According to AIREF (Independent Authority for Fiscal Responsibility), healthcare spending will grow by 4.5% this decade to address chronic conditions (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/sanidad-hoy/el-gasto-sanitario-crecera-un-4-5-esta-decada-para-enfrentar-la-cronicidad-8666)
  • PP initiatives
  • Framework Statute and the Medical Strike
    • This marks the fourth week of the medical strike. More than 2 million canceled appointments and “far apart” positions mark the start of the May doctors’ strike, following the announcement of Mónica García’s candidacy and the failure of the mediator, which have destroyed any possibility of negotiation (https://gacetamedica.com/profesion/estatuto-marco-cuarta-semana-huelga-medica/)
  • Intense surge in silicosis
    • Silicosis continues to spread rapidly in Spain with more than 600 new cases in 2025. This progressive and incurable occupational disease is skyrocketing, with a high incidence among workers in the quartz agglomerate industry, generating intense debate about this material (https://www.eldiario.es/economia/silicosis-sigue-plena-explosion-espana-600-nuevos-casos-2025-trunca-27-anos_1_13204965.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Spire shares rise to $1 billion in takeover bid. Bid for the UK’s largest private hospital operator (https://www.ft.com/content/97c78168-bb92-4039-ba5f-38f03b2a7bde?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly will launch a weight-loss pill at a lower price than Mounjaro and is already testing it on 7 other diseases (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260513/lilly-lanzara-pildora-sobrepeso-menor-precio-mounjaro-prueba-enfermedades-diferentes/1003744242884_0.html)
    • Donte Group exceeded €437 million in revenue in 2025: 11% more than the previous year. Most of the revenue corresponds to Vitaldent (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260512/donte-group-supero-millones-euros-facturacion-ano-anterior/1003744242090_0.html)
  • National
    • Natural viruses to kill superbugs. The Valencian company Evolving Therapeutics is developing phage-based solutions to combat these pathogens that killed 24,000 Spaniards in 2023 (https://elpais.com/economia/negocios/2026-05-14/virus-naturales-para-matar-superbacterias.html)
    • Fenin is promoting a major Ibero-American healthcare technology corridor to Europe in Madrid (https://www.consalud.es/tecnologia-sanitaria/fenin-organiza-la-i-cumbre-iberoamericana-de-la-industria-de-tecnologia-sanitaria.html)

7 days in healthcare (May 4th-10th, 2026)

 

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Stem cell medicine. The scope of what’s to come.
  • Global health: Liver health, a forgotten aspect of the non-communicable disease agenda.
  • International health policy: The response to hantavirus shows that Trump’s cuts have compromised US preparedness.
  • National health policy: Sánchez forces the Canary Islands government to accept the Hondius ship in Tenerife.
  • Companies: Moderna announces work on a hantavirus vaccine and its stock price jumps 14%.

Biomedicine

  • Stem cell medicine. The scope of what’s to come. The totipotent nature of stem cells means they can be used for the regeneration of damaged tissues and for the treatment of some diseases (Parkinson’s, spinal cord injury, bullous keratopathy, and others). It is reasonable to assume that stem cell therapy will play a prominent role in the future.
  • Blood test that provides clues about tumor response to treatment. A biomarker indicates which tumors will respond best to treatment.
  • The human genome encodes a new category of molecules. An article in Nature demonstrates that the genome encodes peptides, a new type of molecule, which may be useful for the production of new drugs.

Global Health

  • Liver health, a forgotten aspect of the non-communicable diseases (NCD) agenda, despite being the second leading cause of lost workdays in Europe.
  • Pandemic Agreement delayed by differences over pathogen sharing. The World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed an extension of talks on the rules for sharing pathogens, delaying the effective entry into force of the Pandemic Agreement.
  • What you should know about hantavirus. What it is, how it is transmitted, what symptoms it causes, and treatment. Interesting review from the BMJ.

International Health Policy

  • The hantavirus response shows that Trump’s budget cuts have compromised US preparedness, according to an article published in the NYT.
  • Republicans in the USA see high-risk plans as the future of health insurance. These plans consist of high deductibles, which can reach $7,000.
  • AI is reshaping European healthcare systems. The report presents how AI is being introduced into the healthcare systems of the WHO-Europe.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Sánchez is forcing the Canary Islands government to accept the Hondius ship in Tenerife, despite the opposition of the Canary Islands president. The Ministry of Transport, through the Merchant Marine, issued a binding resolution to impose the reception of the ship for security reasons. The government has turned what is a public health crisis, which should be managed with consensus, discretion, and efficiency, into a political confrontation and a spectacle for television. This is without even considering the dubious option, despite the support of the WHO and a certain degree of international consensus. But it is at least doubtful that dispersing potential carriers among several countries is the best solution. Regarding Spain, the crisis is occurring without the implementation of the State Public Health Agency.
  • The Ministry of Health plans to promote 16 regulations in 2026, focusing on public management and pharmaceuticals. Updates to the Medicines Act and the Framework Statute are planned, although this government is more effective at announcing laws than passing them.
  • Osakidetza (the Basque Health Service) is committed to a faster diagnostic model in pathology. Osakidetza has completed the full implementation of digital pathology, a milestone in the modernization of the healthcare system that allows for faster, more precise, and more collaborative analysis of tissue samples, especially in addressing diseases such as cancer.
  • Spain, a country of 50 million inhabitants (plus almost 100 million tourists per year), has infrastructure for 40 million.

Companies

  • International
    • Moderna announces work on a hantavirus vaccine and its stock price soars 14%. The laboratory has announced preliminary research for a hantavirus vaccine, which generated a significant boost in its stock price.
    • BioNTech cuts 1,860 jobs due to falling vaccine sales. Three production plants in Germany are threatened with closure.

  • National
    • Quirónsalud Barcelona presents the first private lung cancer screening program in Spain. Screening using low-dose Computed Tomography (CT) has been shown to reduce mortality by between 20% and 26% in high-risk populations. It is the first program of its kind outside the public sector.
    • The Cordón family has increased its investment to €125 million in its mega-complex healthcare facility in Madrid. The center expects to generate between €100 and €150 million in revenue in its fifth year, and the family is already considering replicating this concept in other regions of Spain, according to the hospital’s CEO and CFO, Alfonso Escárate.

Biomedicine

  • Stem cell medicine: The future. The totipotent nature of stem cells means they can be used to regenerate damaged tissues and to treat certain diseases (Parkinson’s, spinal cord injury, bullous keratopathy, and others). Stem cell therapy is expected to play a prominent role in the future (https://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(25)00814-9/fulltext)
  • Does acupuncture work? This technique of Chinese origin is over 3,000 years old. Recent studies consider it useful in pain management, but beyond that, its beneficial effects are questionable (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/05/01/does-acupuncture-work)
  • Colonoscopy and cancer prevention: The new arithmetic of benefit. A recent analysis discussed in The Lancet reaffirms that colonoscopy is useful in the early diagnosis of colon cancer, but has no effect on mortality (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00794-4/fulltext)
  • Blood test that provides clues about tumor response to treatment. A biomarker indicates which tumors will respond best to treatment (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01353-7)
  • The human genome encodes a new category of molecules. An article in Nature demonstrates that the genome encodes peptides, a new type of molecule, which may be useful for the production of new drugs (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/05/06/the-human-genome-encodes-for-a-new-category-of-molecule). Access the original article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10459-x
  • A new atlas of human organs, with three-dimensional access to the organs (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adz2240)

Global Health

  • The agreement on pandemics is delayed due to differences in the sharing of pathogens. The World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed an extension to the talks on pathogen sharing rules, delaying the effective entry into force of the Pandemic Agreement (https://www.consalud.es/politica/se-estancan-las-negociaciones-sobre-el-intercambio-de-patogenos.html)
  • Liver health, a forgotten aspect of the non-communicable diseases (NCD) agenda, despite being the second leading cause of lost workdays in Europe (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00710-5/fulltext)
  • Lebanon’s healthcare system: a silent victim of war. Lebanon’s already weakened healthcare system is under-resourced and in some cases devastated by Israeli attacks (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00907-4/fulltext)
  • What you should know about hantavirus: what it is, how it is transmitted, what symptoms it causes, and treatment. An interesting review from the BMJ (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj.s877)
  • Hantavirus in Argentina: 198 deaths in 13 years and a virus that has spread from Patagonia to central provinces like Buenos Aires. This season alone, it has already killed 9 people. The country is experiencing the paradox that what happened on the cruise ship is forcing it to collaborate with the WHO, an organization that Javier Milei abandoned following in Donald Trump’s footsteps (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/05/69f9fd9721efa0e5668b459d.html)
  • Argentina again criticizes the WHO regarding the hantavirus outbreak: “It is once again putting politics before evidence.” “The WHO is trying to use an extraordinary health event to influence a sovereign decision by Argentina,” Javier Milei asserted (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/08/69fd205bfdddff57158b456d.html).
  • María Neira: “Primary prevention is the great challenge for public/private collaboration in managing global health.” Neira emphasized not only the importance of early detection, but also that it is necessary to go further. In this regard, she argued that “mayors are the new health ministers.” Decisions regarding urban planning, energy policies, and food systems directly determine the health of the population. citizens(https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13903932/05/26/maria-neira-oms-las-enfermedades-infecciosas-siguen-siendo-un-reto-para-la-salud-mundial-porque-nos-hacen-vulnerables.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • WHO Director says hantavirus outbreak proves USA must get back on track. WHO and US authorities are working together, despite Trump’s decision (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/07/hantavirus-outbreak-cruise-who-tedros-00910213)
    • Hantavirus response shows Trump’s cuts have compromised US preparedness, according to a NYT article (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/07/health/hantavirus-americans-cdc.html)
    • Supreme Court temporarily restores mail-in abortion pill distribution (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/us/politics/supreme-court-abortion-pill.html)
    • Republicans see high-risk plans as the future of health insurance. They consist of having high deductibles, which can reach $7,000 (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/03/republicans-embrace-high-deductible-obamacare-plans-00902194)
    • Hospitals are largely to blame for the increase in healthcare costs in the USA. Health insurance premiums for an American family can exceed $27,000 a year. Hospitals are largely responsible for the rise in healthcare prices in the USA (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/opinion/health-care-hospitals-insurance.html)
    • Kennedy launches a campaign to help Americans stop taking antidepressants. The health secretary says Americans are overusing psychiatric medication (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/science/rfk-antidepressants-ssris-hhs-maha.html)
    • A study shows that half of patients with metastatic lung cancer do not receive treatment, according to a study (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/07/well/metastatic-lung-cancer-study.html). Access the original JAMA study: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaoncology/fullarticle/2848634?guestAccessKey=dc8a51f8-dc91-49b9-92dc-974c33b8cd3b&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=050726
    • Why Republicans Support Psychedelic Drugs. For decades, Republicans opposed psychedelic drugs, but now, with Trump, they are fully in favor (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/03/science/ibogaine-psychedelics-rogan-trump.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • Innovation, Economic Growth, Medical Technologies, and the NHS: From Strategy to Implementation. The proposals in the “10-Year Health Plan for England” suggest that the NHS will have to work differently with the pharmaceutical and medical technology industries (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/long-reads/innovation-economic-growth-medtech-nhs-strategy-delivery)
  • France
    • How the French healthcare system is preparing for hantavirus. Transportation, virological tests and clinical examinations, as well as the repatriation of the five French citizens on the ship (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/05/08/hantavirus-comment-le-systeme-sanitaire-et-les-etablissements-de-sante-de-reference-francais-se-preparent_6687083_3224.html)
    • The Academy of Medicine recommends flu vaccination for caregivers and healthcare workers. According to the Academy, this would reduce infections and mortality (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/05/05/l-academie-de-medecine-recommande-l-obligation-vaccinale-contre-la-grippe-pour-les-soignants_6685595_1651302.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Ministry of Health plans to promote 16 regulations in 2026, focusing on public management and pharmaceuticals. Updates to the Medicines Act and the Framework Statute are planned (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/05/sanidad-preve-impulsar-16-normas-en-2026-con-el-foco-en-la-gestion-publica-y-la-farmacia)
    • The Ministry of Health is preparing the ground for centralized public procurement of digital apps and artificial intelligence. The Department is finalizing an order for this (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260505/sanidad-prepara-terreno-compras-centralizadas-publicas-apps-digitales-inteligencia-artificial/1003744233333_0.html)
    • Eleven regions join the framework agreement to acquire 62 CT scanners. A new option is introduced for bidders to offer a lease with or without an option to purchase the equipment. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260507/once-ccaa-incorporan-acuerdo-marco-adquirir-equipos-tac-ahorraran-millones-sanidad-publica/1003744236949_0.html)
  • Regional Governments
    • The Community of Madrid is implementing AI in hospitals to expedite cancer diagnosis. Madrid’s public hospitals are testing systems focused on prostate and breast tumors. (https://theobjective.com/tecnologia/2026-05-06/comunidad-madrid-ia-hospitales-diagnostico-cancer/)
    • Osakidetza is committed to a faster diagnostic model in pathology. Osakidetza has completed the full implementation of the digitalization of its Pathology Department, a milestone in the modernization of the healthcare system that allows for faster, more precise, and more collaborative analysis of tissue samples, especially in the treatment of diseases such as cancer. (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/pais-vasco/osakidetza-apuesta-por-un-modelo-de-diagnostico-mas-rapido-y-preciso-con-la-digitalizacion-de-la-anatomia-patologica.html)
    • New Medicine degree in Burgos (https://www.consalud.es/formacion/nuevo-grado-de-medicina-en-burgos-una-formacion-de-calidad-ya-garantiza-buenos-puestos-en-el-mir.html)
    • Galicia creates a support unit to reduce bureaucracy in Primary Care. It will have 50 qualified professionals and will be launched in the coming weeks (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/galicia/galicia-creara-una-unidad-de-apoyo-para-reducir-burocracia-en-primaria-3357)
    • The Balearic Islands Health Pact sets the roadmap for digital transformation (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/07/el-pacto-por-la-salud-de-baleares-marca-la-hoja-de-ruta-para-la-transformacion-digital)
  • Hantavirus in Spain
    • Sánchez forces the Canary Islands government to accept the Hondius ship in Tenerife, despite the opposition of the Canary Islands president. The Ministry of Transport, through the Merchant Marine, issued a binding resolution mandating the acceptance of the ship for safety reasons (https://www.elespanol.com/ciencia/20260510/sanchez-impone-gobierno-canarias-acogida-hondius-pese-negativa-clavijo-autorizar-fondeo-tenerife/1003744239815_0.html).
    • The Public Health Agency, announced by Sánchez six years ago for crises such as hantavirus, still lacks headquarters and statutes. The creation of AESAP was approved in 2025, but the Ministry of Health has not yet made it operational. Experts describe the delay as “Kafkaesque.” (https://www.elespanol.com/espana/20260508/agencia-salud-anunciada-sanchez-hace-anos-crisis-hantavirus-sigue-sin-sede-estatutos/1003744236875_0.html)
    • The People’s Party (PP) demands the government approve the Plan for Preparedness and Response to Health Emergencies. The party’s Deputy Secretary for Health, Carmen Fúnez, has met with the entities and civil society organizations that signed the ‘Manifesto for Strengthening Preparedness and Response to Health Emergencies in Spain’ and is advancing a non-legislative motion to demand progress (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/hantavirus-pp-plan-preparacion-respuesta/)
  • Sick Leave
    • The occupational health of Spaniards is worsening, reaching 1.07 million sick leaves each week. Spain has gone from being below the OECD average to being the third country with the most sick leaves out of the 38 member states. economies that make up the Organization (https://www.elindependiente.com/economia/2026/05/05/salud-laboral-espanoles-empeora-alcanza-cifras-record-1-millon-bajas-medicas-semana/)
    • Only five autonomous communities cede the management of sick leave to mutual insurance companies, despite the agreement signed in 2024 (Catalonia, Balearic Islands, Asturias, Castilla-La Mancha, and Cantabria) (https://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/13903405/05/26/solo-cinco-autonomias-ceden-la-gestion-de-bajas-a-las-mutuas-pese-al-pacto-firmado-en-2024.html)
  • Psychology
    • Spaniards take six months to access a psychologist for the first time in the public healthcare system, 90 days longer than the European average. Currently, our country has six clinical specialists per 100,000 inhabitants, three times less than the European average (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260504/espanoles-tardan-meses-acceder-primera-vez-psicologo-sanidad-publica-dias-europeos/1003744229920_0.html)
  • Infrastructure problems, also in healthcare
    • Spain, a country of 50 million inhabitants (plus almost 100 million tourists per year), has infrastructure for 40 million. (https://elpais.com/economia/negocios/2026-05-09/espana-llegara-pronto-a-los-50-millones-de-habitantes-y-100-millones-de-turistas-estas-son-las-necesidades-de-inversion-mas-urgentes.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Laboratories are researching more than 90 vaccines to address new health threats. The pipeline includes developments against HIV, respiratory diseases, and antimicrobial resistance, for which there are still no effective solutions (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13905096/05/26/los-laboratorios-investigan-mas-de-90-vacunas-para-hacer-frente-a-nuevas-amenazas-sanitarias.html)
    • How GSK is rebuilding its cancer business: R&D and acquisitions (https://www.ft.com/content/ae053d2c-de07-47a8-92fa-3310b20eae19?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • BioNTech cuts 1,860 jobs due to declining vaccine sales. Three production plants in Germany threatened with closure (https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2026/05/05/biontech-supprime-1-860-postes-sur-fond-de-chute-des-ventes-de-vaccins-anti-covid_6685654_3234.html)
    • The anti-obesity pill boosts Novo Nordisk’s treatments, which improves its forecasts. The Danish pharmaceutical company increases its profit by 67% in the first quarter and rises more than 6% on the stock market (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/industria/2026/05/06/69fb2892e5fdea09318b457b.html)
    • Moderna announces work on a hantavirus vaccine and its stock jumps 14%. The laboratory has announced preliminary research for a hantavirus vaccine, which generated a significant boost in its stock price (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/2026/05/08/69fe304fe5fdea771c8b4592.html)
  • National News
    • Quirónsalud Barcelona presents the first private lung cancer screening program in Spain. Screening using low-dose computed tomography (CT) has been shown to reduce mortality by between 20% and 26% in high-risk populations. It is the first program of its kind outside the public sector (https://www.consalud.es/industria/sanidad-privada/el-hospital-quironsalud-barcelona-presenta-el-primer-programa-de-la-sanidad-privada-en-espana-para-el-cribado-precoz-del-cancer-de-pulmon.html)
    • Rovi’s stock price plummets 16% after a 48% drop in profits and lower annual forecasts (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-05-06/rovi-se-desploma-en-bolsa-tras-reducir-el-beneficio-un-48-y-rebajar-sus-previsiones-anuales.html)
    • The Cordón family increases its investment to €125 million in its mega-complex healthcare facility in Madrid. The center expects to generate between €100 and €150 million in revenue in its fifth year, and the family is already considering replicating this concept in other regions of Spain, according to the hospital’s CEO and CFO, Alfonso Escárate (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13901448/05/26/la-familia-cordon-eleva-la-inversion-a-125-millones-en-su-megacomplejo-sanitario-en-madrid.html).
    • Almirall accelerates R&D and assesses sales in its general medicine portfolio. The group will focus on developing new proprietary products specializing in skin diseases (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/2026/05/09/69fe22f9e5fdeaea5c8b458b.html).

7 days in healthcare (April 27th-May 3rd, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were: 

  • Biomedicine: Genome pioneer Craig Venter dies.
  • Global health: AIDS returns to Zambia with force after a year of cuts in US HIV aid.
  • International health policy: Germany will spend less money on healthcare and more on defense.
  • National health policy: Feijóo points to Sánchez as responsible for the largest doctors’ strike in Spain’s history.
  • Business: Healthcare is driving the American economy.

Biomedicine

  • Genome pioneer Craig Venter, who redefined the boundaries of biology—sequencing DNA at unprecedented speed, engineering synthetic life, and mapping ocean microbes—has died.
  • Long-lived immune cells show promise against cancer after a clinical trial. Blood cell cancers go into remission after being treated with T cells that behave like embryonic cells.
  • Spain treats epidermolysis bullosa (butterfly skin) with gene therapy for the first time. Two patients in Andalusia have been treated with an innovative drug that is still awaiting funding from the National Health System.
  • The first map of smell has been created. This fundamental sense remains largely unknown, but scientists from Harvard University have now presented this ‘olfactory atlas’ showing how the more than 1,000 receptors that allow us to smell are organized in the nose.

Global Health

  • AIDS is returning to Zambia with a vengeance after a year of cuts in US HIV aid. A robust and accredited system that saved thousands of lives has begun to collapse. Trump’s disasters in the health sector with the closure of USAID are immeasurable.

International Health Policy

  • Germany will spend less money on healthcare and more on defense. The Merz government is trying to allocate €133 billion to defense while simultaneously making cuts to the public healthcare system. The plan is to reduce healthcare spending by €20 billion and lower the price of medicines. A far-reaching measure. This will have an impact across Europe and, of course, in Spain.
  • Obamacare enrollment is falling sharply after the price hikes. Millions of Americans are dropping their insurance coverage following the congressional agreement that raised prices.
  • China is surpassing the United States in research and is on the verge of taking its technological leadership. China already surpasses the US in R&D, scientific publications, and patents, while Trump is cutting off funding for science and restricting the entry of foreign talent, jeopardizing its global leadership.
  • Bukele (El Salvador) is entrusting the monitoring of chronic diseases to Gemini, Google’s AI.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Feijóo points to Sánchez as responsible for the largest doctors’ strike in Spain’s history. The PP leader has launched an offensive in Congress amidst the ongoing medical conflict against the Framework Statute, which is experiencing its third national strike this week to demand the withdrawal of the legislation and the implementation of specific labor improvements for the medical profession. Feijóo’s proposal seems reasonable, given the seriousness of the conflict and the Ministry’s apparent inability to find a solution, although Sánchez doesn’t appear to have been very receptive to the request, at least publicly.
  • The European University is bringing six more health-related degrees to Gijón, including Medicine. The Asturian government gave the green light this Monday to the arrival of the European University in Asturias through a center affiliated with the European University of Madrid. With this, Asturias is no longer one of the autonomous communities without a private university.
  • Asturias creates an oncology network to guarantee equity in treatments. The Principality has launched the Astur-CCC network, a new model of cancer care involving all three health areas. This was one of the requests in the document promoted by the RIDEA (Royal Institute of Asturian Studies), entitled “For a Cutting-Edge Asturian Health System” (2025).
  • Spain is the only EU country that does not require a clinical examination or supervision for foreign doctors. A report by the Spanish Medical Association (OMC) denounces the degree validation system as “purely administrative.”

Companies

  • International
    • Healthcare is driving the American economy. In the last year, 43% of new jobs were in the health sector.
    • AstraZeneca restarts investment in Cambridge (UK) after reaching an agreement with the British government on drug prices. This resumes the £300 million investment, which had been paused last year.
  • National News
    • The fertility industry is experiencing another year of growth, accumulating a turnover of €685 million in 2025, 5% more than the previous year.
    • Sanitas (its new CEO, Jaureguízar) is not committed to public-private partnerships in healthcare. It had previously embraced this approach, in the Manises concession (Valencian Community), and also in the administrative mutualism model (MUGEJU).

Biomedicine

  • Genome pioneer Craig Venter, who redefined the boundaries of biology—sequencing DNA at unprecedented speed, engineering synthetic life, and mapping ocean microbes—has died (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01226-z).
  • Long-lived immune cells show promise against cancer after a clinical trial. Blood cell cancers go into remission after being treated with T cells that behave like embryonic cells (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01398-8)
  • A treatment for pre-eclampsia may be on the horizon. Blood filtration has performed well in early trials (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/04/27/a-treatment-for-pre-eclampsia-may-be-on-the-horizon)
  • AI is not the end of the doctor. Although some say medical schools will soon be obsolete, it appears that empathy is the doctor’s last refuge against the advances of AI (https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.4356)
  • Recommendations for discontinuing psychotropic medications. A consensus statement from the American Society of Psychopharmacology (https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.0043)
  • A Spanish drug has managed to correct one of the key factors in ALS and is now in human trials. The drug has begun clinical trials after successfully restoring the function of TDP-43, a protein altered in most cases of the disease, in preclinical models (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-04-28/farmaco-espanol-corregir-claves-ela_4345787/)
  • Treating a meniscus tear with surgery is more harmful than beneficial in the long run. A study has revealed that, ten years later, those who underwent surgery suffered more problems than those who did not (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260502/tratar-rotura-menisco-cirugia-perjudicial-beneficioso-largo-plazo-mayor-riesgo-artrosis/1003744229981_0.html)
  • Europe approves the first drug indicated to reduce the progression of multiple sclerosis. Tolebrutinib has reduced by 30% the progression of the disease that occurs unrelated to relapses (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260428/europa-aprueba-primer-medicamento-indicado-reducir-progresion-esclerosis-multiple/1003744224322_0.html)
  • Spain treats epidermolysis bullosa (EB) with gene therapy for the first time. Two patients have been treated in Andalusia with an innovative drug that is still awaiting funding from the National Health System (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-04-27/espana-trata-por-primera-vez-la-piel-de-mariposa-con-terapia-genica_4345696/)
  • A superclot has been designed that stops severe bleeding in five seconds. Researchers in Canada develop a technique to create biological patches 13 times stronger than natural ones using the patient’s own cells (https://www.abc.es/salud/disenan-supercoagulo-detiene-hemorragias-graves-cinco-segundos-20260429180000-nt.html)
  • The first map of smell has been created. This fundamental sense remains largely unknown, but scientists from Harvard University have now presented this ‘olfactory atlas’ showing how the more than 1,000 receptors that allow us to smell are organized in the nose (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/28/69f0b08721efa057788b457f.html)

Global Health

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • CDC statements undermine faith in vaccines. It all stems from a November 2025 statement that did not rule out an association between vaccines and autism (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aef5320)
    • Obamacare enrollment drops sharply after price increases. Millions of Americans are dropping their insurance after Congress passed a deal that raised prices (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/01/business/obamacare-enrollment-decline.html)
    • A federal court has suspended the possibility of sending the abortion pill by mail after a lawsuit from the Republican state of Louisiana (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/05/02/aux-etats-unis-une-cour-d-appel-federale-suspend-l-envoi-postal-de-la-pilule-abortive_6684757_3210.html)
  • China
    • China surpasses the United States in research and is about to take its technological lead. China has already surpassed the US in R&D, scientific publications, and patents, while Trump cuts off funding for science and restricts the entry of foreign talent, jeopardizing its global leadership (https://www.elconfidencial.com/tecnologia/novaceno/2026-05-01/china-eeuu-i-d-ciencia-tecnologia-orden-mundial_4348009/)
  • United Kingdom
    • Doctors are concerned after it was revealed that a private consulting firm has been awarded £700,000 to design the new Neighborhood Centres, included in England’s 10-year health plan. The contract aims to support the construction of 250 Neighborhood Centres by 2030, as announced by the Chancellor of the Exchequer (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj.s837)
    • England’s 10-year health plan: aligning hope with economic reality. The novelty lies not in the measures announced in the plan, but in the severity of the economic restrictions under which it will have to be implemented (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj-2025-088964)
    • Healthy life expectancy trends in the UK: a time of great change. The vast majority of local areas saw a decline in this expectancy over the last decade (https://www.health.org.uk/reports-and-analysis/analysis/healthy-life-expectancy-trends-in-the-uk-a-watershed-moment)
  • Germany
    • Germany will spend less money on healthcare and more on defense. The Merz government is trying to allocate €1.33 billion to defense, while simultaneously cutting public healthcare spending (https://en.ara.cat/international/cuts-to-the-welfare-state-to-invest-more-in-defense-merz-presents-the-2027-budgets_1_5722623.html)
    • Germany is considering significantly reducing the price and reimbursement of medications. Under a new law to stabilize the finances of the public health system, lower drug prices are included (https://www.globalpolicywatch.com/2026/04/germany-plans-significant-cuts-in-drug-pricing-and-reimbursement-how-would-the-gkv-beitragssatzstabilisierungsgesetz-impact-pharmaceutical-companies/)
    • The German government is considering massive cuts in healthcare, pensions, and social benefits. Health cuts will amount to €20 billion next year (https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2026/04/29/tgij-a29.html)
  • El Salvador
    • Bukele entrusts the monitoring of chronic diseases to Gemini, Google’s AI (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/04/28/au-salvador-nayib-bukele-confie-le-suivi-des-malades-chroniques-a-gemini-l-ia-de-google_6683867_3210.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • Government plan against superbugs: There will be no large boxes of antibiotics to prevent stockpiling. The misuse of antibiotics is largely one of the main causes of the growing resistance to superbugs, microscopic organisms immune to most available drugs that cause the death of some 24,000 people a year in Spain alone (https://elpais.com/expres/2026-04-29/el-plan-del-gobierno-contra-las-superbacterias-no-habra-cajas-grandes-de-antibioticos-para-evitar-el-acopio-y-su-mal-uso.html)
    • The government begins reform of the Occupational Risk Prevention Law. The Council of Ministers has approved the draft bill amending the Occupational Risk Prevention Law, the Regulation of Prevention Services, and the consolidated text of the Workers’ Statute. The Government is thus beginning the process of expanding the recognition and protection of occupational risks, including for the first time mental health and psychosocial risks (https://medicinaresponsable.com/politica-sanitaria/gobierno-reforma-prevencion-riesgos-laborales)
    • Congress approves enshrining abortion in the Constitution. The Government’s proposal to enshrine abortion in the Constitution passed its first hurdle in the Congress of Deputies this Thursday, although with criticism from its coalition partners (https://medicinaresponsable.com/politica-sanitaria/congreso-aprueba-tramitar-blindaje-aborto-constitucion-superar-vetos-pp-vox)
  • Regional governments
    • The European University is bringing six more health-related degrees to Gijón, including Medicine. The Asturian government gave the green light this Monday to the arrival of the European University in Asturias through a center affiliated with the European University of Madrid (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/estudiantes/la-universidad-europea-lleva-a-gijon-medicina-y-6-grados-sanitarios-mas-8127)
    • Asturias creates an oncology network to guarantee equity in treatments. The Principality has launched the Astur-CCC network, a new model of cancer care involving all three health areas (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/asturias/asturias-crea-una-red-oncologica-para-garantizar-la-equidad-en-tratamientos-2609)
  • Doctors’ Strike and Framework Statute
    • Strike participation continues to decline, and doctors are calling for Pedro Sánchez to intervene and take responsibility for the negotiations, which show no signs of being resolved (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-04-27/el-seguimiento-de-la-huelga-de-medicos-continua-cayendo-y-los-sindicatos-piden-la-intervencion-de-pedro-sanchez.html)
    • Feijóo points to Sánchez as responsible for the largest doctors’ strike in Spain. The leader of the People’s Party (PP) has launched an offensive in Congress amidst the ongoing medical conflict against the Framework Statute, which is experiencing its third national strike this week to demand the withdrawal of the legislation and the implementation of specific labor improvements for the medical profession (https://www.consalud.es/politica/feijoo-apunta-a-sanchez-como-responsable-de-la-mayor-huelga-de-medicos-que-ha-habido-en-espana.html).
  • Study on doctors’ salaries
    • The doctor’s salary doesn’t exist: a study on the complex system. At least seven factors (base salary, job position, career path, location, on-call shifts, productivity, and individual factors) determine the final salary (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/medicina/el-sueldo-medico-no-existe-una-foto-al-complejo-entramado-salarial-espanol-6879). Access the original article: https://www.redaccionmedica.com/contenido/images/HPP2025_15_AGLB_Estu_260429_123114.pdf
  • Sick Leave
    • Hours lost due to sick leave are increasing by 10% per year, double the rate of hours worked. Temporary disability now accounts for 6% of total working hours, averaging two hours per week per employee (https://www.vozpopuli.com/economia/empleo/las-horas-perdidas-por-baja-laboral-crecen-un-10-en-un-ano-el-doble-que-las-trabajadas.html)
  • Foreign Doctors
    • Spain is the only EU country that does not require a clinical examination or supervision for foreign doctors. A report by the Spanish Medical Association (OMC) denounces the system for validating medical degrees as “purely administrative” (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260430/espana-unico-pais-ue-no-exige-examen-clinico-supervision-medicos-extranjeros/1003744229003_0.html)
    • The OMC requires an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) for non-EU doctors with recognized qualifications. The Spanish Medical Association (OMC) proposes a clinical exam to validate non-EU doctors’ qualifications after a record 30,000 degrees were validated in 2025, and warns of a bottleneck in the MIR (Medical Residency Exam). (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/omc-pide-ecoe-extracomunitarios-homologados.html)
  • Specialist Recertification
    • FACME requests a specialist recertification system from the LOPS (Organic Law of the Spanish Medical Professions). FACME demands that the LOPS recognize the medical act, the role of the responsible physician, and their leadership of the multidisciplinary team (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/facme-le-pide-lops-sistema-recertificacion-especialistas.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Healthcare is driving the American economy. In the last year, 43% of new jobs were in the health sector (https://www.ft.com/content/6b1bcbab-21d4-49a3-9940-d7550f042e5d?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly’s profits double as sales of obesity medication rise (https://www.ft.com/content/527fb779-bc12-436d-a6cc-1ba4dfc9a5f5?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Purdue, the US pharmaceutical company, faces criminal charges in the opioid crisis (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/04/29/crise-des-opioides-le-laboratoire-americain-purdue-pharma-condamne-au-penal_6684068_3210.html)
    • AstraZeneca restarts investment in Cambridge (UK) after agreement with the British government on drug prices. This restarts the £300 million investment, which had been paused last year (https://www.ft.com/content/dd3b8baa-e7fd-40fa-a015-567164f23e30?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • This is an interesting strategic shift by CVS Pharmacy, one of the world’s largest pharmacy chains, which is focusing on healthcare services, based on the fact that around 80% of patients prefer in-person pharmaceutical care, and 84% consider pharmacies to be trusted healthcare spaces. The new format eliminates mass-market activity and assumes a more healthcare-focused role (https://matrixbcg.com/blogs/growth-strategy/cvshealth)
  • National News
    • The fertility business continues its growth for another year, accumulating a turnover of 685 million euros in 2025, 5% more than the previous year (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260502/negocio-fertilidad-encadena-ano-crecimiento-empresas-dominantes/1003744229340_0.html)
    • Sanitas Valdebebas obtains accreditation as a university center. In 2026, Sanitas will offer 24 MIR (Medical Residency) positions in its accredited university hospitals (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/privada/sanitas-valdebebas-obtiene-la-acreditacion-como-centro-de-formacion-mir-4129)
    • Sanitas (its new CEO, Jaureguízar) is not committed to public/private partnerships in healthcare (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-05-02/jauerguizar-sanitas-la-colaboracion-publico-privada-en-sanidad-es-complejisima-y-por-eso-hemos-renunciado.html)
    • Esteve is reinforcing its highly specialized strategy with five drugs. The company achieved revenues of €828 million in 2025, representing double-digit growth, and expects to reach €950 million this year (https://www.diariomedico.com/farmacia/empresas/esteve-refuerza-5-farmacos-estrategia-alta-especializacion.html)
    • FAES Farma boosts its sales by 31% due to acquisitions. The strong quarterly results are attributed to the launch of its ophthalmology division, made possible by the acquisition of Edol and Sifi last year (https://www.expansion.com/pais-vasco/2026/04/30/69f36532468aeb92638b4574.html)

7 days in healthcare (April 20th-26th, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: A new gene therapy allows deaf children with a rare disease to hear.
  • Global Health: Transforming the WHO: incremental reform is no longer enough.
  • International Health Policy: The British Parliament will ban the sale of tobacco to those born since 2009.
  • National Health Policy: The OECD warns the government of the sharp increase in sick leave in Spain and identifies management problems.
  • Business: 7 of the 10 fastest-growing companies in the USA are in the healthcare sector.

Biomedicine

  • A new gene therapy allows deaf children with a rare disease to hear. The treatment was approved by the FDA last Thursday.
  • Two drugs offer hope for the treatment of aggressive pancreatic cancer. In two separate clinical trials, two drugs show efficacy in one of the grimt diagnoses in oncology.

Global Health

  • Transforming the WHO: incremental reform is no longer enough. The WHO, created in 1948, has grown extraordinarily. Between 2017 and 2024 alone, its staff increased by 70%. Despite numerous calls for reform over the past 30 years, changes have always been incremental and insufficient. The Lancet article proposes two fundamental reforms: reducing the number of programs to only those that are truly essential and changing the governance structure.
  • Malaria vaccines should be bringing the number of cases down, but it is rising. There is little to celebrate on World Malaria Day (April 25). The number of malaria cases, which stood at 238 million in 2018, has risen to 282 million in 2024, the last year with valid figures.
  • Richard Horton’s comment in The Lancet: President Trump, it is not too late. The author, a former editor of The Lancet, cites the findings of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) regarding the mortality and disease crises being experienced by many nations that were formerly beneficiaries of USAID, a program dismantled by Trump.

International Health Policy

  • The British Parliament will ban the sale of tobacco to anyone born since 2009. Both houses of the British Parliament have agreed on the final version of the bill that will prohibit sales and aims to create “the first tobacco-free generation.”
  • Home hospitalization is transforming healthcare in the USA. A Medicare regulation allows for reimbursement of home hospitalization as a substitute for traditional hospitalization.
  • Trump is giving a push to psychedelic drugs. However, the way he is doing so is entirely unorthodox: an email responding to an influencer promising FDA approval, followed by an executive order.
  • The OECD warns that colon cancer is skyrocketing among young people, and only 48% of the population participates in screening. This organization proposes five priority strategies to improve the prognosis of the disease.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The OECD alerts the government to the sharp increase in sick leave in Spain and identifies management problems. The organization ranks Spain as the third country with the highest level of worker absences among OECD countries, with an average of 4.9 weeks per year.
  • The doctors’ strike committee is maintaining its work stoppages due to the lack of “useful proposals” from the healthcare system. The five unions leading the protests state that, without “real progress,” the strike, scheduled for April 27-30, will not be called off.
  • Spain is experiencing the largest increase in sudden death in Europe. A European study warns of an upward trend in this type of death over the last decade.
  • Medical societies are calling on Spain to follow the UK’s lead and ban tobacco sales to those born after 2009.
  • The IDIS Foundation is calling for the integration of private healthcare as a strategic partner to reduce waiting lists. The private sector is offering its more than 400 hospitals and surgical capacity as a strategic ally to alleviate the strain on the National Health System.

Companies

  • International
    • The Financial Times publishes a list of the fastest-growing companies in the United States; of the top 10, 7 are in the healthcare sector.
  • National
    • La Caixa completes a €100 million investment in the CaixaResearch Institute. The banking foundation has inaugurated Spain’s first biomedical research center specializing in immunology.

Biomedicine

  • Two drugs offer hope for treating aggressive pancreatic cancer. In two separate clinical trials, two drugs showed efficacy in one of the grimest diagnoses in oncology (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/business/pancreas-cancer-experimental-drugs.html)
  • A new gene therapy allows deaf children with a rare disease to hear. The treatment was approved by the FDA last Thursday (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/23/science/deaf-gene-therapy.html)
  • A cellular map reveals how Down syndrome alters prenatal brain development. In this syndrome, the brain begins to develop differently in the early stages of pregnancy. This is revealed in new research published in Science, which has created a detailed cellular map of how trisomy alters human brain development before birth (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/23/69e9e15421efa0746f8b4576.html)
  • The number of drugs in research worldwide falls for the first time in almost 30 years. The number of drugs in research and development worldwide has fallen for the first time in almost 30 years, according to the latest annual report from the consulting firm Citeline (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260424/numero-medicamentos-investigacion-mundo-cae-primera-vez-anos/1003744217708_0.html)

Global Health

  • Malaria vaccines should be causing it to fall, but it’s rising. There is little to celebrate on World Malaria Day (April 25). The number of malaria cases, which stood at 238 million in 2018, has risen to 282 million in 2024, the latest year with valid figures (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01253-w)
  • Transforming the WHO: Incremental reform is no longer enough. The WHO, established in 1948, has grown extraordinarily. Between 2017 and 2024 alone, its staff increased by 70%. Despite numerous calls for reform over the past 30 years, changes have consistently been incremental and insufficient. The Lancet article proposes two fundamental reforms: reducing the number of programs to only those that are truly essential and changing governance (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00609-4/fulltext)
  • Nestlé’s sponsorship of the United Nations is considered an outrage. Hundreds of experts are calling for an end to Nestlé’s sponsorship of the United Nations University (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00797-X/fulltext)
  • Richard Horton’s comment in The Lancet: President Trump, it’s not too late. The author, a former editor of The Lancet, cites the findings of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) regarding the mortality and disease crises being experienced by many nations that were formerly beneficiaries of USAID, a program dismantled by Trump (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00790-7/fulltext).
  • Kenya: The court refuses to recognize abortion as a fundamental right. Doctors and patients are threatened if they perform or undergo a voluntary termination of pregnancy (https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2026/04/24/kenya-la-justice-refuse-de-reconnaitre-l-avortement-comme-droit-fondamental_6683129_3212.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The CDC is on the brink. 80% of senior positions are vacant (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00799-3/fulltext)
    • Home hospitalization is transforming healthcare delivery in the USA. A Medicare regulation allows payment for home hospitalization as a substitute for traditional hospitalization (https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.4791)
    • Trump is giving a push to psychedelic drugs. However, the way he’s doing it is completely unorthodox: an email responding to an influencer promising FDA approval, followed by an executive order (https://www.economist.com/business/2026/04/23/donald-trump-is-giving-psychedelic-medicines-a-welcome-boost)
    • In the US, the birth rate is in sharp decline. It has fallen from 2.12 children per woman in 2007 to 1.62 in 2025. All projections indicate that the birth rate will continue to fall (https://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(25)00744-2/fulltext)
    • Youth suicides are declining after the implementation of a national hotline. Youth suicides fell more in states that implemented the 988 hotline, according to results published in JAMA (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/22/science/988-youth-suicides-decline.html). Access the original article: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2848066?guestAccessKey=e44e29be-7891-45b3-a22d-128a80e60dad&utm_source=for_the_media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=042226
    • Trump moves in favor of medical marijuana, reducing federal regulation of the drug (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/23/trump-moves-to-reschedule-marijuana-00888729)
    • The FDA launches Rapid: the express access model that unifies regulation and funding of devices. The new program will allow medical devices with “Breakthrough” designation to obtain Medicare coverage in just two months (https://diariofarma.com/2026/04/23/borrador-automati)
  • China
    • The medical data of 500,000 Britons is for sale on a Chinese website. It was at an Alibaba branch; the data came from the UK Biobank, and the ad was quickly removed (https://www.ft.com/content/2022ff7b-ec38-4a03-90a3-d80a33133118?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • United Kingdom
    • The British Parliament will ban the sale of tobacco to those born since 2009. Both houses of the British Parliament have agreed on the final version of the law that will prohibit sales and aims to make possible “the first tobacco-free generation” (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/21/69e7b494fc6c8337228b45cc.html)
    • The bill on assisted dying in England and Wales fails in Parliament, due to opposition from the House of Lords (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/04/24/au-royaume-uni-le-projet-de-loi-sur-l-aide-a-mourir-en-angleterre-et-au-pays-de-galles-echoue-au-parlement_6683097_3210.html)
  • Australia
    • Modeling the effects of taxes and subsidies on food. Fiscal policies can reduce the burden of diet-related diseases (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(26)00043-5/fulltext?dgcid=tlcom_carousel1_globalhealth_red_lanpub)
  • Hungary
    • The new government wants to revitalize healthcare. The Tisza Party promises to increase investment, strengthen public health, and address staff dissatisfaction (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00795-6/fulltext)
  • OECD
    • The OECD warns that colon cancer is skyrocketing among young people, and only 48% of the population participates in screening. This organization proposes five priority strategies to improve the prognosis of the disease (https://www.consalud.es/pacientes/la-ocde-alerta-el-cancer-de-colon-se-dispara-entre-los-jovenes-y-solo-el-48-de-la-poblacion-participa-en-el-cribado.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Ministry of Health is finalizing the Health Technology Assessment decree and states that it is “almost ready.” Javier Padilla says there are modifications still being discussed with other ministries (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260421/sanidad-ultima-decreto-evaluacion-tecnologias-sanitarias-afirma-punto-salir-horno/1003744214683_0.html)
    • The Ministry of Health is raising the age for colon cancer screening to 74 and expanding the heel prick test to include 21 other conditions. The Official State Gazette (BOE) published this Monday the new ministerial order that incorporates nine additional diseases into the newborn screening program, known as the “heel prick test,” bringing the total to 21 detectable pathologies (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/sanidad-eleva-anos-cribado-cancer-colon-amplia-20260421163444-nt.html).
    • The Ministry of Health concludes that there is no scientific evidence to support the effectiveness of homeopathy in any pathology. A report from the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products warns of the risk of replacing medical treatments with proven efficacy with homeopathic alternatives (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/21/69e7652cfdddffc6178b457e.html)
  • Regional governments
    • Asturian hospitals unify their laboratories into a network. This will facilitate the performance of analyses and the consultation of results from any center (https://www.lne.es/cangas-del-narcea/2026/04/23/hospitales-asturianos-unifican-laboratorios-red-129455585.html)
    • Castilla-La Mancha reinstates the healthcare professional career path established by the People’s Party (PP) 14 years ago. Unions and the regional government signed an agreement this Monday to reactivate the economic incentive in the only autonomous community that had not yet implemented it (https://elpais.com/espana/2026-04-20/castilla-la-mancha-recupera-la-carrera-profesional-sanitaria-congelada-por-el-pp-hace-14-anos.html)
    • Proton therapy advances against cancer: Galicia leads its rollout in up to seven communities (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/avanza-la-llegada-de-protonterapia-publica-frente-al-cancer-galicia-encabeza-su-despliegue-en-hasta-siete-ccaa.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • The strike committee maintains the work stoppages due to the lack of “useful proposals” from the healthcare sector. The five unions leading the protests affirm that, without “real progress,” the strike, scheduled for April 27-30, will not be called off (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/22/69e85c1cfdddff3a5a8b459d.html).
  • Sudden Death in Spain
    • Spain is experiencing the largest increase in sudden death in Europe. A European study warns of an upward trend in this type of death over the last decade (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-04-24/espana-experimenta-el-mayor-aumento-de-muerte-subita-de-europa.html). Access the original document published in Lancet Regional Health: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762(26)00067-0/fulltext
    • Cardiologists call for more defibrillators to curb the rise in sudden cardiac death in Spain. The largest increase in deaths from this cause across Europe between 2010 and 2020 occurred in Spain, with an average annual increase of 3.3%, according to a recent study (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/cardiologos-piden-desfibriladores-frenar-incremento-muerte-subita-20260424004422-nt.html)
  • Impact of the British law banning tobacco for those born from 2009 onwards
    • Medical societies are calling on Spain to follow the UK’s lead and prohibit tobacco purchases for those born from 2009 onwards. (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-04-22/sociedades-medicas-piden-que-espana-imite-al-reino-unido-y-prohiba-comprar-tabaco-a-los-nacidos-a-partir-de-2009.html)
    • The Ministry acknowledges that Spain is not yet ready to prohibit the sale of tobacco to an entire generation. The Ministry of Health views the measure favorably but believes it is too soon to implement it in the country. British regulations are less restrictive regarding vapes and electronic cigarettes (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/22/69e8d23ee9cf4ae3318b4575.html)
  • Sick leave
    • The OECD warns the government of the sharp increase in sick leave in Spain and identifies management problems. The organization ranks Spain as the third country with the highest level of worker absences in the OECD, with an average of 4.9 weeks per year (https://www.expansion.com/economia/2026/04/22/69e8f3bce5fdeacf798b4578.html)
    • The Government will send a new proposal to social partners to improve sick leave (https://www.consalud.es/politica/el-gobierno-remitira-a-los-agentes-sociales-una-nueva-propuesta-para-mejorar-las-bajas-medicas.html)

Companies

  • International
    • UnitedHealth reports flat profits in the first quarter (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/business/united-health-group-earnings.html)
    • Financial Times publishes list of the fastest-growing companies in the United States; of the top 10, 7 are healthcare companies (https://www.ft.com/content/3d3b5406-b7e6-4ef0-8b50-cf02904589cb?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Moderna receives European approval for its mRNA vaccine that combines flu and COVID-19 in adults. The European Commission grants marketing authorization to mCOMBRIAX, the world’s first combined mRNA vaccine against influenza and COVID-19. The drug is indicated for active immunization in adults aged 50 and over (https://diariofarma.com/2026/04/22/moderna-logra-el-aval-europeo-para-su-vacuna-de-arnm-que-combina-gripe-y-covid-en-adultos)
    • Asia as the emerging epicenter of global pharmaceutical investment. Innovation, demographics, and regulatory reforms are driving a new strategic cycle for multinationals and local markets (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/analisis/asia-como-epicentro-emergente-de-la-inversion-farmaceutica-global.html)
    • Bayer expects to soon settle the glyphosate lawsuits with legal settlements of around €24 billion (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-04-24/bayer-espera-cerrar-pronto-las-demandas-por-el-glifosato-con-un-desembolso-legal-que-ronda-los-24000-millones.html)
  • National News
    • PharmaMar obtains authorizations in Australia and Singapore for lung cancer treatment (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-04-20/pharmamar-obtiene-autorizaciones-en-australia-y-singapur-para-el-tratamiento-del-cancer-de-pulmon.html)
    • La Caixa completes a €100 million investment in the CaixaResearch Institute. The banking foundation has inaugurated Spain’s first biomedical research center specializing in immunology (https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2026/04/24/69eb46f9e5fdea8c7a8b4589.html)
    • Quirón publishes its results in the NEJM Catalyst, comparing them with other hospitals in Madrid. The study compares 16 medium-sized hospitals in the Community of Madrid: 13 from the Madrid Health Service (SERMAS) and 3 from Quirón operating under a concession agreement. The results are very favorable for Quirón hospitals (https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:b79ac08e-d23c-44e4-acd4-3411b45555a2)
    • Vithas buys the Blue Healthcare clinic and expands its network in the center of Madrid. The center is expected to begin operating under the Vithas brand between April and May (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260420/vithas-compra-clinica-blue-healthcare-amplia-red-centro-madrid/1003744211053_0.html)
    • Quirón wants the outgoing company of its new Madrid laboratory to lay off the staff in order to rehire them without seniority. Days before the handover, the healthcare giant clashes with Ribera Salud, which opposes paying millions in severance packages to the 249 workers (https://elpais.com/espana/madrid/2026-04-25/quiron-quiere-que-la-empresa-saliente-de-su-nuevo-laboratorio-madrileno-despida-a-la-plantilla-para-recontratarlos-sin-antiguedad.html)

7 days in healthcare (April 13th-19th, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Joan Massagué: “The goal is to cure cancer, although along the way we will make some deadly diseases chronic.”
  • Global Health: Milei follows Trump and leaves the WHO.
  • International Health Policy: “Patients should choose their healthcare, not the one dictated by the State or their doctor,” according to Alan Milburn, former UK Health Minister.
  • National Health Policy: Nearly 5 million people on waiting lists for surgery or specialist appointments.
  • Business: A pack of cigarettes: a luxury in Europe and a bargain in Spain.

Biomedicine

  • Joan Massagué: “The goal is to cure cancer, although along the way we will make some deadly diseases chronic.” The director of the Sloan Kettering Institute in New York, a world leader in metastasis research, believes that a therapeutic vaccine against the disease will be available in a few years: “It’s not an act of faith, but a reality.” • AI chatbots make mistakes in more than 80% of initial cases. Top models, such as OpenAI and DeepSeek, make overly hasty judgments when patient information is incomplete.
  • Bioinformatics describing cancer: how zeros and ones translate into future therapies. Beginning in the 1960s, bioinformatics has completely transformed cancer research and laboratories in recent years. Therefore, in a bioinformatics workspace, there are no pipettes or test tubes; instead, there are computers running complex computational processes.
  • New CRISPR approach silences the extra chromosome in Down syndrome. A US scientific team has developed a more efficient system for correcting the trisomy responsible for Down syndrome in cell lines.

Global Health

  • Milei follows Trump and leaves the WHO. Following Trump’s abrupt withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO), abandoning it as a full member and net contributor, Javier Milei has also formalized his departure, believing that the globalist institution intends to diminish national sovereignty in health-related decisions. The Argentine president announced his intention a year ago, and now his Foreign Minister, Pablo Quirno, has made the withdrawal official, citing “profound disagreements” with the handling of the pandemic and in defense of national sovereignty.
  • Editorial from The Lancet: Abortion: the possibilities of progress. The prohibition of abortion does not eliminate it; it simply drives it toward clandestine and dangerous practices, endangering mental and physical health.

International health policy

  • “The patient must choose their healthcare, not the one dictated by the State or their doctor”, declared Alan Milburn, former UK Health Minister, in Madrid to the magazine Redacción Médica. Many healthcare systems, starting with the British one, were created based on the logic of public monopoly. All of these are evolving to put patient choice at the center.
  • Trump appoints Dr. Erica Swartz, a vaccine advocate, as the new CDC director. She is seen as a traditional, highly qualified choice and a rebuke of RJK, Jr.
  • A new National Cancer Plan for England has just been released.
  • Slow progress towards privatization in the NHS 10-Year Health Plan. This BMJ article accuses the plan of privatization due to the proposal to use private centers to address waiting lists and the return to PFIs (Private Finance Initiatives) for the infrastructure plan.
  • Parents and schools need to better equip young people for work, according to former UK Health Secretary Alan Milburn. More than one million young people aged 16 to 24 are unemployed, and 60% of them are not even looking for work.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Nearly 5 million people are on waiting lists for surgery or specialist appointments. Since 2024, nearly 7,000 patients have been added to the waiting lists for surgery, and 114,915 are waiting for a specialist appointment.
  • The government has validated 65,000 degrees, 30,000 of them for doctors.
  • Discontent within the Andalusian healthcare system is taking to the streets. Thousands of Andalusians are demonstrating in the eight provincial capitals, with the May 17th protests seen as a turning point to halt the deterioration of the healthcare system.
  • Negotiations on the Framework Statute with doctors will continue, despite the strikes called off after last Friday’s meeting.
  • The healthcare impact of the regularization of immigrants approved by the Government is unmanageable with current resources, according to the president of SEMERGEN.

Companies

  • International
    • The pharmaceutical sector will sign 144 mergers and acquisitions deals in 2025, with a peak in activity in the fourth quarter. An infographic from Evaluate Pharma shows that the total value of transactions rose from €35.2 billion in the first quarter to €87.6 billion in the fourth.
  • National News
    • A pack of cigarettes: a luxury in Europe and a bargain in Spain. €23 in the UK, €19 in Ireland, and €13.50 in France. In Spain, €6.15. The cheapest countries: Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, and Croatia.
    • The rise in private healthcare costs will lead to further increases in health insurance premiums. AON data points in that direction.

Biomedicine

  • Tumor cells use a genetic trick to become resistant to drugs. Normal cells can only replicate 50 times before dying. Tumor cells escape this rule. But once the mechanism is understood, there are ways to neutralize it (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/04/16/tumour-cells-use-a-genetic-trick-to-become-drug-resistant)
  • An analysis of an Alzheimer’s drug raises doubts about its effectiveness, stating that the clinical benefit is negligible (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/health/alzheimers-drugs-benefit-anti-amyloid.html). Access the Cochrane article: https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD016297/full
  • A new treatment that alters the immune system allows three transplant patients to avoid treatment with anti-rejection drugs. It appears that the treatment doesn’t always work (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/17/health/liver-transplants-antirejection-drugs.html)
  • DNA repair for aging. Everyone’s DNA continues to mutate. The question is whether correcting those errors could lead to longevity (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/04/beyond-inheritance-excerpt-roxanne-khamsi/686831/)
  • From Berlin to Oslo: Ten people worldwide have now managed to overcome HIV. The success of the so-called “Oslo patient,” who received a transplant from his own brother, consolidates a paradigm shift: curing the virus is no longer a miracle but a scientific roadmap (https://www.abc.es/salud/paciente-oslo-trasplante-logro-erradicar-resto-vih-20260413173904-nt.html)
  • The risk of consulting Dr. ChatGPT: half of its medical answers are erroneous or dangerous. A study warns that large language models offer imprecise, difficult-to-read information with fabricated references about health (https://www.abc.es/salud/riesgo-consultar-doctor-chatgpt-mitad-respuestas-medicas-20260414041946-nt.html)
  • AI chatbots make mistakes in more than 80% of initial cases. Top models, such as OpenAI and DeepSeek, make judgments too quickly when patient information is incomplete (https://www.ft.com/content/b10002fc-5fff-4e4d-bf64-0502b2d09bb1?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • Joan Massagué: “The goal is to cure cancer, although along the way we will make some deadly cancers chronic.” The director of the Sloan Kettering Institute in New York, a world leader in metastasis, believes that in a few years there will be a therapeutic vaccine against the disease: “It is not an act of faith but a reality” (https://www.abc.es/salud/joan-massague-objetivo-curar-cancer-convertirlo-enfermedad-20260415041813-nt.html)
  • Bioinformatics that describes cancer: how zeros and ones are translated into future therapies. Beginning in the 1960s, bioinformatics has completely transformed cancer research and laboratories in recent years. Therefore, in a bioinformatics workspace, there are no pipettes or test tubes; instead, there are computers running complex computational processes (https://www.elconfidencial.com/tecnologia/ciencia/2026-04-16/bioinformatica-cancer-matematicas-ia-terapias-cnio_4335900/).
  • New CRISPR approach silences the extra chromosome in Down syndrome. A US scientific team has developed a more efficient system for correcting the trisomy responsible for Down syndrome in cell lines (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/genetica/nuevo-enfoque-crispr-corregir-trisomia-sindrome-down.html).

Global Health

  • Law against homosexuality in Senegal. The repressive policy pursued by the government puts decades of progress in public health at risk (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/04/17/loi-contre-l-homosexualite-au-senegal-les-justifications-historique-et-sanitaire-de-la-loi-sont-infondees_6680815_3232.html)
  • Editorial in The Lancet: Abortion: the possibilities of progress. Banning abortion does not eliminate it; it simply drives it toward clandestine and dangerous practices, endangering mental and physical health (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00753-1/fulltext)
  • Milei follows Trump and leaves the WHO. Following Trump’s abrupt withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO), abandoning it as a full member and net contributor, Javier Milei has also formalized his departure, believing that the global institution seeks to diminish national sovereignty in health-related decisions. The Argentine president announced his intention a year ago, and now his Foreign Minister, Pablo Quirno, has made the withdrawal official, citing “profound disagreements” with the handling of the pandemic and in defense of national sovereignty. (https://www.larazon.es/salud/milei-sigue-trump-sale-oms_2026041969e41fbdb7e0a27eb99d1e5d.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The new normal for RJK, Jr. After Trump’s overreach, such as the appointment of a new pro-vaccine CDC director, we see a more repressed version of RJK, Jr. (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/04/cdc-director-schwartz-rfk/686837/)
    • Trump hopes to reduce restrictions on psychedelic drugs. The president’s executive order seeks to increase research on the effects of psychedelics (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/17/health/trump-psychedelics-ibogaine.html)
    • Trump nominates Dr. Erica Schwartz, a vaccine advocate, as the new director of the CDC; she is seen as a traditional, highly qualified choice (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/16/health/erica-schwartz-cdc-director-trump.html)
  • China
    • China in a price war over obesity drugs. The loss of the patent allows China to produce GLP-1 drugs on a large scale (https://www.ft.com/content/a10159af-c6b5-48e4-8a68-16676684cb22?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • United Kingdom
    • “The patient should choose their healthcare, not the one dictated by the State or their doctor,” declared former UK Health Minister Alan Milburn in Madrid to the magazine Redacción Médica. Many healthcare systems, starting with the British one, were created with the logic of a public monopoly. All of these are evolving to put patient choice at the center (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/sanidad-hoy/-el-paciente-debe-elegir-su-sanidad-no-la-que-digan-el-estado-o-su-medico–5354)
    • A new National Cancer Plan for England has just been released (https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/699ec931532c9ad91ebbcc64/national-cancer-plan-for-england-delivering-world-class-cancer-care.pdf)
    • Slow movement towards privatization in the NHS 10-year Health Plan. This article accuses the NHS of privatization, citing the proposal to use private centers to address waiting lists and the return to Private Finance Initiatives (PFIs) for the infrastructure plan (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj.s656).
    • The NHS 10 Year Health Plan lacks a focus on rural areas, despite 10 million people living there. The Plan is accused of neglecting this group (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj.s647).
    • Air pollution causes many people in the UK to develop chronic diseases earlier. Research says pollution makes long-term illnesses appear earlier (https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/17/air-pollution-making-people-in-uk-get-long-term-illnesses-earlier-study-finds) Access the original article: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11357-025-01806-3
    • People in the poorest areas of the UK live less than 50 years in good health. A 20-year gap compared to those living in wealthier areas (https://www.ft.com/content/85de9ce1-37f1-4983-af72-30bf05363a49?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Parents and schools need to better equip young people for work, according to former UK Health Minister Alan Milburn. More than one million young people aged 16 to 24 are unemployed, and 60% of them are not even looking for work (https://www.ft.com/content/b4ab3ec6-35cf-4e7f-a3ae-ca7dc67ad06a?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • France
    • “Giant technology companies, the holders of the most health data,” according to an opinion piece in Le Monde by Professor Théodore Christakis. Every week, more than 230 million people ask ChatGPT questions about health and well-being. Five tech giants (OpenAI, Anthropic, Microsoft, Amazon, and Perplexity) have launched AI products dedicated to healthcare (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/04/15/les-geants-de-la-tech-constituent-les-plus-vastes-agregations-privees-de-donnees-de-sante-jamais-envisagees_6680263_3232.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The government validates 65,000 degrees, 30,000 of them medical degrees (https://elpais.com/educacion/2026-04-14/el-gobierno-valida-65000-titulos-universitarios-extranjeros-en-un-ano-30000-de-ellos-de-medicos.html)
    • The Ministry of Health creates the Patient Roundtable as an advisory body and evaluation. It will be composed of 22 members, half representing the Ministry and the other half representing patients (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/ministerio-sanidad/sanidad-crea-la-mesa-de-los-pacientes-como-organo-asesor-y-de-evaluacion-8179)
    • The Ministry of Health has committed to bringing forward breast cancer screenings to age 45. The measure comes after a campaign launched by María Varela, a metastatic cancer patient who has gathered more than 86,000 signatures to lower the age for mammograms (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/09/69d79025e85ecef92a8b459f.html)
  • Regional governments
    • The Madrid government has expressed its rejection of the abortion conscientious objector registry. The regional government mentions up to nine times the court order requiring it to implement the measure following its conflict with the central government (https://elpais.com/espana/madrid/2026-04-15/el-gobierno-de-ayuso-exhibe-su-rechazo-al-registro-de-objetores-al-aborto-en-cada-linea-de-su-tramitacion-obligada-por-la-justicia.html)
    • The discontent within the Andalusian healthcare system takes to the streets. Thousands of Andalusians demonstrate in the eight provincial capitals, with the May 17th elections as a turning point to halt the deterioration of the healthcare system (https://elpais.com/espana/elecciones-andalucia/2026-04-12/el-malestar-por-la-sanidad-andaluza-toma-las-calles-masivamente-en-la-primera-advertencia-a-moreno-ojala-esto-sea-un-bano-de-realidad-en-las-urnas.html)
    • Extremadura: this is the healthcare agreement for the legislature. The Extremadura government agreement includes increased funding, with an additional €500 million starting in 2026 and subsequent years, and incentives for underserved areas (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/extremadura-acuerdo-pp-vox-sanidad-legislatura.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • Negotiations will continue without calling off the strikes after Friday’s meeting. Under the shadow of an ultimatum from PP councilors demanding Mónica García’s resignation, the negotiating table remains discreet, with the schedule of April 27th protests and the participation of the Autonomous Communities still uncertain (https://gacetamedica.com/profesion/estatuto-marco-negociacion-sin-desconvocar-paros-reunion-viernes/)
  • Waiting Lists
    • Nearly 5 million people are on waiting lists for surgery or specialist appointments. Since 2024, nearly 7,000 patients have been added to the waiting lists for surgery, and 114,915 are waiting for a specialist appointment (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/16/69e09ef421efa0ed3f8b458d.html). Access the original Ministry document: https://www.sanidad.gob.es/estadEstudios/estadisticas/inforRecopilaciones/docs/LISTAS_PUBLICACION_Dic_2025.pdf. Access the Ministry’s summary: https://www.sanidad.gob.es/estadEstudios/estadisticas/inforRecopilaciones/docs/Informe_situacion_listas_de_espera_dic_2025_V1.pdf
  • Effects of the Iran war on the healthcare system
    • The healthcare technology industry warns of a lack of access to certain raw materials. Fenin highlights a direct impact on intensive processes such as the manufacture of medical oxygen or cellulose products (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260414/industria-tecnologia-sanitaria-alerta-falta-acceso-determinadas-materias-primas-guerra-iran/1003744205990_0.html)
    • The armed conflict puts essential products for the operation of hospitals at risk. Helium, gloves, syringes, and other products are affected by the blockade in the Strait of Hormuz (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/conflicto-belico-oriente-medio-pone-riesgo-productos-esenciales-funcionamiento-hospitales.html)

Companies

  • International
    • The pharmaceutical sector is expected to complete 144 mergers and acquisitions in 2025, with activity peaking in the fourth quarter. An infographic from Evaluate Pharma shows that the total value of these deals rose from €35.2 billion in the first quarter to €87.6 billion in the fourth (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/sector-farmaceutico-fusiones-adquisiciones-2025/).

 

 

7 days in healthcare (April 6th-12th, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Sir Demis Hassabis, head of Google DeepMind and winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, wants to automate drug design.
  • Global Health: US-Israeli attacks on Iran have damaged schools and hospitals.
  • International Health Policy: Europe approves only 39% of innovative drugs compared to 85% in the United States.
  • National Health Policy: The Strike Committee rejects the POP as a mediator in the conflict.
  • Business: Pharmaceutical companies are accelerating their efforts in the “obesity market.”

Biomedicine

  • Sir Demis Hassabis, head of Google DeepMind and winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, wants to automate drug design, using AI, to treat all diseases.
  • A cancer treatment that does more than scientists thought. CAR-T therapy, originally developed for cancer, is now applicable to autoimmune diseases.

Global Health

  • How the US-Israeli attacks on Iran have damaged schools and hospitals. The Iranian Red Cross said on April 2 that at least 763 schools and 316 healthcare facilities have been damaged or completely destroyed by the war.
  • Health, the most powerful reason to act against climate change. The scientific evidence is unequivocal. The burning of fossil fuels is responsible for millions of deaths each year, both from the climate risks it exacerbates and from the even more immediate cardiovascular diseases, respiratory illnesses, and cancers associated with the air pollution it generates.

International Health Policy

  • Europe approves only 39% of innovative medicines compared to 85% in the United States, according to a report by the consultancy CRA, commissioned by EFÑPIA (the European pharmaceutical industry association).
  • It is estimated that Long COVID will cost OECD economies $135 billion a year. The reasons are lower productivity, sick leave, and job abandonment.
  • OECD healthcare systems face the challenge of an aging population: spending will increase by 2.8% of GDP by 2050. For the healthcare sector, this has a direct consequence: the need for much better integration of healthcare and coordination with social services.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Strike Committee rejects the Public Health Policy (POP) as a mediator in the conflict, considering that it defends partisan positions and that a mediator should be required to be neutral.
  • Sick leave in Spain reached another record high in 2025 with no solutions in sight. Social Security is seeking an agreement to address the problem with unions and employers, who disagree on the causes of the increase in temporary disability.

Companies

  • International
    • Pharmaceutical companies are accelerating their efforts in the “obesity market.” Novo Nordisk will offer discounts of up to 50% on Wegovy and Ozempic to expand its customer base in the USA. The pharmaceutical company is betting on accessibility to conquer an underserved mass market
  • National News
    • Quirón’s parent company, Fresenius, plans to open new hospitals and expand its centers in Spain during 2026. They anticipate an increase in demand for healthcare services.
    • The “5-star” hospital with which María Cordón wants to change the patient experience. The fully private hospital will operate using reimbursement cards. Located in Pozuelo, it represents an investment of around 100 million euros.

Biomedicine

  • The future of pre-conception health. The current view not only affects women’s health, but also that of the couple from a health and nutrition perspective before conception (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00707-5/fulltext)
  • Sir Demis Hassabis, head of Google DeepMind and winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, wants to automate drug design, using AI, to treat all diseases (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/04/09/sir-demis-hassabis-wants-to-automate-drug-design)
  • Mammography should include AI assistance, allowing it to go beyond the capabilities of radiologists. (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00659-8/fulltext)
  • How psychedelics affect the brain. Analysis of hundreds of images shows that psychedelics direct activity in various parts of the brain (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/07/health/psychedelic-medicine-brain.html)
  • A cancer treatment that does more than scientists thought. CAR-T therapy, originally developed for cancer, is now applicable to autoimmune diseases (https://www.theatlantic.com/science/2026/04/car-t-cell-therapy-autoimmune-disease/686742/)
  • Three new therapies that regenerate joints open the door to new hope for osteoarthritis. These therapies aim to regenerate cartilage (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260408/nuevas-terapias-regeneran-articulaciones-abren-puerta-nueva-esperanza-artrosis/1003744198105_0.html)
  • Why drugs like Ozempic don’t work the same for everyone: age, sex, and genes all play a role. A study identifies genetic variants related to appetite that affect weight loss and the side effects of medications (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-04-08/por-que-los-farmacos-como-ozempic-no-funcionan-igual-para-todos-influye-la-edad-el-sexo-y-tambien-los-genes.html)
  • Cancer therapy that has achieved remission in three autoimmune diseases (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-04-09/terapia-cancer-remision-enfermedades-autoinmunes_4335234/). Access the original document: https://www.cell.com/med/fulltext/S2666-6340(26)00078-4
  • The largest study on the liver warns of the silent damage caused by poor diet and alcohol. One in 60 adults suffers unknowingly from hepatic fibrosis, a condition in which the organ becomes rigid, affecting its function and potentially progressing to cirrhosis and cancer (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-04-06/el-mayor-estudio-sobre-el-higado-alerta-de-los-estragos-silenciosos-que-de-la-mala-dieta-y-el-alcohol-nunca-me-habia-dolido-nada.html)
  • A “smart eye” that self-medicates and keeps glaucoma at bay has been created. The Terasaki Institute in Los Angeles has been presenting science-fiction contact lenses for years. This time, it’s a polymer device that measures eye pressure and autonomously releases medication to reduce it (https://www.abc.es/salud/ojo-inteligente-medica-mantiene-glaucoma-raya-20260408200247-nt.html)
  • New opportunity for Parkinson’s: deep brain stimulation with 4 electrodes, instead of the traditional two (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/neurocirugia/nueva-oportunidad-parkinson-estimulacion-cerebral-profunda-4-electrodos-vez-2-tradicionales.html)

Global Health

  • Bangladesh launches an emergency vaccination program against the malignant measles epidemic. The death rate is the highest it has been in the last two decades (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/04/05/le-bangladesh-lance-un-programme-de-vaccination-d-urgence-contre-une-epidemie-de-rougeole-meurtriere_6676907_3210.html)
  • How US-Israeli attacks on Iran have damaged schools and hospitals. The Iranian Red Cross said on April 2 that at least 763 schools and 316 healthcare facilities have been damaged or completely destroyed by the war (https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/04/09/world/middleeast/us-israel-strikes-iran-structures-damage.html)
  • Health, the most powerful reason to act against climate change. The scientific evidence is unequivocal. The burning of fossil fuels is responsible for millions of deaths each year, both because of the climate risks it exacerbates, and because of the even more immediate cardiovascular diseases, respiratory illnesses and cancers associated with the air pollution it generates (https://elpais.com/opinion/2026-04-10/la-salud-la-razon-mas-poderosa-para-actuar-contra-el-cambio-climatico.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump’s new science advisors include 12 tech executives and one academic. The composition reflects a focus on technology and industry (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00977-z)
  • UK
    • Why the UK can’t pass an assisted dying bill. The bill, passed by the Commons, has been rejected in the House of Lords (https://www.economist.com/britain/2026/04/09/why-cant-britain-pass-an-assisted-dying-bill)
  • Brazil
    • There is little chance of abortion being legalized in Brazil. Other large Latin American countries have legalized or decriminalized this practice (https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2026/04/09/there-is-little-prospect-of-legalising-abortion-in-brazil)
  • Europe
    • Europe only approves 39% of innovative medicines compared to 85% in the United States (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260411/europa-solo-da-luz-verde-medicamentos-innovadores-frente-unidos/1003744201991_0.html) Original report by the consultancy CRA, commissioned by EFPIA (https://www.efpia.eu/media/5mvbnamw/assessing-europe-s-competitiveness-as-a-location-for-the-life-sciences-industry.pdf)
  • OECD
    • Long Covid is estimated to cost OECD economies $135 billion annually. The reasons include reduced productivity, sick leave, and job losses (https://www.ft.com/content/de4463af-093e-43e2-a928-c41429bccde8?syn-25a6b1a6=1). Access the original document: https://www.oecd.org/content/dam/oecd/en/publications/reports/2026/03/addressing-the-costs-and-care-for-long-covid_e203e3d0/87a0c171-en.pdf
    • OECD health systems facing the challenge of aging: spending will increase by 2.8% of GDP in 2050. For the health sector, this has a direct consequence: the need to much better integrate healthcare and coordinate with social services (https://www.consalud.es/pacientes/los-sistemas-sanitarios-de-la-ocde-ante-el-reto-del-envejecimiento-el-gasto-aumentara-un-28-del-pib-en-2050.html) Access the original document: https://www.oecd.org/content/dam/oecd/en/publications/reports/2026/04/future-long-term-care-expenditure-trajectories-across-oecd-countries_00aa6c05/800aba3e-en.pdf

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The government is processing the abortion reform as a matter of urgency. The Socialists want the debate in Congress to take place on Thursday, April 30, coinciding with the poster campaign in Andalusia, which will be held that same evening (https://www.elespanol.com/espana/politica/20260410/gobierno-tramita-reforma-aborto-caracter-urgente-debate-coincida-campana-andaluza/1003744200546_0.html)
    • INGESA is preparing framework agreements to purchase healthcare technology. The agreement for the acquisition of computed tomography equipment is now ready, and the agreement for magnetic resonance imaging will soon be finalized (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260406/ingesa-prepara-acuerdos-marco-comprar-tecnologia-sanitaria-precio-anecdotico/1003744189717_0.html)
    • The reform of the Law on the Regulation of Healthcare Professions: a new problem for healthcare? The problem in this case arises from the professional classification of doctors and nurses (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/reforma-ley-ordenacion-profesiones-sanitarias-nuevo-problema-sanidad.html)
    • Double reform of the healthcare portfolio in the National Health System: nutrition and the catalog of orthotics and prosthetics. Introduces clinical malnutrition and updates products due to funding issues (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/ministerio-sanidad/doble-reforma-de-cartera-en-el-sns-nutricion-y-catalogo-de-ortoprotesis-4234)
  • Regional Administrations
    • The Ayuso government delays approval of the new euthanasia manual from the Ministry of Health, which aims to expedite urgent cases (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-04-09/ayuso-retrasa-la-aprobacion-del-nuevo-manual-de-eutanasia-de-sanidad-que-busca-agilizar-los-casos-urgentes.html)
    • Córdoba adds its 405 pharmacies to the list for colon cancer prevention and detection. The province’s pharmacy network will distribute informational materials to reach patients between 50 and 69 years old (https://diariofarma.com/2026/04/09/cordoba-suma-a-sus-405-farmacias-en-la-prevencion-y-deteccion-del-cancer-de-colon)
  • Framework Statute
    • The Strike Committee rejects the Public Health Program (POP) as a mediator in the conflict, considering that it defends partisan positions and that a mediator should be required to be neutral (https://www.consalud.es/profesionales/comite-de-huelga-rechaza-la-decision-unilateral-del-ministerio-de-llevar-a-la-pop-a-la-reunion-de-este-miercoles.html)
  • Sick Leave
    • Sick leave in Spain reached another record high in 2025 with no solutions in sight. Social Security is seeking an agreement to address the problem with unions and employers, who disagree on the causes of the increase in temporary disability (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-04-06/las-bajas-laborales-en-espana-marcaron-en-2025-otro-record-sin-soluciones-a-la-vista.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly climbs into the industry’s “top 3” for its anti-obesity treatments (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/industria/2026/04/06/69d2b729e5fdea2a578b458e.html)
    • Pharmaceutical companies are accelerating in the “obesity market.” Novo Nordisk will apply discounts of up to 50% on Wegovy and Ozempic to expand its customer base in the USA. The pharmaceutical company is betting on accessibility to conquer an underserved mass market (https://www.expansion.com/economia/financial-times/2026/04/11/69da1009e5fdea0c568b45ab.html)
  • National News
    • Quirón’s parent company, Fresenius, plans to open new hospitals and expand its centers in Spain during 2026. They anticipate an increase in demand for healthcare services (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260408/matriz-quiron-fresenius-planea-abrir-nuevos-hospitales-ampliar-centros-espana/1003744197967_0.html)
    • The “5-star” hospital with which María Cordón wants to change the patient experience. The fully private hospital will operate using reimbursement cards. Located in Pozuelo, it represents an investment of around 100 million euros (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-04-09/nuevo-hospital-memorial-publio-cordon-cbtrrptj_4334318/)
    • CRB Health Tech, the venture capital firm focused on healthcare innovation (https://www.expansion.com/mercados/fondos/2026/04/09/69d75b97e5fdea336d8b4575.html)

7 days in healthcare (March 30th-April 5th, 2026)

 

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Scientists are working on “universal vaccines.”
  • Global health: UN report: More than 4 million displaced by the Middle East conflict.
  • International health policy: The Trump Administration announces new tariffs on medicines.
  • National health policy: Xenoma Galicia: the challenge of genotyping one in seven citizens.
  • Companies: Anthropic joins Google and Microsoft in the multi-billion dollar battle for AI in healthcare.

Biomedicine

  • Scientists are working on “universal vaccines”. A simple injection can protect against a wide range of pathogens.
  • Heritable human genome editing: a critical paradigm in evolution. Heritable human genome editing (HHGE) remains an ongoing project.
  • E-cigarettes found to cause long-term mouth and lung cancer. The social perception that e-cigarettes are a harmless alternative to traditional tobacco is being dismantled by recent scientific evidence.

Global Health

  • UN report as of March 26 on the consequences of the conflict in the Middle East, in terms of displaced persons, injuries, and deaths. Between Iran and Lebanon, more than 4 million displaced persons. A major humanitarian catastrophe.
  • WHO Member States expand negotiations on the key annex to the Pandemic Agreement. The objective of the PABS annex is to ensure that the exchange of pathogens with pandemic potential occurs swiftly and on equal terms.
  • The war with Iran puts the supply of essential medicines to Europe at risk. Countries like Sweden and the United Kingdom fear that the conflict will soon increase shortages.

International Health Policy

  • The Trump Administration announces new tariffs on medicines. Trump announces tariffs on 100% of medicines, while warning companies that have not lowered prices or made investments in the USA.
  • Postal code predicts cancer prognosis. The OECD, together with the European Commission, has just published a nearly 300-page report—Delivering High Value Cancer Care—that examines inequalities in cancer care in Europe.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Xenoma Galicia: the challenge of genotyping one in seven citizens to develop a Galician DNA map. Galicia accelerates the world’s largest genomic study per capita: how a €20 million plan seeks to create the most accurate genetic map on the planet and transform cancer prevention.
  • The nine points governing the accreditation of Catalan healthcare centers. These will apply to the entire public healthcare system (SISCAT) and are: 1. Leadership; 2. Strategy; 3. People management; 4. Partnerships and resources; 5. Processes; 6. Results for citizens; 7. Results for staff; 8. Results for society; 9. Key results.

Companies

  • International
    • Anthropic joins Google and Microsoft in the multi-billion dollar battle for AI in healthcare. The tech giant Anthropic announced the acquisition of the biotech startup Coefficient BIO for $400 million, in a further step towards the convergence of artificial intelligence and the healthcare sector.
  • National
    • Five Catalan hospitals join forces to purchase Chinese surgical robots. The joint purchase of the robots has allowed the five centers to save 21% (€3.5 million) compared to the initial tender.

Biomedicine

  • Scientists transform plastic waste into levodopa, a Parkinson’s drug (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s616)
  • Scientists are working on “universal vaccines.” A single injection could protect against a wide range of pathogens (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/04/01/scientists-are-working-on-everything-vaccines)
  • Heritable human genome editing: a critical paradigm in evolution. Heritable human genome editing (HHGE) remains an ongoing project (https://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(25)00705-3/fulltext)
  • Spanish pharmaceutical company Ferrer is using a Phase III clinical trial to test a new drug to treat ALS. This is pridopidine, which has also shown positive results in Huntington’s disease (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260330/farmaceutica-espanola-ferrer-ultima-ensayo-clinico-fase-iii-probar-nuevo-farmaco-tratar-ela/1003744185980_0.html)
  • E-cigarettes have been found to cause long-term mouth and lung cancer. The social perception that e-cigarettes are a harmless alternative to traditional tobacco is being dismantled by recent scientific evidence. A team of researchers from Australia has conducted a comprehensive review of studies carried out between 2017 and 2025, drawing conclusions that directly link the use of these devices to the development of cancer. (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/30/69ca9fbb21efa07c2a8b4592-video.html)

Global Health

  • The global battle to reduce infant deaths is losing momentum. More than 60 countries are on track to meet the United Nations’ 2050 targets, although solutions exist (https://www.science.org/content/article/we-re-failing-newborns-global-push-reduce-infant-deaths-losing-steam)
  • Childhood cancer: progress, but not enough (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00655-0/fulltext). Access the CONCORD-4 study, published by The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00189-3/fulltext
  • UN report as of March 26 on the consequences of the conflict in the Middle East, in terms of displaced persons, injuries, and deaths. Between Iran and Lebanon, more than 4 million displaced persons. A major humanitarian catastrophe (https://cdn.who.int/media/docs/default-source/middle-east-situation-report/middle-east-conflict-global-situation-report-26-march-2026.pdf?sfvrsn=600e236_7&download=true)
  • WHO Member States expand negotiations on the key annex to the Pandemic Agreement. The objective of Annex PABS is to ensure that the exchange of pathogens with pandemic potential occurs swiftly and on equal terms, and that the benefits generated from their use—such as vaccines, diagnostic tests, or treatments—are distributed fairly and equitably. (https://www.consalud.es/politica/los-estados-miembros-de-la-oms-amplian-las-negociaciones-del-anexo-clave-del-acuerdo-sobre-pandemias.html)
  • The war with Iran puts the supply of essential medicines to Europe at risk. Countries like Sweden and the United Kingdom fear that the conflict will soon increase shortages, while Spain is confident that the strength of the generics sector will mitigate the tensions already affecting supply chains (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-04-05/la-guerra-en-iran-pone-en-riesgo-el-suministro-de-medicamentos-esenciales-a-europa.html)
  • Harmonization and safety: the African Medicines Agency’s roadmap to transform the continent (https://www.consalud.es/industria/armonizacion-y-seguridad-la-hoja-de-ruta-de-la-agencia-africana-de-medicamentos-para-transformar-el-continente.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The Trump Administration announces new tariffs on medications. Trump announces tariffs on 100% of medications, while warning companies that have not lowered prices or made investments in the USA (https://www.ft.com/content/25ecf952-2fca-4ac0-9f72-69949c929a62?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Trump announces changes to family planning: from contraception to conception. He wants to eliminate subsidies for current plans (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/03/trump-admin-moves-title-x-family-planning-program-away-from-contraception-towards-conception-00858913)
    • The FDA is expected to lift restrictions on peptides, in accordance with the wishes of RFK, Jr. The peptides, which are advertised as facilitators of longevity and health benefits, had been withdrawn from the market in 2023 (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/31/health/peptide-ban-fda-rfk-jr.html)
    • The US gives the green light to the first obesity pill that can be taken at any time of day and without restrictions (from Lilly, following Novo Nordisk’s) (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/04/01/69cd4f42e4d4d806098b45b5.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • Abortion rates in England and Wales are at record highs since it was legalized in 1967 (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s562)
    • The government is urging pharmaceutical companies to invest in the UK after the price agreement with the USA (https://www.ft.com/content/4bc868a1-bd4d-4d80-b8dd-064a4b87a4bb?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • France
    • Liberal nurses sign an agreement with the National Health Insurance to update their fees (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/03/31/les-infirmieres-liberales-signent-un-accord-avec-l-assurance-maladie-pour-revaloriser-leurs-revenus_6675653_1651302.html)
  • European Union
    • The EMA (European Medicines Agency) is addressing a new methodology to reduce the use of animals in preclinical research. The system seeks to reduce the number of rats in dose-ranging studies by using virtual control groups (https://diariofarma.com/2026/04/01/la-ema-abre-consulta-para-reducir-el-uso-de-animales-en-el-desarrollo-de-medicamentos)
    • “The postal code predicts cancer prognosis” (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-04-03/el-codigo-postal-del-cancer-por-que-tu-direccion-predice-tu-pronostico_4330748/). The OECD, together with the European Commission, has just published a nearly 300-page report—Delivering High Value Cancer Care—that exposes the inequalities in cancer care in Europe: https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/delivering-high-value-cancer-care_060869fe-en.html

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The government gives the green light to the Observatory of the Suicide Prevention Plan (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/31/69cb842e21efa09e4c8b45ad.html)
    • The specialty of Emergency Medicine, finally published in the Official State Gazette. The publication in the Official State Gazette (BOE) of the training program for the specialty of Emergency Medicine marks its definitive inclusion in the specialized healthcare training (FSE) positions (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/medicina-urgencias/boe-consolida-especialidad-medicina-urgencias.html)
  • Regional Administrations
    • Madrid takes the first step towards creating a registry of conscientious objectors to abortion, after months of resistance (https://elpais.com/expres/2026-04-03/madrid-da-el-primer-paso-para-crear-el-registro-de-objetores-al-aborto.html)
    • According to diario.es, the report that proves Ayuso gave money to private healthcare (https://www.eldiario.es/madrid/informe-muestra-ayuso-regalo-millones-sanidad-privada-71-653-032-no-encontrar-documentacion_1_13111704.html)
    • Xenoma Galicia: the challenge of genotyping one in seven citizens to develop a Galician DNA map. Galicia accelerates the world’s largest genomic study per capita: how a €20 million plan seeks to create the most accurate genetic map on the planet and transform cancer prevention (https://gacetamedica.com/investigacion/xenoma-galicia-reto-genotipar-ciudadanos-mapa-adn-gallego/)
    • The nine points that govern the accreditation of Catalan healthcare centers. They will apply to all publicly funded centers in Catalonia (SISCAT) and are: 1. Leadership; 2. Strategy; 3. People Management; 4. Partnerships and resources; 5. Processes; 6. Results for citizens; 7. Results for staff; 8. Results for society; 9. Key results. (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/cataluna/los-nueve-puntos-que-rigen-la-acreditacion-de-centros-sesultaanitarios-catalanes-7221). Decree published in the Official Gazette of the Government of Catalonia: https://dogc.gencat.cat/ca/document-del-dogc/?documentId=1040956
    • Navarre’s healthcare system launches a pilot program of incentives for healthcare professionals to reduce waiting lists. The system will link the extraordinary remuneration of professionals to healthcare activity targets and a reduction in waiting times for appointments (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/navarra/servicio-navarro-de-salud-osasunbidea-lanza-un-piloto-de-incentivos-para-reducir-listas-de-espera.html)
    • AIREF recommends that Navarre develop a healthcare infrastructure plan and a new remuneration model. The entity has prepared, at the request of Navarre, two reports on healthcare infrastructure and human resources policy (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/navarra/la-airef-recomienda-a-navarra-elaborar-un-plan-de-infraestructuras-sanitarias-y-revisar-el-modelo-retributivo.html)
    • Galicia and Cantabria take the lead with two pioneering digital health laws in 2026 (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/cantabria-y-galicia-toman-la-delantera-con-dos-leyes-pioneras-en-salud-digital-para-este-2026.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • Timeline of the conflict over the Framework Statute: the key dates after Easter. From April 27 to 30: the third wave of national strikes (https://gacetamedica.com/profesion/estatuto-marco-calendario-conflicto-fechas-reuniones-huelga-semana-santa/)

Companies

  • International
    • Are India and China prepared for the “chaotic” growth of generic obesity drugs? (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00649-5/fulltext)
    • Poland and Romania ordered to pay over €2 billion for unpaid vaccines to Pfizer (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/04/01/la-pologne-et-la-roumanie-condamnees-a-verser-pres-de-2-milliards-d-euros-de-vaccins-anti-covid-impayes-a-pfizer_6675915_3210.html)
    • Lilly acquires narcolepsy drug developer for $6.3 billion (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/31/business/eli-lilly-narcolepsy-centessa.html)
    • Big Tech’s new conquest: Anthropic joins Google and Microsoft in the multi-billion dollar battle for AI in healthcare. The tech giant Anthropic announced the acquisition of the biotech startup Coefficient BIO for $400 million, in a further step towards the convergence of artificial intelligence and the healthcare sector. (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13855409/04/26/la-nueva-conquista-de-las-big-tech-anthropic-se-suma-a-google-y-microsoft-en-la-multimillonaria-batalla-por-la-ia-en-la-salud.html)
    • Gilead, Lilly, Merck-MSD, and Novartis shake up pharmaceutical acquisitions (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/industria/2026/04/03/69cef714e5fdea83388b45a0.html)
  • National News
    • Five Catalan hospitals join forces to purchase Chinese surgical robots. The joint purchase of the robots has allowed the five centers to save 21% (3.5 million) compared to the initial tender (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/cinco-hospitales-catalanes-unen-comprar-robots-quirurgicos-chinos.html)
    • Prim raises its dividends by 18% and finalizes its new strategic plan (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-03-27/prim-eleva-sus-dividendos-un-18-y-ultima-su-nuevo-plan-estrategico.html)
    • Pablo Gallart, CEO of Ribera: “Despite all the noise surrounding Torrejón, we had our best year ever in 2025” (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260331/pablo-gallart-ceo-ribera-pesar-ruido-torrejon-mejor-ano/1003744187126_0.html)

7 days in healthcare (March 23rd-29th, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Changes in the geography of pharmaceutical innovation, favoring China, which now surpasses the USA.
  • Global Health: Child mortality: millions of preventable deaths.
  • International health policy: The politicization of the FDA erodes trust in this important institution with global influence.
  • National health policy: The Ministry and the autonomous communities agree that an independent body will mediate with doctors to end the strike.
  • Companies: Meta and Google held liable in the USA for harm to children’s mental health.

Biomedicine

  • The geography of pharmaceutical innovation: USA and China in the new world order. China’s emergence as a powerhouse in drug development represents one of the most significant changes in recent times. The number of drug development programs is currently higher in China than in the USA.

Global Health

  • Child mortality: millions of preventable deaths, while cuts in aid minimize progress, warns the United Nations. A report from this organization proves that 4.9 million children died before the age of 5 in 2024.
  • The opportunity has arrived for the African Medicines Agency. Created in 2025 and currently under development, it already has a busy agenda.
  • Meningitis caused more than 250,000 deaths in 2023, affecting African countries particularly, according to a study. Despite vaccination, the disease primarily affects poor countries, hindering progress toward global health goals.

International Health Policy

  • The politicization of the FDA erodes trust. The role of the US FDA is to evaluate medicines from a safety and efficacy standpoint, and its decisions have a global impact. The changes implemented by the Trump Administration are eroding trust in this organization.
  • The King’s Fund presents its report on public satisfaction with the NHS and social services in 2025. In that year, satisfaction scores improved for the NHS.
  • The OECD presents its roadmap for the use of AI in health. The organization’s diagnosis is that the transformative potential of AI in health “is not being fully realized due to fragmented databases, a lack of coherence in policies and practices, and structural and governance barriers that hinder its scalability.”

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Ministry and the autonomous communities agree that an independent body will mediate with doctors to end the strike. It was about time; however, it is not positive that one of the parties (the Ministry) is initially setting limits on what it is willing to offer, clearly excluding a specific statute for doctors.
  • A decree is announced to determine the actual length of waiting lists. The Minister of Health, Mónica García, announced this Thursday that the Government will modify the royal decree regulating waiting lists to give the system “transparency and traceability.” Very importantly, in the past the Ministry of Health ignored waiting lists, considering it a problem for the regional governments, as if fulfilling a substantial part of the healthcare services portfolio were not also the Ministry’s responsibility.
  • The Ministry prohibits cosmetic surgeries for doctors who are not specialists. The Council of Ministers approves a Royal Decree to guarantee that care is provided exclusively by personnel “with the appropriate qualifications and skills.”

Companies

  • International
    • Meta and Google found liable in the USA for harm to children’s mental health caused by social media. The jury proposed fines of $3 billion, primarily against Meta, owned by Mark Zuckerberg, for its actions on Instagram.
  • National
    • Juan Abarca, acting individually, not as HM Hospitals, buys Redacción Médica and opens a new chapter for this healthcare digital publication, with the ambition of influencing the sector. A move that will undoubtedly have consequences, given the importance of the professional healthcare press.

Biomedicine

  • The Geography of Pharmaceutical Innovation: USA and China in the New World Order. China’s emergence as a drug development powerhouse represents one of the most significant changes in recent times. The number of drug development programs is currently higher in China than in the USA (https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.2390)
  • A combination of radiotherapy and experimental gene therapy shows a “potent antitumor effect” in animal models. In mouse studies, the approach developed by researchers at CIMA (a research center affiliated with the University of Navarra) has shown it to be safe and effective (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/23/69c10ddfe4d4d8625a8b4570.html)

Global Health

  • Child Mortality: Millions of preventable deaths, while aid cuts minimize progress, warns the United Nations. A United Nations report proves that 4.9 million children died before the age of 5 in 2024. (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s540?nbd_source=adestra&nbd=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&uaa_id=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&utm_campaign=This%20week%20in%20The%20BMJ%20-%20Fortnightly%20manual%20alert&utm_medium=email&utm_source=adestra). To access the UN report: https://data.unicef.org/resources/levels-and-trends-in-child-mortality-2025/
  • The opportunity has arrived for the African Medicines Agency. Established in 2025 and currently under development, it already has a busy agenda (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00601-X/fulltext)
  • Meningitis caused more than 250,000 deaths in 2023, disproportionately affecting African countries, according to a study. Despite vaccination, the disease is hitting poor countries hardest, with progress toward global health goals slow (https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2026/03/28/la-meningite-a-fait-plus-de-250-000-morts-en-2023-touchant-particulierement-les-pays-africains-selon-une-etude_6674793_3244.html)
  • Diabetes, often overlooked and without proper screening, is a new risk for Africa. Diabetes deaths are approaching those from infectious diseases (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/23/health/diabetes-africa-cameroon-type-5.html)
  • The Iran-Contra conflict threatens MRI scanners: a third of the world’s liquid helium comes from Qatar. This material is essential for cooling the magnets used in MRI machines, which need to be refilled periodically (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260326/guerra-iran-amenaza-resonancias-magneticas-tercio-helio-liquido-mundial-procede-qatar/1003744183688_0.html)
  • Europe fails to detect one in five cases of tuberculosis. Europe continues to struggle with tuberculosis detection, failing to identify one in five cases, according to a report published Monday by the World Health Organization Europe and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/23/69c11e41fc6c83a3088b4590.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The politicization of the FDA erodes trust. The FDA’s role is to evaluate drugs from a safety and efficacy standpoint, and its decisions have a global impact. Changes under the Trump Administration are eroding trust in this organization (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00600-8/fulltext)
    • The Environmental Protection Agency is being sued by 24 states over changes to the criteria for regulating greenhouse gases. These states say that under the Trump Administration, the Agency is weakening the fight against these gases. (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s556?nbd_source=adestra&nbd=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&uaa_id=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&utm_campaign=This%20week%20in%20The%20BMJ%20-%20Fortnightly%20manual%20alert&utm_medium=email&utm_source=adestra)
    • RFK Jr. is losing control of the CDC (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/03/cdc-director-hhs-kennedy-bhattacharya/686541/)
    • As RFK Jr. tries to regulate food companies, they resist (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/27/health/rfk-food-ingredients-fda.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • The King’s Fund presents its report on public satisfaction with the NHS and social services in 2025. In that year, satisfaction results improved in the NHS (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/reports/public-satisfaction-nhs-social-care-2025-bsa). Access the full document: https://assets.kingsfund.org.uk/f/256914/x/bd8551f32f/public_satisfaction_nhs_bsa2025_march2026.pdf
  • France
    • The French healthcare system suffers from weaknesses in prevention policies (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/03/26/le-systeme-de-sante-francais-souffre-de-la-faiblesse-des-politiques-de-prevention_6674309_3232.html)
  • OECD
    • The OECD presents its roadmap for the use of AI in healthcare. The organization’s diagnosis is that the transformative potential of AI in healthcare “is not being fully realized due to fragmented databases, a lack of coherence in policies and practices, and structural and governance barriers that hinder its scalability.” This is not a technological problem, but rather an organizational, regulatory, and cultural one. (https://www.consalud.es/politica/como-mejorar-el-uso-de-la-inteligencia-artificial-en-los-sistemas-sanitarios-la-ocde-presenta-su-hoja-de-ruta.html). Access the original document: https://www.oecd.org/en/publications/scaling-artificial-intelligence-in-health_a436e12d-en.html

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • A decree is announced to determine the actual length of waiting lists. The Minister of Health, Mónica García, announced this Thursday that the Government will modify the royal decree regulating waiting lists to give the system “transparency and traceability” (https://www.eldiario.es/sociedad/monica-garcia-anuncia-decreto-conocer-duracion-real-listas-espera-no-pasa-pacientes_1_13100879.html)
    • The Ministry will reduce bureaucratic delays in euthanasia procedures. It aims to approve a Good Practices Manual on Euthanasia by 2026 (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260326/sanidad-reducira-plazos-burocraticos-eutanasia-reforzara-papel-enfermera-proceso/1003744183563_0.html)
    • The drug law is diluted amidst the political and health debate. The Minister of Health highlighted the importance of the initiative without specifying its current status, despite the fact that the Ministry was “finalizing the last review” in October of last year (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/ley-medicamentos-diluye-debate-politico-sanitario/).
  • Framework Statute
    • The Ministry and the autonomous communities agree that an independent body will mediate with the doctors to end the strike (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260327/sanidad-ccaa-acuerdan-organismo-independiente-medie-medicos-poner-fin-huelga/1003744186788_0.html).
    • The Platform of Patient Organizations (POP) puts itself forward to mediate between the government and doctors. “We believe we can bring transparency to the negotiations,” explains Carina Escobar, president of the association.(https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260328/plataforma-pacientes-pop-postula-mediar-gobierno-medicos-buena-relacion/1003744187010_0.html)
  • Violence against doctors
    • Violence against doctors reaches record levels in Spain. According to data from the Spanish Medical Association, there were 897 attacks on doctors in 2025. (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s560?nbd_source=adestra&nbd=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&uaa_id=8fbb67008476fb2494c9dc673c1a59b833545ade97e59cd7efd9c117443308b8&utm_campaign=This%20week%20in%20The%20BMJ%20-%20Fortnightly%20manual%20alert&utm_medium=email&utm_source=adestra)
  • Cosmetic Surgery
    • The Ministry bans cosmetic surgeries to doctors who do not have the specialty. The Council of Ministers approves a Royal Decree to guarantee that care is provided exclusively by personnel “with the appropriate qualifications and skills” (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-03-24/sanidad-veta-las-cirugias-esteticas-a-los-medicos-que-no-tengan-la-especialidad.html)
  • Palliative care
    • Spain, at the bottom of the European rankings in palliative care teams, with only 0.6 per 100,000 inhabitants. Spain is at the bottom of the European rankings in palliative care and far from the two teams recommended by the European Association for Palliative Care, the association of professionals specializing in the field. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260327/espana-cola-europa-equipos-cuidados-paliativos-solo-habitantes/1003744185609_0.html)
  • Research
    • The end of Next-Gen funding plunges Spanish R&D into a crisis due to a lack of funding. In August of this year, the Next Generation EU funds, which the EU promoted as a resilience mechanism for economic recovery after the pandemic, will expire. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260322/final-next-gen-arroja-id-espanola-crisis-falta-financiacion/1003744178176_0.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Ozempic, about to become generic for billions of people. In India, China, and other nations, Novo Nordisk is about to lose its patent (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/19/health/ozempic-wegovy-generic-india-china-canada.html)
    • Meta and Google held liable in the USA for harm to children’s mental health caused by social media. The jury proposed sanctions of $3 billion, primarily against Meta (https://www.ft.com/content/d3d80bd4-d2b1-4522-9752-4071df5b4c0a?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Merck reaches a $5.7 billion agreement with a biotech company to boost its cancer drugs (https://www.ft.com/content/3f695210-8cc0-4736-837a-7961d80588d9?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Gilead Sciences buys autoimmune company Ouro Medicines for $2.2 billion (https://www.ft.com/content/81528c31-c735-41b7-b042-81a811a76877?syn-25a6b1a6=1
    • The two mistakes that the president of Novo Nordisk will have to explain to shareholders (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-03-26/los-dos-errores-que-el-presidente-de-novo-nordisk-tendra-que-explicar-ante-los-accionistas-enfadados.html)
  • National News
    • Juan Abarca, acting individually, not as HM Hospitals, buys Redacción Médica and opens a new chapter for this healthcare digital publication (https://www.elconfidencialdigital.com/articulo/medios/presidente-hm-hospitales-compra-diario-online-redaccion-medica/202603271300001012367.html)
    • Grifols is considering an IPO in the United States for its biopharma division (https://www.larazon.es/economia/grifols-estudia-salida-bolsa-estados-unidos-division-biopharma_2026032469c2ffabe9252951fe88f7da.html)
    • Europe recommends Zepzeica (from Pharmamar) as maintenance therapy for small cell lung cancer (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260327/europa-recomienda-zepzelca-pharmamar-terapia-mantenimiento-cancer-pulmon-celula-pequena/1003744186557_0.html)
    • The United States approves the first gene therapy drug “made in Spain” (https://www.abc.es/salud/estados-unidos-aprueba-primer-medicamento-terapia-genica-20260328153659-nt.html)

 

7 days in healthcare (March 16th-22nd, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Immune cells with a bait are more effective at hunting cancer cells.
  • Global Health: The US is considering withdrawing HIV aid to Zambia unless it facilitates access to certain minerals.
  • International Health Policy: A judge suspends the Trump Administration’s vaccine recommendations.
  • National Health Policy: The second week of the strike ends with hundreds of thousands of canceled appointments and no progress made between doctors and the Ministry of Health.
  • Business: Privately run hospitals in Madrid achieve better results than publicly managed ones, according to a study.

Biomedicine

  • Immune cells with a bait are more effective at hunting cancer cells. Research has developed stronger, longer-lasting, and more precise T lymphocytes against prostate tumors, paving the way for the development of more potent immunotherapies.
  • Women who experience menopause before age 40 have a higher risk of myocardial infarction. A new study supports this finding.

Global Health

  • The US is considering withdrawing HIV aid to Zambia unless it facilitates access to certain minerals. This is according to a draft memo from the State Department. As with everything, the United States applies the same transactional approach to health aid to developing countries as it does to other activities.
  • Health and war in Sudan. The humanitarian crisis is growing amid international indifference.

International Health Policy

  • A judge suspends the Trump Administration’s vaccine recommendations. A federal judge overturned Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s vaccine recommendations, ruling that they were not based on science.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic brought the UK’s healthcare system to the brink of collapse. The service was ill-prepared and forced professionals to put their lives at risk. And what’s worse, both the King’s Fund and the Nuffield Trust, two important British health think tanks, doubt that the NHS would be better prepared if another pandemic were to occur now. An excellent report by Baroness Hallett, far superior to the official report produced in Spain.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The second week of the strike ends with hundreds of thousands of canceled appointments and no progress in negotiations between doctors and the Ministry of Health. Various political parties (PP, Vox, ERC, Junts) and autonomous communities (Castilla y León, the Canary Islands, and the Basque Country) are calling for negotiations with the Ministry, which appears to be an obligation of the Administration.
  • 74% of citizens prefer public healthcare for complex cases, compared to 24% who choose private healthcare. The 061 and 112 emergency services are consolidated as the best-rated in the system, according to the 2025 Health Barometer, prepared by the CIS (Spanish Centre for Sociological Research) and the Ministry of Health.
  •  Padilla (Secretary of State for Health) defends the confidentiality of drug prices. The Secretary of State for Health points out that “publishing the net price could create a barrier to access to innovative medicines in Spain.” A responsible position, undoubtedly.

Companies

  • International
    • Ozempic about to become a generic in India, China, and Canada. Novo Nordisk is about to lose patent protection in those countries.
  • National
    • Privately managed hospitals in Madrid achieve better results than publicly managed ones, according to a study. Research published in ‘Healthcare’ compares efficiency and quality of care indicators between privately managed centers and traditional SERMAS hospitals, always based on published official data. The privately managed hospitals compared are: Villalba, Rey Juan Carlos, and Infanta Elena, and they are compared with 13 directly managed hospitals.

Biomedicine

  • Should you take GLP-1 for longevity? The evidence is exciting, but that’s not the same as proof (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/03/13/should-you-take-glp-1-drugs-for-longevity)
  • Detecting oral cancer with a simple photo taken with a mobile phone: the device is still in the prototype phase (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/03/20/depister-des-cancers-orl-grace-a-une-simple-photo-de-la-bouche-avec-un-smartphone_6672658_1650684.html)
  • Women who go through menopause before age 40 have a higher risk of heart attack. A new study supports this finding (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/health/menopause-heart-disease-risk-jama.html). Article published in JAMA: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamacardiology/fullarticle/2846695?guestAccessKey=3dab6e72-0105-4f54-a20f-4f2edcb06e2f&utm_source=for_the_media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=031826
  • Immune cells with a hook are better at hunting cancer. Research has developed stronger, longer-lasting, and more precise T lymphocytes to target prostate cancer, paving the way for more potent immunotherapies (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-03-19/unas-celulas-inmunitarias-reforzadas-con-un-anzuelo-logran-cazar-mejor-el-cancer.html). Access the original article in Science: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adx3162
  • Unexpected finding: Tumor cells are addicted to glutathione and use it to grow. Considered a cell damage repairer, it may promote tumor growth and survival. Blocking this antioxidant could be a viable treatment strategy (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/oncologia/inesperado-hallazgo-celulas-tumorales-son-adictas-glutation-crecer.html). Access the original article in Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10268-2
  • An implantable device enables verbal communication in people with paralysis. A brain-computer interface ‘reads’ the brain instructions a person thinks while using a keyboard and converts them into real text (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/neurologia/dispositivo-implantable-permite-comunicacion-verbal-personas-paralisis.html)

Global Health

  • Health and war in Sudan. The humanitarian crisis grows amid international indifference (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00415-0/fulltext)
  • Are microplastics really dangerous to health? New research suggests that the level of microplastics in the environment and in the body may have been overestimated (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s421)
  • The US is considering withdrawing HIV aid to Zambia unless it facilitates access to certain minerals. This is according to a draft memo from the State Department (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/16/health/zambia-hiv-aid-minerals-trump.html)
  • The WHO warns Argentina that it will be less safe after withdrawing from the organization. The measure was announced a year ago by the government of Javier Milei.
  • (https://www.abc.es/sociedad/oms-advierte-argentina-segura-tras-salida-organizacion-20260319175006-nt.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • United States cuts ties with a major cancer agency. The US withdrawal from the UN may prohibit its scientists from having ties with the International Agency for Research on Cancer (https://www.science.org/content/article/united-states-cutting-ties-influential-global-cancer-agency)
    • Judge suspends Trump Administration vaccine recommendations. A federal judge overturns Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s vaccine recommendations, ruling they are not based on science (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2026/03/16/vaccins-aux-etats-unis-un-juge-suspend-la-refonte-des-recommandations-lancee-par-l-administration-trump_6671476_3210.html)
    • Trump’s health policy that Democratic and Republican states are embracing. The policy is to allow tax breaks for companies, instead of helping citizens purchase Obamacare insurance (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/15/trump-health-policy-both-parties-bullish-on-00813177)
  • United Kingdom
    • The Covid pandemic brought the UK’s health service to the brink of collapse. The service was ill-prepared and forced professionals to put their lives at risk (https://www.ft.com/content/8b15c3fd-fd23-4957-9152-3befc8b63078?syn-25a6b1a6=1). Access to the UK Covid-19 Inquiry, Module 3: https://covid19.public-inquiry.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/16164422/M3-report-web-accessible-PDF-NO-COMMENTS.pdf
    • King’s Fund response to the Covid-19 Inquiry. According to this think tank, if the crisis were to repeat itself tomorrow, the NHS would be in a worse situation due to longer waiting lists and the problems caused by the closure of NHS England (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/press-releases/latest-covid-19-inquiry-report)
    • Nuffield Trust response to the Covid-19 Inquiry. The big question, this report says, is whether the NHS is now in a better or worse situation than before the pandemic (https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/news-item/nuffield-trust-response-to-the-covid-inquiry-report-on-healthcare-systems)
  • European Union
    • Opportunities and doubts surrounding the Critical Medicines Act: The Critical Medicines Act is progressing in the EU with the aim of improving the resilience of the pharmaceutical supply chain, although doubts persist about its development in key areas such as public procurement, industrial incentives, and European coordination (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/19/la-critical-medicines-act-abre-oportunidades-con-dudas-sobre-su-aplicacion-real)
    • The EMA is tightening its surveillance due to the risk of drug shortages caused by the Middle East conflict. The sector is seeking logistical alternatives in Saudi Arabia and Oman to prevent the geopolitical crisis from compromising European citizens’ access to their treatments (https://www.consalud.es/industria/la-ema-activa-la-vigilancia-estrecha-ante-el-riesgo-de-escasez-de-farmacos-por-el-conflicto-en-oriente-medio.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government
    • The Ministry of Health will submit guidelines to the Interterritorial Council for reducing waiting lists. The expert working group is finalizing the operational documents that will guide the autonomous communities (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/parlamentarios/sanidad-elevara-al-interterritorial-las-guias-para-reducir-listas-de-espera-1443)
    • The reform of the LOPS (Law on the Regulation of Health Professions) is open for review. The draft bill will review professional functions and the system of continuing education in the National Health System (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/17/sanidad-abre-a-consulta-la-reforma-de-la-lops-para-actualizar-el-papel-de-los-profesionales)
  • Regional Governments
    • Catalan model for the care of rare diseases. Experts involved, including those from CatSalut, evaluate the XUEC (Catalan Rare Diseases Units) and highlight their strengths as well as the need for decisions for their efficient implementation (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/modelo-atencion-enfermedades-raras-catalan-perla-acabar-pulir.html)
  • Negotiations on the Framework Statute
    • The second week of the strike ends with hundreds of thousands of canceled appointments and no progress between doctors and the Health Ministry (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-03-20/la-segunda-semana-de-huelga-termina-con-cientos-de-miles-de-citas-canceladas-y-sin-acercamiento-entre-los-medicos-y-sanidad.html)
    • The Basque Country, Castilla-La Mancha, and the Canary Islands demand independent mediation to stop the doctors’ strike, which has been rejected by the Ministry (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/20/69bd216021efa0822d8b45a3.html)
    • The PP, Vox, PNV, ERC, and Junts parties are now demanding that García negotiate an end to the doctors’ strike. For her part, the minister insists that she is willing to talk, but only with representatives of the Forum of the Medical Profession (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260321/pp-vox-pnv-erc-junts-exigen-garcia-negocie-final-huelga-medica/1003744177429_0.html)
  • Health Barometer
    • 74% of citizens prefer public healthcare for complex cases, compared to 24% who choose private healthcare. The 061 and 112 emergency services have consolidated their position as the best-rated in the system, according to the 2025 Health Barometer, prepared by the CIS (Spanish Center for Sociological Research) and the Ministry of Health (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/20/69bd42c6e85ece66538b458f.html). Access the latest wave of the Health Barometer (https://www.sanidad.gob.es/estadEstudios/estadisticas/BarometroSanitario/home_BS.htm)
  • MUFACE Crisis
    • The MUFACE crisis worsens with more than 24,000 civil servants moving to the public healthcare system. The number of civil servants has decreased from 1,011,834 to 987,677 between January 31, 2025, and January 31, 2026 (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260319/crisis-muface-agrava-funcionarios-van-sanidad-publica/1003744175237_0.html)
  • Confidentiality of drug prices
    • Padilla defends the confidentiality of drug prices. The Secretary of State for Health points out that “publishing the net price could create a barrier to access to innovative medicines in Spain.” His position must be understood within the context of the Most Favored Nation Clause promoted by Donald Trump, President of the United States. “Trump has said that he will impose drug prices in his country similar to those of the G7 countries, plus Denmark and Switzerland, that are paying the least. Spain is not part of this group, but Spain’s prices are used as a benchmark by some of these countries, so it all has a cascading effect.” (https://www.diariomedico.com/farmacia/industria/padilla-defiende-confidencialidad-precio-farmacos.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Ozempic about to become generic in India, China, and Canada. Novo Nordisk is about to lose patent protection in those countries (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/19/health/ozempic-wegovy-generic-india-china-canada.html)
    • Novartis will pay up to $2.65 billion to Synnovation for an experimental breast cancer drug. The therapy targets the PIK3CA mutation, present in 40% of breast tumors with the worst prognosis (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13833766/03/26/novartis-pagara-hasta-2605-millones-a-synnovation-por-un-farmaco-experimental-contra-el-cancer-de-mama.html)
  • National
    • Hospitals in Madrid that operate under concession achieve better results than those under public management, according to a study. Research published in ‘Healthcare’ compares efficiency and quality of care indicators between indirectly managed centers and traditional SERMAS hospitals, always based on officially published data. The concessionary hospitals compared are: Villalba, Rey Juan Carlos, and Infanta Elena, and they are compared with 13 directly managed hospitals. (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-03-20/mejores-resultados-en-hospitales-madrilenos-de-gestion-concesional_4323580/). Access the study published in the journal Healthcare: https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/14/6/731
    • The generic drug sector is teetering on the brink due to “reckless price reductions,” which jeopardize its viability. “Today, companies face a very dangerous situation: costs are rising and prices are falling,” says Elena Casaus, Secretary General of Aeseg (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260317/sector-medicamentos-genericos-asoma-abismo-bajadas-temerarias-comprometen-viabilidad/1003744172153_0.html)
    • GSK’s first biosafety laboratory to combat pandemics. The British company has installed the only facility of its kind in a pharmaceutical company at its Spanish subsidiary. The infrastructure cost approximately 5.2 million euros (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/21/69bd63c5e9cf4acb2e8b4594.html)
    • Bayer’s plant in La Felguera, the first in industrial decarbonization. These facilities are set to become the first in the sector in Spain to decarbonize their activity (https://www.elcomercio.es/area-metropolitana-asturias/cuencas/planta-bayer-felguera-pionera-descarbonizacion-industrial-20260313090438-nt.html)