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)

7 days in healthcare (March 9th-15th, 2026)

 

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Changing guidelines on high blood pressure.
  • Global health: Data control and sovereignty concerns lead African countries to reject agreements with the US.
  • International health policy: One-third of Americans have cut spending or resorted to debt for healthcare.
  • National health policy: The Council of Ministers approves the Royal Decree guaranteeing healthcare for undocumented migrants.
  • Companies: The FDA proposes eliminating PK clinical trials (pharmacokinetic tests) to expedite the development of biosimilars.

Biomedicine

  • Changing guidelines on high blood pressure. The trend is to lower the threshold for what is considered hypertension.
  • Certain cancers may be less frequent among vegetarians: prostate, breast, pancreatic, etc. A study in four countries demonstrates a lower risk of cancer in those who abstain from eating meat.
  • Breast cancer surgery can be less invasive without losing effectiveness. The study analyzed the evolution of axillary surgery in more than 17,300 breast cancer patients treated between 2010 and 2021 at 68 accredited centers across Europe.

Global Health

  • Data control and sovereignty concerns are leading African countries to reject agreements with the US being designed under the increasingly criticized America First Global Health Strategy (AFGHS).
  • The human consequences of Epic Fury. The health crisis in Iran and the surrounding Middle East is escalating rapidly, according to Hanan Balkhy, the WHO Regional Director for the Middle East.

International Health Policy

  • One-third of Americans have cut back on healthcare spending or taken out loans. Many Americans are making sacrifices in the face of rising healthcare costs.
  • UK-US agreement on drug prices. Ministers give NICE a role in approvals, despite reservations.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Council of Ministers approves the Royal Decree guaranteeing healthcare for undocumented migrants. It appears the measure was improvised, without assessing the economic impact or the potential pull factor. According to this law, any relative of immigrants can come to Spain and seek medical treatment. It would be important to analyze comparative law to see if this is the case in other European countries. The People’s Party (PP) opposes this Royal Decree.
  • The Community of Madrid is the first autonomous community to support the creation of its own statute for physicians.

Companies

  • International
    • The FDA proposes eliminating PK clinical trials (pharmacokinetic tests) to expedite the development of biosimilars.
  • National
    • Dental visits are the biggest healthcare expense for Spanish families. According to the Spanish Consumers and Users Organization (OCU), households spend an average of €667 annually on dental expenses, making it the largest single healthcare expenditure in the country.

Biomedicine

  • Changing guidelines on high blood pressure. The trend is to lower the threshold for what is considered hypertension. (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/14/health/blood-pressure-guidelines-hypertension-dementia.html)
  • The battle for supremacy in weight loss shifts from injections to pills. Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy tablet offers the Danish manufacturer the opportunity to compete with Lilly (https://www.ft.com/content/6e805306-5195-40d5-b1a2-fe2700d7721b)
  • Certain cancers may be less common among vegetarians: prostate, breast, pancreatic, etc. A study conducted in four countries shows a lower risk of cancer in those who abstain from eating meat (https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2026/03/11/prostate-sein-pancreas-certains-cancers-seraient-moins-frequents-chez-les-vegetariens_6670539_3244.html)
  • Wegovy is associated with a higher risk of “eye stroke” than other anti-obesity drugs. An FDA adverse effects analysis reveals that the chances of developing ischemic optic neuropathy are five times higher with this drug than with Ozempic. All signs point to high doses (https://www.abc.es/salud/wegovy-asocia-mayor-riesgo-infarto-ocular-farmacos-20260310042620-nt.html)
  • Breast cancer surgery can be less invasive without losing effectiveness. The study analyzed the evolution of axillary surgery in more than 17,300 breast cancer patients treated between 2010 and 2021 in 68 accredited units across Europe (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/10/69b00b5621efa08e578b456e.html)
  • The solution to fertility problems may lie in the brain. The RANK protein acts as a key mediator in cell-to-cell communication (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-03-12/relacion-celulas-cerebro-fertilidad_43)

Global Health

  • Global health in an era of US extraction, with the destruction of global health by 2025. The United States is targeting African countries with high-cost bilateral agreements. Extraction is a word Trump likes (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s394?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)
  • Iran: WHO calls For the protection of healthcare workers. Healthcare workers and facilities are under fire in the Middle East conflict, warn health leaders and charities. (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s445?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)
  • The human consequences of Epic Fury. The health crisis in Iran and the surrounding Middle East is escalating rapidly, according to Hanan Balkhy, the WHO Regional Director for the Middle East (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00497-6/fulltext).
  • Peace, let it come quickly. War is bad for health; how can we avoid a war that is being chosen? (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s480)
  • Data control and sovereignty concerns are leading African countries to reject agreements with the US designed under the increasingly criticized American First Global Health Strategy (AFGHS) (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00509-X/fulltext)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • A new wave of disruptors is trying to control American healthcare. American healthcare is very expensive and generates significant user dissatisfaction. This has led many large companies, such as Google, IBM, Amazon, and others, to experience major failures in trying to “fix” the system. In these changing times, AI is looking to play a role in this regard, and the ChapGPT is playing an increasingly important part (https://www.economist.com/business/2026/03/10/a-new-wave-of-disrupters-takes-on-american-health-care)
    • Two states (Vermont and Indiana) stand out for their soaring hospital prices. Since 2000, hospital prices have risen 250%, double the rate of healthcare spending and triple the rate of inflation (https://www.economist.com/united-states/2026/03/12/two-very-different-states-take-aim-at-soaring-hospital-prices)
    • One-third of Americans have cut back on healthcare spending or taken out loans. Many Americans are making sacrifices in the face of rising healthcare costs (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/12/health/health-costs-cutting-back.html)
    • The FDA opens the door to cigarettes with more flavors, such as mint, coffee, or tea, to attract more adults (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/09/health/fda-e-cigarettes-flavors.html)
    • A Trump memo attacks the Cuban doctors program. The US government is trying to hinder the Cuban doctors program abroad (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/13/cuban-doctors-us-pressure-00827683)
  • United Kingdom
    • New deficits in NHS funding. Many of the trusts are in deficit, meaning spending exceeds the budget (https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/data-and-charts/nhs-trusts-deficit)
    • UK-USA agreement on drug prices. Ministers give NICE a role in approvals, despite reservations (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s442?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)
  • France
    • More than 20,000 people from over 65 people died from falls in 2024. Between 2019 and 2024, the number of deaths from falls rose by 18% (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/03/13/plus-de-20-000-personnes-de-plus-de-65-ans-sont-mortes-a-cause-d-une-chute-en-2024-un-phenomene-en-augmentation-et-encore-inexplique_6671008_3225.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government
    • The Council of Ministers approves the Royal Decree guaranteeing healthcare for undocumented migrants (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/10/69afd778e9cf4a47378b45a8.html)
    • The Ministry of Health rules out an audit of the controversial MIR exam, but will allocate €10.2 million to its management and digitization (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-03-10/10-2-millones-gestion-mir-ministerio-de-sanidad_4317899/)
  • Regional Governments
    • The Canary Islands approves the 2026-2031 Health Plan with 49 priority areas (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/canarias/canarias-aprueba-el-plan-de-salud-2026-2031.html)
    • The Parliament of Cantabria sets a maximum of 15 days for delivering the results of biopsies suspected of being cancerous (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/12/el-parlamento-de-cataluna-exige-retirar-el-proyecto-de-ley-de-gestion-publica-por-invadir-competencias)
    • The initial project for the future Girona health campus has been selected (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/seleccionado-proyecto-inicial-futuro-campus-salud-girona.html)
    • Asturian healthcare will subject the specialties with the longest waiting lists to an audit (https://www.elcomercio.es/asturias/sanidad-asturias-especialidades-listas-espera-auditoria-20260310201008-nt.html)
    • Galicia’s new strategy against rare diseases (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/enfermedades-raras-galicia-acceso-precoz/)
  • Negotiations on the Framework Statute
    • The Community of Madrid, the first autonomous community to support the creation of its own statute for doctors (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/12/69b2f4a2e4d4d8801f8b45b9.html)
    • Doctors deny the existence of the agreement defended by Mónica García and call her proposal “poor and ridiculous” (https://www.larazon.es/sociedad/medicos-niegan-que-exista-acuerdo-que-defiende-monica-garcia-califican-propuesta-pobre-ridicula_2026031369b414cfd489bf782e18fb37.html)
  • Public Management Law
    • The Parliament of Catalonia demands the withdrawal of the Public Management Law (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/12/el-parlamento-de-cataluna-exige-retirar-el-proyecto-de-ley-de-gestion-publica-por-invadir-competencias)
    • The Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) and Together for Catalonia (Junts) avoid supporting a motion on public management of the National Health System (SNS) proposed by the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE). (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/08/pnv-y-junts-evitan-apoyar-una-mocion-sobre-gestion-publica-del-sns-del-psoe)
  • Royal Decree on healthcare for undocumented immigrants
    • The PP opposes it. It warns that the measure is being taken without planning and in a context of overburdened public healthcare professionals (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/10/criticas-del-pp-al-decreto-de-cobertura-universal-convierte-la-irregularidad-en-un-derecho)
  • Study on oral health in Spain
    • White Paper on Oral Health from the General Council of Dentists. It analyzes the evolution over a quarter of a century: 2000-2025 (https://consejodentistas.es/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2026.02.09-Libro-blanco-salud-oral-2025-1.pdf)

Companies

  • International
    • The boom in counterfeit obesity drugs. Due to high prices, lack of insurance coverage, and the desire to lose weight, counterfeit medications are proliferating, generating health concerns. (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00461-7/fulltext)
    • Sales of the obesity drug Mounjaro catapult Lilly to the top spot as the world’s leading pharmaceutical company in revenue (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260313/ventas-farmaco-obesidad-mounjaro-catapultan-eli-lilly-primera-pharma-mundial-ingresos/1003744166443_0.html)
    • The FDA is considering eliminating PK clinical trials (pharmacokinetic tests) to expedite the development of biosimilars (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/09/la-fda-plantea-la-eliminacion-de-estudios-clinicos-pk-para-agilizar-el-desarrollo-de-biosimilares)

 

 

7 days in healthcare (March 2nd-8th, 2026)

 

 

Summary

The most impactful health news stories of the week were:

  • Biomedicine: The immunotherapy that revolutionized cancer treatment has a dark side.
  • Global health: Gender equality and equity: essential for health and society.
  • International health policy: Growing control of private equity (PE) firms in American healthcare.
  • National health policy: Feijóo (PP) addresses a letter to doctors, following the conflict over the Framework Statute.
  • Companies: Novo Nordisk’s illness as a company.

Biomedicine

  • The immunotherapy that revolutionized cancer treatment has a dark side: 63 complications linked to high mortality. According to pharmacovigilance data from more than 290,000 patients in the USA and the WHO database.
  • Blood tests for cancer are proliferating. Do they really work? Their manufacturers say they can detect dozens of types of cancer. But many scientists say they may fail to diagnose some cancers or provide an incorrect diagnosis. There are more than 40 cancer screening tests in development, and some are already on the market.
  • The shingles vaccine: promising side effects against dementia. Immunization against the virus has been shown to delay Alzheimer’s.

Global Health

  • Gender equality and equity: essential for health and society. The term gender equality has been downplayed by the Trump Administration. A global study shows that 608 million girls over the age of 15 have been exposed to intimate partner violence, and more than 1 billion boys have experienced sexual violence during childhood. It remains a key issue, according to The Lancet.
  • Global warming has accelerated significantly. The latest data confirm the acceleration of warming.

International Health Policy

  • The transformation of American medicine by private equity (PE) firms. These companies have gained increasing control over healthcare infrastructure. PE investors promise to eliminate inefficiencies in America’s fragmented healthcare markets, increase investment, and exploit economies of scale. However, growing evidence shows that PE companies have created access difficulties for rural populations, the elderly, low-income communities, marginalized groups, and ethnic minorities.
  • Trends among primary care physicians in the USA: dissatisfaction, stress, and burnout. This is very prevalent in primary care, but the causes are poorly understood. In an international study, burnout among American primary care physicians was 42%, compared to only 18% in Switzerland and 12% in the Netherlands.
  • Monitoring pollution should be part of governments’ work in the fight against cancer, according to the new European Code Against Cancer.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Countdown to the Digital Health Law, which aims to regulate interoperable and accessible digital health records throughout the country and the European Union.
  • Feijóo’s (PP) letter to doctors. It is extremely commendable that the PP President met with the Forum of the Medical Profession and with the strike committee regarding the Framework Statute. However, his advisors could surely have put more effort into the letter’s content, moving beyond the specific union demands and focusing their solution on a more defined and explicit healthcare policy, which is lacking in the letter.
  • The IDIS Foundation presents objections to the Draft Law on Public Management and Integrity of the National Health System and denounces it as a frontal attack on “public/private collaboration in healthcare.”

Companies

  • International
    • The decline of Novo Nordisk as a company offers painful lessons. It went from being the company with the largest market capitalization in Europe to suffering a collapse in its value, and in the field of obesity, it is now second only to Lilly.
  •  National
    • Aspirin, Frenadol, Ventolin, and Almax, top-selling drugs “made in Spain.” Spain is home to 111 pharmaceutical plants for human use. Bayer, GSK, Pfizer, Novartis, Lilly, Almirall, Faes Farma, and Merck have strategic plants in the country that export worldwide.

Biomedicine

  • Blood tests for cancer are proliferating. Do they really work? Their manufacturers say they can detect dozens of types of cancer. But many scientists say they may miss some cancers or give a false positive. There are more than 40 cancer screening tests in development and some already on the market (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00661-2)
  • Stem cells offer a powerful treatment for frailty. Older people with frailty, which affects a quarter of those over 50, showed improved resilience after a single dose of stem cells (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00584-y)
  • Users of weight-loss injections have a lower risk of alcohol and drug addiction. Researchers find that GLP-1 users are less likely to develop substance use disorders (https://www.ft.com/content/899f2d49-af16-4b68-a33a-9edf294678c8)
  • The immunotherapy that revolutionized cancer treatment has a dark side: 63 complications linked to high mortality. This is according to pharmacovigilance data from more than 290,000 patients in the USA and the WHO database (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-03-02/la-inmunoterapia-que-revoluciono-el-cancer_4312734/). Access the original article: https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2427234123
  • Gene therapy shows very promising results against Dravet syndrome: it reduces epileptic seizures by 91%. The treatment is still experimental (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/05/69a82917e4d4d8c0378b456e.html). Access the original article: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2506295
  • Scientists decode the “brain’s pipes”: cerebrospinal fluid, key to understanding and fighting tumors. The results of a study led by the National Center for Genomic Analysis (CNAG) open new avenues for developing personalized therapies for patients with central nervous system tumors (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/06/69aaf8e3fc6c8357058b4570.html)
  • Immunotherapy, which is curing cancer, is now targeting Alzheimer’s. A study in ‘Science’ transfers the promising anti-cancer technology to astrocytes, enabling them to act as a precision cleaning service in the brain (https://www.abc.es/salud/cancer-alzheimer-inmunoterapia-nueva-arma-20260305200540-nt.html)
  • The shingles vaccine: promising side effects against dementia. Immunization against the virus has been shown to delay Alzheimer’s (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-03-02/la-vacuna-del-herpes-zoster-prometedores-efectos-secundarios-contra-la-demencia.html)

Global Health

  • Gender equality and equity: essential for health and society. The term gender equality has been downplayed by the Trump Administration. A global study shows that 608 million girls over the age of 15 have been exposed to intimate partner violence and more than 1 billion boys have experienced sexual violence during childhood (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00456-3/fulltext)
  • Bangladesh’s ambitious health plan. The new government has promised to prioritize health in its policies (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00458-7/fulltext)
  • Botswana’s fight against HIV. With cuts in international aid, Botswana has been left without HIV control programs (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)02585-1/fulltext)
  • Global warming has accelerated significantly. The latest data confirm the acceleration of warming (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2025GL118804)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The transformation of American medicine by private equity (PE) firms. These firms have gained increasing control over healthcare infrastructure. PE investors promise to eliminate inefficiencies in fragmented American healthcare markets, increase investment, and exploit economies of scale. However, growing evidence shows that PE firms have resulted in access difficulties for rural populations, the elderly, low-income communities, marginalized groups, and ethnic minorities (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2415615).
    • Trends among primary care physicians in the USA: dissatisfaction, stress, and burnout. This is very prevalent in primary care, but the causes are poorly understood. In an international study, burnout among US primary care physicians was 42%, compared to only 18% in Switzerland and 12% in the Netherlands (https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2025.00880)
  • China
    • China hopes IVF can improve its birth rates. The number of IVF treatment cycles in China grew from 236,000 in 2013 to more than 1.1 million in 2019 (https://www.economist.com/china/2026/03/01/china-hopes-ivf-can-slow-its-baby-bust)
  • United Kingdom
    • How GPs (primary care physicians) are using AI. In a survey of 2,108 British GPs, 598 (28%) say they use AI in their clinical practice (https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/research/how-are-gps-using-ai-insights-from-the-front-line)
    • Why does England have GPs without jobs, while people can’t get an appointment? The article analyzes how many doctors may not be able to find positions in Primary Care, while unmet demand increases (https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/resource/why-does-england-have-unemployed-gps-when-patients-can-t-get-gp-appointments)
  • France
    • France authorizes an injectable preventive treatment for HIV, a move welcomed by numerous experts and associations (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/02/26/vih-la-france-autorise-enfin-un-traitement-preventif-injectable_6668379_3224.html)
  • European Union
    • Monitoring pollution should be part of governments’ work in the fight against cancer (https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/mar/06/tackle-air-pollution-cut-cancer-rates-scientists). Access the European Code Against Cancer: https://cancer-code-europe.iarc.who.int

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • Countdown to the Digital Health Law, which aims to regulate interoperable and accessible digital health records throughout the country and the European Union (EU) (https://www.consalud.es/politica/ministerio-sanidad/cuenta-atras-para-la-ley-de-salud-digital-sanidad-espera-su-aprobacion-definitiva-este-mismo-ano.html)
    • The Ministry of Health expects the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment to be approved before April, designed to lay the foundations for a new regulatory framework for the assessment of these technologies in Spain (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/sanidad-rd-evaluacion-tecnologias-sanitarias-aprobacion-abril/)
  • Regional Administrations
    • The Catalan budget proposal increases investment in health. The government’s forecasts propose allocating €13.84 billion to healthcare, with Primary Care accounting for 31% of the spending (https://diariofarma.com/2026/03/01/el-proyecto-de-presupuestos-catalanes-elevan-la-inversion-en-salud-en-2-428-millones)
    • The Balearic Islands health service is joining the EU-Patient Summary to improve emergency care in Europe. Healthcare professionals in other European countries will be able to access data such as allergies, active medications, and relevant pathologies (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/baleares/el-servicio-de-salud-de-baleares-se-integra-en-eu-patient-sumary-para-mejorar-la-atencion-de-urgencia-en-europa.html)
    • Madrid pharmacies strengthen their healthcare role (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/27/la-farmacia-madrilena-impulsa-su-rol-sanitario-con-un-nuevo-modelo-modelo-de-gestion-de-servicios)
    • A virtual assistant in Asturias will now be available for scheduling medical appointments at health centers. The ordeal of constantly busy health center phones in Asturias is over. For now, however, this service is only available to residents of the Nalón Valley. They will be the privileged few who will no longer have to wait for someone to answer the phone to schedule an appointment with their doctor. “Noa” arrives, a virtual assistant that never communicates and will answer calls 24 hours a day, 365 days a year (https://www.lne.es/cuencas/2026/03/02/calvario-contactar-telefono-centros-salud-127451276.html)
  • Negotiations on the Framework Statute
    • Feijóo’s letter to doctors (https://www.cesm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/CARTA-PRESIDENTE-FEIJOO-A-LOS-MEDICOS-1.pdf)
    • The Ministry of Health and the Forum of the Medical Profession reach an agreement to try to avoid the strike. The Forum includes union representatives (CESM) and professional associations and scientific societies. Mónica García’s Ministry seeks to smooth things over with this rapprochement, but the Strike Committee has not called off the strikes (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/05/69a98bf7e9cf4a054d8b458f.html)
    • The medical unions CESM and Amyts temper optimism in the healthcare sector: “There is no agreement” (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/06/69aaedb0e85ece60688b45b3.html)
  • Public Management Law
    • The IDIS Foundation presents objections to the Draft Law on Public Management and Integrity of the National Health System and denounces it as a frontal attack on “public/private collaboration in healthcare” (https://isanidad.com/363189/idis-lamenta-que-el-anteproyecto-de-ley-de-gestion-publica-supone-un-ataque-frontal-a-la-colaboracion-publica-privada/)
  • MIR Exam
    • The government will reform the MIR exam after the exam with the most “errors”: a record number of annulled questions, resignations, suspicions of fraud, and delays in procedures (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/03/07/69ac4d4a21efa0ec6e8b456d.html)
    • 99.19% of applicants who took the Specialized Health Training exams passed. (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/02/27/69a1ff2de85ece005b8b4589.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Bayer suffers multimillion-dollar losses due to lawsuits related to glyphosate (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-03-04/bayer-sufre-perdidas-millonarias-por-las-demandas-relacionadas-con-el-glifosato.html)
    • Permira freezes the sale of Neuraxpharm as it seeks a valuation exceeding €3.5 billion (https://www.elconfidencial.com/empresas/2026-03-05/permira-enfria-venta-neuraxpharm-ofertas-inferiores_4314494/)
    • The Novo Nordisk crisis as a company offers painful lessons. It went from being the company with the largest market capitalization in Europe to suffering a collapse in its value, and in the field of obesity, it’s second only to Lilly (https://cincodias.elpais.com/opinion/2026-03-04/la-enfermedad-de-novo-nordisk-ofrece-dolorosas-lecciones.html)
  • National
    • Miranza increases its revenue by 16% in 2025 and accelerates its expansion in Portugal. The ophthalmology group surpasses €128 million in revenue, increases its surgical activity, and invests in AI and R&D (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/nacional/miranza-eleva-un-16-su-facturacion-en-2025-y-acelera-su-expansion-a-portugal.html)
    • Novo Nordisk announces price reductions for “Ozempic” and “Wegovy” in Spain. The price will decrease by up to 17.6% for the highest dose of “Wegovy,” to €223.64. Ozempic and Rybelsus, with very restrictive NHS funding, also see price drops (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/novo-nordisk-anuncia-bajada-precios-ozempic-wegovy-espana.html)
    • Oximesa acquires Esteve Teijin Healthcare and strengthens its home respiratory therapy services, following approval by the CNMC (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/nacional/oximesa-adquiere-esteve-tejin-healthcare-y-refuerza-sus-servicios-de-terapias-respiratorias-domiciliarias-en-la-peninsula.html)
    • The General Council of Dentists demands answers regarding the reasons for the €40 million bailout of Vivanta. The General Council of Dentists demands transparency regarding the €40 million public bailout granted to Vivanta, while thousands of iDental patients remain without treatment solutions or reimbursement of their payments (https://www.consalud.es/dentalia/clinicas/el-consejo-de-dentistas-reclama-las-razones-del-rescate-a-vivanta-costo-40-millones-de-dinero-publico.html)
    • Aspirin, Frenadol, Ventolin, and Almax, best-selling drugs “made in Spain.” Spain is home to 111 pharmaceutical plants for human use. Bayer, GSK, Pfizer, Novartis, Lilly, Almirall, Faes Farma, and Merck have strategic plants in the country that export worldwide (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/industria/2026/03/06/69a49877468aeb955f8b457e.html)
    • The dental business accelerates its digitalization with the arrival of AI and 3D printers (https://cincodias.elpais.com/extras/2026-03-04/el-negocio-dental-acelera-su-digitalizacion-con-la-llegada-de-la-ia-y-las-impresoras-3d.html)
    • Grifols acquires Canadian Plasma Resources and takes a key step in its diversification. As part of its strategy to diversify plasma sources, Grifols is moving forward with its growth plans in Canada, one of the group’s strategic markets (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13811727/03/26/grifols-compra-canadian-plasma-resources-y-da-un-paso-clave-en-su-diversificacion.html)

7 days in healthcare (February 23rd-March 1st, 2026)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: An mRNA vaccine shows potential in triple-negative breast cancer.
  • Global Health: Why does the US vaccine recall not only affect the US?
  • International Health Policy: Two prosecutors and 13 states oppose RFK, Jr.’s anti-vaccine policies.
  • National Health Policy: Feijóo (PP) is open to considering a specific statute for doctors.
  • Business: Pharmaceutical companies are building bridges to the patent precipice.

Biomedicine

  • An mRNA vaccine shows potential in triple-negative breast cancer. A preliminary trial with 14 patients with triple-negative breast cancer indicates that it triggers robust immune responses safely and lastingly.
  • A new single-pill treatment for HIV promises a solution for survivors of this disease.
  • The discovery of genetic variants that predispose individuals to smoking opens new therapeutic avenues against tobacco addiction. Smoking is responsible for millions of deaths worldwide each year. Although its harmful effects are widely known, addiction makes quitting smoking a difficult task, and available treatment options remain limited.

Global Health

  • Why does the US withdrawal of vaccines not only affect the US? The modification of the childhood vaccination schedule by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last January will foreseeably have public health implications for the American population, but the consequences may extend further. The CDC removed six of the 17 vaccines previously recommended for this population segment: the flu and COVID-19 vaccines for children, as well as those for rotavirus, meningitis, hepatitis A, and hepatitis B. These vaccines can still be administered in the US, but only after consultation with a specialist, that is, under the shared clinical decision-making approach coined by the US administration.

International Health Policy

  • Two Attorneys General and 13 States Oppose RFK Jr.’s Anti-Vaccine Policies. A coalition of 14 state attorneys general, led by California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, has filed a multistate lawsuit against the Trump Administration for the “unprecedented” changes to the childhood immunization schedule.
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr.: A Year of Failures. Serious errors in vaccine policy, nutritional recommendations, and cuts to research.
  • Europe Wants to Guarantee Diagnosis of Rare Diseases within 12 Months. The European Parliament is finalizing an initiative to create a binding framework for these illnesses. The current average for a diagnosis exceeds four years.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Feijóo (PP) is open to considering a specific statute for doctors. He has conveyed to physicians that he supports the need for them to have their own negotiating body. The unions’ virtual monopoly on negligence with the Administration, contrary to the consideration of the “professionalism” of doctors and other professionals.
  • In its submissions to the Ministry, the FADSP (Federation of Associations for the Defense of Public Health) states that the safeguards established in the Draft Law on Public Management to prevent the “privatization” of the National Health System (SNS) seem insufficient. Submissions are also expected from the IDIS Foundation and ASPE, most likely taking a very different stance, given the attack that the Draft Law on Public Management represents on public/private partnerships in healthcare, proposing a change along “Podemos-style” lines to the General Health Law.

Companies

  • International
    • Pharmaceutical companies are building bridges to the patent precipice. Only 10% of the drug revenues of the top 20 firms will still have patent protection in a decade.
  • National News
    • FENIN calls for institutional support to increase medical technology manufacturing in Spain. Fenin has presented the study ‘Medical Technology Manufacturers in Spain’, which offers a comprehensive overview of the sector’s contribution to the national economy.

Biomedicine

  • Grail’s cancer detection test fails in a major study. The test seemed promising for avoiding late cancer diagnoses, but this has not been confirmed in a large clinical trial (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/20/health/cancer-detection-test-grail.html)
  • Longevity and wellness are driving the promotion of miracle cures, never tested on humans. Health influencers play a significant role in this (https://www.ft.com/content/0f682ce3-b0e7-46bc-8d1a-e288f24ad8de)
  • A new one-time HIV pill promises a solution for survivors of the disease (https://www.ft.com/content/4fe55a54-0d89-4dca-9724-cc22044dc0fa). Original article in The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00307-7/fulltext
  • Vegetarians have a lower risk of five cancers, including breast, prostate, and kidney cancer (https://www.ft.com/content/ce5a1436-51a8-4d3c-9eaa-4c8644bacf83)
  • The discovery of genetic variants that predispose individuals to smoking opens new therapeutic avenues for combating tobacco addiction. Smoking is responsible for millions of deaths worldwide each year. Although its harmful effects are widely known, addiction makes quitting smoking a difficult task, and the available treatment options remain limited (https://elpais.com/expres/2026-02-25/el-hallazgo-de-variantes-geneticas-que-predisponen-a-fumar-abre-nuevas-vias-terapeuticas-contra-la-adiccion-al-tabaco.html)
  • The first vaccine to prevent four cancers: colon, rectum, endometrium, and stomach. A Spanish researcher is leading pioneering research against Lynch syndrome at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston (https://www.abc.es/salud/primera-vacuna-prevenir-cuatro-tumores-colon-recto-20260214042656-nt.html)
  • A living drug has eliminated tumors in mice with pancreatic, ovarian, or kidney cancer (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-02-26/un-farmaco-viviente-logra-eliminar-los-tumores-de-ratones-con-cancer-de-pancreas-ovario-o-rinon.html). Access the original article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adv7378
  • An mRNA vaccine shows potential in triple-negative breast cancer. A preliminary trial with 14 patients with triple-negative breast cancer indicates that it triggers robust immune responses safely and lastingly (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/oncologia/vacuna-arnm-muestra-potencial-cancer-mama-triple-negativo.html)
  • When ChatGPT becomes the medical record in direct-to-consumer care. Interesting analysis from Health Affairs magazine (https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/forefront.20260210.132574/full/)

Global Health

  • Africa lags behind in surgeries that prevent the leading cause of blindness. Three out of four people on the continent do not have access to cataract surgery. Experts warn that there are also gaps in the intervention for glaucoma and eye injuries in children (https://elpais.com/planeta-futuro/2026-02-23/africa-a-la-cola-de-las-cirugias-que-previenen-la-principal-causa-de-ceguera-nadie-deberia-perder-la-vista-por-cataratas.html)
  • The UN proposes a roadmap for Bolivia to reverse its high maternal mortality rates. The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) presented a strategy on Tuesday for Bolivia to control and reduce maternal mortality (https://www.abc.es/espana/propone-ruta-bolivia-revierta-altos-ndices-mortalidad-20260225031647-vi.html)
  • Why does the US vaccine recall not only affect the US? The modification of the childhood vaccination schedule by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last January will predictably have public health implications for the American population, but the consequences may extend further. The CDC removed six of the 17 vaccines previously recommended for this population segment: the flu and COVID-19 vaccines for children, as well as those for rotavirus, meningitis, hepatitis A, and hepatitis B. These vaccines can still be administered in the U.S., but only after consultation with a specialist, that is, under the shared clinical decision-making approach coined by the U.S. administration. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/medicina-preventiva/retirada-vacunas-eeuu-afecta-eeuu.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The growing success of Medicare drug negotiations, which will achieve significant discounts on 15 new medications in 2027 (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2517584)
    • The new US dietary guidelines: a recipe for worse health. Poor adherence to scientific evidence (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00300-4/fulltext)
    • Federal reforms of PBMs. There is agreement between both parties, Democrats and Republicans, for this reform (https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/forefront.20260223.563817/full/)
    • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., a year of missteps. Serious errors in vaccine policy, nutritional recommendations, and research cuts (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00414-9/fulltext)
    • Obamacare’s new plans could increase family deductibles by up to $31,000, potentially raising bills for families (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/26/health/obamacare-health-insurance-rollbacks.html)
    • Two attorneys general and 13 states oppose RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine policies. A coalition of 14 state attorneys general, led by California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, has filed a multistate lawsuit against the Trump Administration over “unprecedented” changes to the childhood vaccination schedule. (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/fiscales-guerra-politicas-antivacunas-kennedy-jr-eeuu/)
  • France
    • The end-of-life bill has been approved by the Congress and returns to the Senate, along with the bill on palliative care (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/02/25/fin-de-vie-l-assemblee-nationale-approuve-la-proposition-de-loi-instaurant-un-droit-a-l-aide-a-mourir-le-texte-transmis-au-senat_6668257_3224.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government
    • Public comment periods for the Draft Bills on Patient Participation and Public Management and Integrity of the National Health System. The deadline for both drafts is March 4, 2026 (https://www.sanidad.gob.es/normativa/audiencia/home.htm)
  • Regional Governments
    • Andalusia creates specialist research categories for physicians and nurses. The Minister of Health, Antonio Sanz, highlights that “it is the first autonomous community to integrate clinical research into the heart of the healthcare system” (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/andalucia/andalucia-crea-las-categorias-de-facultativo-y-enfermera-especialistas-clinicos-investigadores.html)
    • Valdecilla Hospital activates a unit for Rare Diseases. With funding from European and regional sources, the Rare Diseases Unit at Valdecilla Hospital will integrate 12 medical disciplines (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/26/valdecilla-activa-en-marzo-su-nueva-unidad-de-ee-rr-en-la-que-realizara-2-000-atenciones-anuales)
    • Alfonso X University has set a date for admission of medical and nursing students in Oviedo. UAX sets the goal of “building a hub for job creation and talent retention” linked to the health sciences sector in Asturias (https://www.elcomercio.es/oviedo/universidad-alfonso-fecha-proceso-admision-estudiantes-medicina-20260226153026-nt.html)
    • The HUCA (Central University Hospital of Asturias) has interminable delays in dermatology; they postpone the review of an oncological lesion for a year (https://www.lne.es/asturias/2026/03/01/efectos-demoras-interminables-dermatologia-huca-127401441.html)
  • Problems with the Framework Statute
    • Feijóo (PP) is open to considering a specific Statute for doctors; he has conveyed to physicians that he defends the need for them to have a framework for negotiation (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260227/feijoo-pp-ofrece-valorar-estatuto-marco-exclusivo-medicos-hara-propuesta-proxima-semana/1003744147664_0.html)
    • Mónica García speaks out again against a specific statute for doctors. The Minister of Health, Mónica García, has stated that she sees no need for doctors to have their own statute because “their specificities fit within a common statute” (https://www.abc.es/espana/mnica-garca-estatuto-propio-mdicos-solo-servira-20260223135741-vi.html).
  • Public Management Law
    • In its submissions to the Ministry, the FADSP (Federation of Associations for the Defense of Public Healthcare) states that the safeguards established in the Draft Law on Public Management to prevent the “privatization” of the National Health System (SNS) seem insufficient (https://cronicasanitaria.es/2026/02/27/fadsp-considera-que-la-ley-para-limitar-la-colaboracion-publico-privada-en-sanidad-no-garantiza-un-blindaje-suficiente/). Access to FADSP’s allegations: https://fadsp.es/alegaciones-fadsp-ley-sns/

Companies

  • International
    • Gilead heats up biotechnology: buys Arcellx for €6.6 billion to strengthen its position in cancer treatment (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-02-23/gilead-calienta-la-biotecnologia-compra-arcellx-por-6600-millones-para-reforzarse-en-los-tratamientos-de-cancer.html)
    • The Novo Nordisk Foundation supports quantum computing beyond Denmark (https://www.ft.com/content/8896a881-5246-4bfd-a989-8e6612026bcf)
    • Novo Nordisk’s stock price plummets after trials of its new obesity drug (https://www.vozpopuli.com/sanitatem/novo-nordisk-se-desploma-en-bolsa-tras-los-ensayos-de-su-nuevo-medicamento-contra-la-obesidad.html)
    • Why pharmaceutical products have not been affected by Trump’s tariffs, an analysis by David Cantarero (IDIVAL) (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/por-que-productos-farmaceuticos-libran-arancel-trump/)
    • Pharmaceutical companies are buying bridges to the patent precipice. Only 10% of the pharmaceutical revenues of the top 20 companies will still be protected in a decade (https://cincodias.elpais.com/opinion/2026-02-25/las-farmaceuticas-compran-puentes-para-el-precipicio-de-las-patentes.html)
  • National
    • FENIN calls for institutional support to increase medical technology manufacturing in Spain. Fenin has presented the study ‘Medical Technology Manufacturers in Spain’, which offers a comprehensive overview of the sector’s contribution to the national economy (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/fenin-reclama-apoyo-institucional-aumentar-fabricacion-tecnologia-sanitaria-espana.html). Access the original report: https://fenin.es/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/FENIN-Informe_Estudio-Fabricantes-TS-Espana-2025.pdf
    • Rovi increases R&D investment by 47% in 2025 (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/rovi-incremento-inversion-id-2025/)
    • Almirall quadruples profits thanks to the surge in biological drugs (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/2026/02/23/699bf97e468aeb73618b459b.html)

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

 

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: The Human Exposome Project will map how environmental factors influence our health.
  • Global Health: Leaving the WHO does not serve the best global or American interests.
  • International Health Policy: The days of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s “wild” hegemony in health may be coming to an end.
  • National Health Policy: The doctors’ strike corners Minister García and puts thousands of appointments at risk.
  • Companies: BioNTech creates an mRNA vaccine to treat the most dangerous form of breast cancer.

Biomedicine

  • The Human Exposome Project will map how environmental factors influence our health. Several studies suggest that the cause of diseases is 20% genetic and 80% related to environmental factors.
  • Can shingles vaccines slow aging? The evidence is surprisingly strong. New data suggests it reduces the risk of dementia by 20%.
  • Cats offer clues for better cancer treatments. Similarities between tumors in cats and humans provide certain insights into treating diseases.

Global Health

  • Leaving the WHO does not contribute to the best global or American interests. The US seems to trust bilateral agreements more than global ones. Along these lines, it published the Global Health Strategy, which includes agreements with 15 countries, surprisingly without mentioning vaccines. Agreements with another 50 countries are planned. It also calls for a focus on certain infectious diseases—such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and polio—but not on maternal and child health, reproductive health, certain tropical diseases, non-communicable diseases, and other important health conditions.
  • The problems in the Cuban health system are deepening. The Cuban Minister of Health, José Ángel Portal Miranda, has acknowledged the poor situation. He has blamed the crisis on the American embargo, in line with the official position.
  • Health on the Front Lines: Four Years After the Start of the War in Ukraine. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has been a catastrophe on all levels, including health. In four years, there have been more than 47,000 Ukrainian civilian casualties, 5-6 million people have emigrated, and 3-8 million have been internally displaced, disrupting their healthcare. The deliberate attack on healthcare facilities has been a substantial part of the Russian strategy.

International Health Policy

  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s days of “wild” hegemony in health may be ending. After letting him act freely until now, it seems the White House is beginning to worry about some of his initiatives.
  • Primary Care Deserts: Data Shows a Shortage of Primary Care Physicians in the UK. Four-fifths of integrated councils in England need to at least double their number of primary care physicians to reach staffing standards considered adequate, according to the British Medical Journal.
  • The British pharmacy sector sees Morrison’s sales as another warning sign for the NHS. The British giant is divesting itself of dozens of its community pharmacies to reduce costs; this situation highlights “the real economic danger facing pharmaceutical companies,” according to Community Pharmacy England.
  • The fragility of the healthcare system in Venezuela. Healthcare spending was 1.7% of GDP in 2018, well below the Latin American average of 4%. All indicators are very negative, even by regional standards.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The doctors’ strike corners Minister García and puts thousands of appointments at risk. The Platform of the Patients’ Organization (POP) estimates that cancellations could exceed 450,000. The Ministry maintains its intransigent position.
  • Mónica García fails to convince Junts in her first parliamentary blitz on the Public Management Law. Although the Minister of Health assures that the new law “does not harm the Catalan model,” the separatists respond that “neither you nor any minister has the right to say anything about how Catalonia is organized.” This law aims to make any public-private partnership mechanism virtually impossible, in addition to interfering in management aspects transferred to the autonomous communities. Although the chances of the law being approved are minimal, this does not diminish the extremely serious nature of the text’s content.
  • The Bioregion of Catalonia consolidates its leadership in the pharmaceutical industry. It concentrates 79 pharmaceutical production plants, 44% of the national total, and represents nearly 50% of the sector’s revenue, according to the Biocat 2025 Report, which analyzes the industrial, scientific, and regulatory weight of the Catalan ecosystem.

Companies

  • International
    • BioNTech creates an mRNA vaccine to treat the most aggressive form of breast cancer. The first clinical trial demonstrates that the vaccine creates a long-lasting immune response tailored to each patient’s tumor.
  • National
    • Ribera completes the acquisition of the Valencian group HCB Hospitales for €100 million. With a team of more than 650 professionals, it has two hospitals in Benidorm and Denia, three medical centers in Calpe, Moraira, and Albir, and two centers in Benidorm and Denia, as well as two diagnostic imaging centers in Alicante.

Biomedicine

  • Can shingles vaccines slow aging? The evidence is surprisingly strong. New data suggests it reduces the risk of dementia by 20% (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/02/13/can-the-shingles-vaccine-slow-ageing)
  • The Human Exposome Project will map how environmental factors influence our health. Several studies suggest that the cause of diseases is 20% genetic and 80% related to environmental factors (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/02/18/the-human-exposome-project-will-map-how-environmental-factors-shape-health)
  • Scientists say air pollution is linked to the risk of Alzheimer’s. Particles from fossil fuel combustion may damage the brain more than previously thought (https://www.ft.com/content/35c5904e-c1bc-452c-9f38-29b6b1b77066). Access the original article: https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1004912
  • Cats hold clues to better cancer treatments. Similarities between tumors in cats and humans offer some clues for treating diseases (https://www.ft.com/content/807ac68a-d96a-4da0-bdfc-5970c3c5a836)
  • Psychedelics found in Amazonian ayahuasca hold promise for treating depression. Single doses were able to eliminate the symptoms (https://www.ft.com/content/492f3a15-6c5d-4e26-8e1e-a24902d0bed3)
  • Tetris-based therapy shows promise in post-traumatic stress (https://www.ft.com/content/e185a5ed-833e-416d-9a10-e0178754dde0)
  • EDEN: The AI ​​system that learns from a million species to design new treatments. The model allows for the precise and complex modification of cells and molecules to cure diseases (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2026-02-18/eden-el-sistema-de-ia-que-aprende-de-un-millon-de-especies-para-disenar-nuevos-tratamientos.html)
  • Revolution in the treatment of multiple sclerosis: AI discovers new subtypes of this disease. British researchers have combined imaging tests and blood markers to describe two distinct patterns.
  • (https://www.elespanol.com/ciencia/salud/20260218/revolucion-tratamiento-esclerosis-multiple-ia-descubre-nuevos-subtipos-enfermedad/1003744132864_0.html)
  • Photonic technology to diagnose Alzheimer’s in Spain through the eyes. These diagnoses can be made quickly by observing the lens and retina using two different techniques (https://www.elespanol.com/ciencia/salud/20260217/tecnologia-fotonica-diagnosticar-alzheimer-espana-traves-ojos-puede-detectar-anos/1003744132793_0.html)

Global Health

  • Problems in the Cuban health system are deepening. Cuban Health Minister José Ángel Portal Miranda has acknowledged the dire situation. He has blamed the crisis on the American embargo, in line with the official position (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00356-9/fulltext)
  • Health on the front lines: four years after the start of the war in Ukraine. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has been a catastrophe on all levels, including health. In four years, there have been more than 47,000 Ukrainian civilian casualties, 5-6 million people have emigrated, and 3-8 million have been internally displaced, disrupting their access to healthcare. The deliberate attack on healthcare facilities has been a substantial part of the Russian strategy (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00355-7/fulltext).
  • Leaving the WHO does not serve the best global or American interests. The US seems to rely more on bilateral agreements than on global ones. Along these lines, it published the Global Health Strategy, which includes agreements with 15 countries, surprisingly without mentioning vaccines. Agreements with another 50 countries are planned. It also calls for a focus on certain infectious diseases—such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and polio—but not on maternal and child health, reproductive health, certain tropical diseases, non-communicable diseases, and other major health conditions (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aeg1937). Access the Global Health Strategy, September 2025: https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/America-First-Global-Health-Strategy-Report.pdf

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump’s rejection of the fight against climate change is “a rejection of the laws of physics.” Scientists have condemned this initiative, labeling it a rejection of scientific logic (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s324)
    • The FDA’s change of course on Moderna’s flu vaccine after pressure from the White House. This follows an interview between the FDA Commissioner and President Trump, who expressed his displeasure with the measure, according to Politico (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/18/fda-reverses-course-on-moderna-flu-shot-bid-00785799)
    • The days of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s “wild” hegemony in health may be coming to an end. After letting him act freely until now, it seems the White House is starting to worry about some of his initiatives (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/21/rfk-midterms-maha-pesticides-vaccines-food-00792018)
    • Should over-the-counter medications be advertised to the public? Controversy begins over direct drug advertising, amid an offensive by certain brands regarding aging (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/16/health/drug-advertisements-consumers.html)
    • Measles makes a strong comeback in the United States, raising alarms. A total of 24 states are now affected by this disease, including Florida, Arizona, Washington, and South Carolina (https://www.vozpopuli.com/sanitatem/el-sarampion-vuelve-con-fuerza-a-estados-unidos.html)
  • China
    • Pharmaceutical consumption has grown more in China than in the USA in the last five years. A new report from IQVIA indicates that by the end of the decade, drug consumption will approach four trillion defined daily doses (DDDs). Growth is pronounced in China and modest in the United States. (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/18/el-consumo-farmaceutico-crecio-mas-en-china-que-en-eeuu-en-los-ultimos-5-anos)
  • United Kingdom
    • Deserts in Primary Care: Data shows a shortage of primary care physicians in the United Kingdom. Four-fifths of integrated councils in England need to at least double their number of primary care physicians to reach staffing standards considered adequate, according to the British Medical Journal (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s301)
    • English pharmacies see Morrison’s sales as another warning sign for the NHS. The British giant is divesting itself of dozens of its community pharmacies to reduce costs; this situation highlights “the real economic danger facing pharmaceutical companies,” according to Community Pharmacy England (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/16/la-farmacia-inglesa-ve-en-la-venta-de-farmacias-morrison-otra-senal-de-alerta-grave-para-el-nhs)
  • France
    • The end-of-life debate returns to the National Assembly. The two texts on palliative care and assisted dying are being debated in the Assembly (https://www.lemonde.fr/politique/article/2026/02/16/fin-de-vie-le-debat-revient-a-l-assemblee-nationale-en-deuxieme-lecture_6666940_823448.html)
    • AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis: France reduces its contribution to the Global Fund by almost 60%. This decrease in aid is disappointing for the association, as these three diseases cause 2.5 million deaths worldwide each year (https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2026/02/20/sida-paludisme-tuberculose-la-france-abaisse-de-pres-de-60-sa-contribution-au-fonds-mondial_6667596_3244.html)
    • The national health data platform is a strategic asset for France. This country possesses one of the world’s richest health data assets, but struggles to mobilize it for research, public health, and innovation, prior to the creation of the Health Data Hub in 2019 (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/02/16/la-plateforme-nationale-des-donnees-de-sante-est-un-actif-strategique-pour-la-france_6666976_3232.html)
  • Venezuela
    • The fragility of the health system in Venezuela. Health spending was 1.7% of GDP in 2018, well below the Latin American average of 4%. All indicators are very negative, even by regional standards (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00203-5/fulltext)
  • India
    • India’s pollution is an economic roadblock. Government inaction is a problem for its own development goals (https://www.economist.com/asia/2026/02/15/indias-pollution-is-becoming-an-economic-roadblock)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government Initiatives
    • The government postpones the selection of the headquarters for the State Public Health Agency until August. The government indicates this is due to the number of applications submitted and the construction work that would be required. This is not credible; rather, the reason is the delicate political situation with many elections, and that it is better to proceed in August (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260217/gobierno-retrasa-agosto-eleccion-sede-agencia-salud-publica-obras-requieren-aspirantes/1003744133939_0.html)
    • The Public Health Agency will operate immediately, even without a headquarters. While the agency could operate from within the Ministry of Health (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/sanidad-hoy/la-agencia-de-salud-publica-operara-de-forma-inmediata-incluso-sin-sede-7235)
  • Regional Administrations
    • Basque Health Cluster and GSK seal a strategic alliance to boost healthcare innovation in Spain. The biopharmaceutical company joins as a Business Partner of the Basque cluster with the aim of strengthening open collaboration and accelerating the transformation of the healthcare ecosystem (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/nacional/basque-health-cluster-y-gsk-sellan-una-alianza-estrategica-para-impulsar-la-innovacion-sanitaria-en-euskadi.html)
    • Galicia secures its leadership in oncology: 23 million invested in CAR-T and the milestone of proton therapy. The Minister of Health, Antonio Gómez Caamaño, announces that the region will be the first to implement public proton therapy and will create a pioneering population-based genomic map (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/galicia/galicia-blinda-liderazgo-oncologico-car-t-protonterapia-farmacos-propios.html)
    • The Bioregion of Catalonia consolidates its leadership in the pharmaceutical industry. It concentrates 79 pharmaceutical production plants, 44% of the national total, and represents nearly 50% of the sector’s revenue, according to the Biocat 2025 Report, which analyzes the industrial, scientific, and regulatory weight of the Catalan ecosystem (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/19/la-bioregion-de-cataluna-consolida-su-liderazgo-en-la-industria-farmaceutica-en-espana)
    • Collaborative dispensing avoids 78,000 trips annually in Andalusia. The model for delivering hospital medication through community pharmacies increases the efficiency of the system and improves health outcomes (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/18/la-dispensacion-colaborativa-evita-78-000-desplazamientos-anuales-en-andalucia)
    • The Galician government (Xunta) declares 29 special pharmaceutical zones to facilitate the viability of rural pharmacies. A total of 18 of the pharmacies are located in the province of Ourense and 11 in Lugo (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/18/la-xunta-declara-las-29-zonas-farmaceuticas-especiales-para-facilitar-la-viabilidad-de-boticas-rurales)
  • Problems with the Framework Statute
    • The doctors’ strike corners Minister García and puts thousands of appointments at risk. The Platform of the Patient Organization (POP) estimates that cancellations could exceed 450,000 (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/02/17/69934820fc6c8381138b45b2.html)
    • Doctors are making progress with the PP, Vox, and ERC to block the Framework Statute while their strike paralyzes healthcare. The group has secured a meeting with these three parliamentary groups with the aim of halting the legislation in Parliament (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260219/medicos-avanzan-pp-vox-erc-frenar-estatuto-marco-huelga-paraliza-sanidad/1003744135944_0.html)
  • Measles
    • The WHO has issued a warning to Spain regarding its handling of the measles outbreak. Our country, along with five other European nations, has lost its status as a measles-free country. The recent outbreak in Alicante and the circulation of cases detected in Madrid this week do not suggest that the situation will reverse in the short term (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/02/22/69975206e9cf4a6a0a8b456e.html)
  • Public Management Law
    • Mónica García fails to convince Junts in her first parliamentary debate on the Public Management Law. Although the Minister of Health assures that the new law “does not harm the Catalan model,” the separatists respond that “neither you nor any minister has any say in how Catalonia is organized” (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/18/monica-garcia-no-convence-a-junts-en-el-primer-lance-parlamentario-sobre-la-ley-de-gestion-publica)

Companies

  • International
    • BioNTech creates an RNA vaccine to treat the most aggressive form of breast cancer. The first clinical trial demonstrates that the vaccine creates a long-lasting immune response tailored to each patient’s tumor (https://www.lavanguardia.com/ciencia/20260218/11468768/biontech-crea-vacuna-arn-tratar-cancer-mama-peor-pronostico.html)
    • Smartwatches still don’t accurately measure blood pressure. Current evidence suggests caution. A recent article analyzed whether these devices can truly replace clinically validated blood pressure monitors. The conclusion is clear: not yet (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/relojes-inteligentes-miden-bien-tension-arterial-20260218163713-nt.html)
    • Vaccines could enter a downward financial spiral. The reluctance of citizens and the US government is ultimately affecting corporate investment (https://cincodias.elpais.com/opinion/2026-02-20/las-vacunas-pueden-entrar-en-una-espiral-financiera-descendente.html)
  • National
    • Cofares breaks its sales record again with a 7.4% increase, reaching €4.58 billion. The pharmaceutical cooperative once again leads the wholesale market, with a 30% share (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260218/cofares-vuelve-batir-record-facturacion-ventas-toca-millones-euros/1003744135496_0.html)
    • Lilly chooses Spain to manufacture its obesity pills. Alcobendas will host the final phase of orforglipron production. Thanks to an investment of over €300 million initiated in 2023 (https://es.linkedin.com/posts/el-mundo_lilly-apuesta-por-espa%C3%B1a-para-fabricar-las-activity-7429101551958437888-s7vU)
    • Ribera closes the purchase of the Valencian group HCB Hospitales for €100 million. With a team of over 650 professionals, it has two hospitals in Benidorm and Denia, three medical centers in Calpe, Moraira and Albir, and two centers in Benidorm and Denia, and two diagnostic imaging centers in Alicante. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260218/ribera-cierra-compra-grupo-valenciano-hcb-hospitales-millones/1003744135296_0.html)
    • ISDIN’s revenue is €648 million and its profit is 14% lower (https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2026/02/18/69961283468aeb85408b45a2.html)

 

 

7 days in healthcare (February 8th-15th, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Obesity is linked to a 70% higher risk of serious infections.
  • Global Health: African countries must take control of their health policies.
  • International Health Policy: Trump revokes the greenhouse gas emissions assessment and intensifies the climate offensive.
  • National Health Policy: The government approves a bill intended to curb public management of healthcare. A complete absurdity and a compendium of sectarianism.
  • Business: Corporate health insurance becomes 10% more expensive, straining company budgets.

Biomedicine

  • Obesity is linked to a 70% higher risk of serious infections, including influenza and pneumonia.
  • The end of animals in medical experimentation? Both the US and UK governments are calling for an end to the use of animals in experimentation. But we must ask ourselves whether this approach is realistic and will not hinder research progress. The approach is based on New Approach Methodologies (NAMs). But until researchers find a model that allows them to model the entire human body, it will be difficult to do without animal experimentation.

Global Health

  • African countries must take control of their health policies. Massive aid cuts are having a devastating short-term effect, but they can help build more resilient systems in the long term.
  • Peru has had to recall thousands of cancer drugs due to contamination, interrupting cancer treatments. The Andean country has imported at least 118,000 vials of chemotherapy drugs that have ended up being discarded after failing quality tests since 2019, according to an investigation. One in four cancer patients has their treatment delayed due to drug shortages.

International Health Policy

  • Trump revokes the greenhouse gas emissions assessment and deepens the climate offensive. The revocation of the hazard assessment approved this Thursday by US President Donald Trump, issued in 2009 establishing that six greenhouse gases are harmful, is the latest in a series of measures by the Republican that run counter to efforts to curb climate change.
  • An important article in The Lancet by a group of prestigious academics analyzes the aspirations and implementation of the 10-year Health Plan for NHS England. The plan, published in July 2025, contains a series of policies, ambitions, and objectives. A chapter on implementation is expected.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The new law with which the government wants to curb private management of public healthcare, approved last Tuesday by the Council of Ministers, aims to limit forms of private participation in the public service. The text explicitly prohibits models of construction concessions with subsequent management of the hospital. The draft bill has been made public, giving a deadline of March 4th for submitting contributions to the Ministry. The text is a complete anti-European absurdity, with a ridiculous “scientific” approach in the preamble, a compendium of sectarianism, and harmful to the public healthcare sector. Its only redeeming quality is that it will never be approved, as that is not the intention; rather, it is to generate propaganda by publishing draft bills for which the government lacks a majority and, incidentally, to wage a political battle within “Más Madrid.”
  • Thousands of people demonstrated in Madrid against Ayuso’s healthcare policy. The demonstrators, called by unions and neighborhood associations on February 9th, demanded that the regional government halt the privatization of services, chanting “Either you have the checkbook or you’re going to the other side.”
  • The Community of Madrid has forgiven 71 million euros to private companies after they assumed responsibility for treating its patients. An internal document from the Ayuso government confirms that the public healthcare system loses millions every year by not billing private hospitals for many of the treatments it provides for its patients.
  • Castilla-La Mancha launches the H3.0 health plan with an emphasis on data management. It is a new healthcare model committed to integrating AI, robotics, data analytics, and precision and genomic medicine.
  • Some 5,000 doctors in Madrid are demanding the resignation of Mónica García and a specific Framework Statute for their profession. The demonstration on February 14th is a prelude to the five-day strike planned for next week, the first of five strikes scheduled until July. Whatever it may be called, doctors, whose doctor-patient relationship is the core of any healthcare system, need a distinct dialogue. Experience over the years has shown that this dialogue is lost amidst a multifaceted union representation that neither understands nor wants to understand doctors’ positions. The Ministry of Health is responsible for fueling this conflict with its intransigent stance.
  • The government has signed an agreement establishing a 21% profit margin for pharmacies (6% for distribution), to be reviewed every two years. Royal Decree 90/2026 on the financing and pricing of healthcare products introduces significant changes to their funding. The final text sets a 21% margin for pharmacies (6% for distribution) and strengthens economic control. It also establishes a review schedule by group for products already on the market.

Companies

  • International
    • Novo Nordisk intensifies its battle against Lilly by launching Wegovy in vials. Novo Nordisk will begin marketing Wegovy, its flagship drug, in vials, abandoning the exclusivity of the plastic injection pens it has used until now. This will represent a key strategic shift in its fight for dominance in the weight-loss drug market.
  • National
    • Corporate health insurance becomes 10% more expensive, putting pressure on company budgets. Corporate spending on health will remain around 9% in 2026.

Biomedicine

  • The end of animals in medical experimentation? Both the US and UK governments are calling for an end to the use of animals in experimentation. But we must ask ourselves whether this approach is realistic and will not hinder the progress of research. The approach is based on New Approach Methodologies (NAMs). But until researchers find a model that allows them to model the entire human body, it will be difficult to do without animal experimentation (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00298-9/abstract).
  • Obesity is linked to a 70% higher risk of serious infections, including influenza and pneumonia (https://www.ft.com/content/b6f8a203-c2e5-4e34-bec8-3e0111b37e16). Access the original Lancet study: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)02474-2/fulltext
  • 2-3 cups of coffee a day are linked to a lower risk of Alzheimer’s, but not if it’s decaffeinated. This conclusion was reached after following 132,000 people for 40 years (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/09/health/coffee-tea-dementia-risk.html). Access the original JAMA article: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2844764?guestAcces%5b…%5dferral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=020926
  • The shortcomings of the ChapGPT test for medical diagnosis (https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2026/02/09/les-failles-de-chatgpt-pour-l-autodiagnostic-medical-revelees-par-une-etude_6666026_4408996.html). Access the original article: https://cdn.openai.com/pdf/2cb29276-68cd-4ec6-a5f4-c01c5e7a36e9/OpenAI-AI-as-a-Healthcare-Ally-Jan-2026.pdf

Global Health

  • African countries must take control of their health policies. Massive aid cuts are having a devastating short-term effect, but can help build more resilient systems in the long run (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00381-7)
  • Peru has had to recall thousands of cancer drugs due to contamination, disrupting cancer treatments. The Andean country has imported at least 118,000 vials of chemotherapy drugs that have ended up being discarded after failing quality tests since 2019, according to an investigation. One in four cancer patients experiences delays in treatment due to drug shortages (https://elpais.com/planeta-futuro/2026-02-12/peru-retira-miles-de-medicamentos-importados-contra-el-cancer-por-estar-contaminados-interrumpiendo-tratamientos-vitales.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump revokes greenhouse gas hazard assessment and deepens climate offensive. The revocation of the hazard assessment approved this Thursday by US President Donald Trump, issued in 2009 establishing that six greenhouse gases are harmful, is the latest in a series of measures by the Republican that run counter to efforts to curb climate change. (https://www.elindependiente.com/economia/2026/02/13/trump-revoca-el-dictamen-de-peligrosidad-de-los-gases-de-efecto-invernadero-y-profundiza-su-ofensiva-climatica/)
    • The Trump Administration withdraws $600 million in healthcare funding from four Democratic states: California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/09/health/trump-public-health-cuts-california.html)
  • China
    • Drug use in China will double by 2030, while it stabilizes in the USA, Europe, and Japan. A new report from IQVIA highlights that the drugs that will contribute most to increased spending will be those for oncology, immunology, diabetes, and obesity (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/medicamentos-china-duplicara-2030-europa-eeuu-japon-estabiliza/)
  • United Kingdom
    • An important article in The Lancet by a group of prestigious academics analyzes the aspirations and implementation of the 10-year Health Plan for NHS England. The plan, published in July 2025, contains a series of policies, ambitions, and objectives. A chapter on implementation is expected (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00035-8/abstract)
    • Millions of women in the UK have access to only one IVF cycle through the NHS. Health authorities continue to cut availability, despite official policies (https://www.ft.com/content/cd560417-8e6b-40fc-b23c-e305fe9fb753)
  • France
    • French people exposed to worrying levels of cadmium, lead, and aluminum through food, warns the French Agency for Health Safety (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/02/12/cadmium-plomb-aluminium-les-francais-exposes-a-des-niveaux-preoccupants-via-l-alimentation-alertent-les-autorites-de-sante_6666416_1651302.html)
  • India
    • A patient-centered health system for India. The Indian health system is undergoing a shift towards universal coverage, a crucial component for raising the country’s development status by 2047. The Lancet Commission has made many proposals (https://www.thelancet.com/commissions-do/india-citizen-health)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government Initiatives
    • The new law with which the government wants to curb private management in public healthcare, approved last Tuesday by the Council of Ministers, aims to limit forms of private participation in the public service. The text explicitly prohibits models of construction concessions with subsequent hospital management. The draft text has been made public, giving a deadline of March 4th for submitting contributions to the Ministry. The general impression is that the text will not be approved and that it is part of a policy of approving propaganda texts that then never come into effect because they are not passed (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-02-10/nueva-ley-frenar-la-gestion-privada-en-la-sanidad-publica_4300485/)
    • Brussels questions the government’s new anti-smoking law. The European Commission and the CNMC warn the Ministry of Health of legal risks, lack of proportionality, and potential distortions of the internal market (https://www.larazon.es/sociedad/bruselas-cuestiona-nueva-ley-antitabaco-monica-garcia_20260210698a83f79243cc133c3e799f.html)
    • Up to seven health initiatives hope to pass Congress, including the law to limit public-private partnerships, the tobacco law, the framework statute, the medicines law, and the alcohol law (https://www.consalud.es/politica/hasta-siete-iniciativas-sanitarias-aspiran-a-superar-el-complejo-liston-del-congreso.html)
  • Regional governments
    • A report links the precarious state of Emergency Departments in Catalonia with hospital mortality. The Catalan Audit Office and unions denounce the long waiting times and lack of resources in the region’s emergency rooms (https://www.vozpopuli.com/espana/cataluna/un-informe-vincula-la-precariedad-en-las-urgencias-de-cataluna-con-la-mortalidad-hospitalaria.html)
    • The map of the Catalan healthcare system is presented, prioritizing proximity. The new model, although reducing the number of management areas from 43 to 30, promises to “adapt to the specific characteristics of each territory.” (https://elpais.com/espana/catalunya/2026-02-10/salud-presenta-el-mapa-del-sistema-sanitario-catalan-con-la-creacion-de-30-areas-integradas.html)
    • Thousands of people demonstrate in Madrid against Ayuso’s healthcare policy. The protesters, called together by unions and neighborhood associations, are demanding that the regional government halt the privatization of services, chanting “either you have a checkbook or you’re going to the other side” (https://elpais.com/espana/madrid/2026-02-08/miles-de-personas-se-manifiestan-en-madrid-contra-la-politica-sanitaria-de-ayuso.html)
    • The Community of Madrid has forgiven 71 million euros to private companies after they assumed responsibility for and treated its patients. An internal document from the Ayuso government confirms that the public health system loses millions every year by not billing private hospitals for many of the treatments it provides for its patients. (https://www.eldiario.es/sociedad/comunidad-madrid-perdonado-71-millones-quiron-ribera-salud-asumir-tratar-pacientes_1_12899576.html)
    • Castilla-La Mancha launches the H3.0 health plan with an emphasis on data management. It is a new healthcare model committed to integrating AI, robotics, data analytics, and precision and genomic medicine. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/castilla-mancha-pone-marcha-plan-salud-h30-foco-gestion-datos.html)
    • Cantabria signs improvements with doctors. Its objective is to attract and retain medical professionals, including resident physicians, in the regional health service. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/cantabria-buruaga-firma-medicos-mejoras-supeditadas-presupuestos.html)
  • Problems with the Framework Statute
    • Some 5,000 doctors in Madrid are demanding the resignation of Mónica García and their own Framework Statute. The demonstration is a prelude to the five-day strike planned for next week, the first of five planned until July (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-02-14/unos-5000-medicos-piden-en-madrid-la-dimision-de-monica-garcia-y-un-estatuto-marco-propio.html)
  • Patient Organizations Law
    • Patient associations disagree on the new law: POP is against it, while the Foro is in favor. The Platform of Patient Organizations (POP) is calling for the correction of Article 2 of the regulations, as it leaves the concept of “patient association” too broad (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260211/desacuerdo-organizaciones-pacientes-nueva-ley-no-soluciona-problema-viene-corregir/1003744125483_0.html)
  • Pharmacy
    • The government signs a 21% margin for pharmacies (6% for distributors), to be reviewed every two years. Royal Decree 90/2026 on the financing and pricing of healthcare products introduces significant changes to their financing. The final text sets a 21% margin for pharmacies (6% for distributors) and strengthens economic control. It also establishes a review schedule by product group for products already on the market. (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/12/el-gobierno-fija-en-el-21-el-margen-de-los-ppss-en-farmacia-se-revisara-cada-dos-anos)

Companies

  • International
    • Novo Nordisk intensifies its battle against Lilly by launching Wegovy in vials. Novo Nordisk will begin marketing Wegovy, its flagship drug, in vials, abandoning the exclusivity of the plastic injection pens it has used until now. This will represent a key strategic shift in its fight for dominance in the weight-loss drug market. (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/2026/02/12/698dc8eee5fdea0b138b4727.html)
    • AstraZeneca expects to earn €8.597 billion in 2025, a 54.3% increase, and raises its annual dividend (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260210/astrazeneca-gana-millones-euros-eleva-dividendo-anual/1003744124842_0.html)
  • National
    • Corporate health insurance becomes 10% more expensive, putting pressure on company budgets. Corporate spending on healthcare will remain around 9% in 2026. Prevention and claims management are key to maintaining profits (https://cincodias.elpais.com/extras/ciencia-salud/2026-02-14/el-seguro-medico-corporativo-se-encarece-un-10-y-tensiona-los-presupuestos-de-las-empresas.html)
    • Roche Diagnostics is considering layoffs of up to 50 people in Sant Cugat. The Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche has filed for workforce reductions at Roche Diagnostics, its subsidiary specializing in diagnostics, whose Spanish headquarters are located in Sant Cugat del Vallés (Barcelona) (https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2026/02/13/698f7e45e5fdea4e028b45c4.html)
    • Abbott is considering expanding its plant in Granada due to increased demand in nutrition. The multinational medical technology company exports from its factory in Andalusia to 65 countries. (https://cincodias.elpais.com/extras/ciencia-salud/2026-02-13/abbott-estudia-la-ampliacion-de-su-planta-de-granada-por-la-mayor-demanda-en-nutricion.html)

 

 

7 days in healthcare (February 2nd-8th, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: More than a third of cancers originate from preventable risk factors.
  • Global Health: Biblical diseases may resurface in Africa.
  • International Health Policy: TrumpRx, the online drug store, launches.
  • National Health Policy: Following the AIREF report, the Social Security system convenes social partners to discuss the lack of control over sick leave.
  • Companies: Asisa will increase its doctors’ compensation by 7.3% by 2026.

Biomedicine

  • More than a third of cancers originate from preventable risk factors. Tobacco, infections, and alcohol are the main causes. The study published in Nature Medicine states that of the 20 million cancers diagnosed in 2022, 38% were caused by preventable factors. It is the most comprehensive study conducted to date on preventable causes of cancer and confirms tobacco as the greatest risk factor.
  • Electronic cigarettes: a comprehensive study outlining the risks. After reviewing 3,000 articles, the French Agency for Health Safety (ANSES) states that vaping poses short- and long-term health risks, while acknowledging its value in smoking cessation.

Global Health

  • Biblical diseases may resurface in Africa. Parasites and infections that cause blindness and other disabilities had been nearly eradicated in some countries, but the distribution of medications to treat and prevent them has been halted in many places by 2025, following the cessation of US aid (USAID).
  • Venezuela: health after the political earthquake. More than 20 million Venezuelans live in abject poverty, without access to medicines. The current crisis is chronic and a result of the corruption and mismanagement of the Chávez and Maduro governments.

International Health Policy

  • TrumpRx, the online drug store, launches. According to the New York Times, researchers say the public may end up paying too much if they use this store. The website will not sell medications, but will only indicate where they can be purchased and at what price. It is backed by agreements with some pharmaceutical companies. The website will offer information on 43 medications, from insulin to obesity therapies. It is unlikely that Americans will save money with this method; many medications are covered by insurance, and cheaper generic versions of many others are available. Around 85% of Americans have prescription drug insurance coverage.
  • The FDA launches PreCheck incentives to revitalize domestic pharmaceutical manufacturing. “After 35 years of globalists moving pharmaceutical manufacturing overseas, the FDA is taking bold steps to bring it back,” says FDA Commissioner Marty Makary.
  • The NHS agreement with the United States will cost the United Kingdom £1 billion over the next three years. The Minister of Science says the NHS will obtain this money outside its regular budget.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Following the AIREF report, the Social Security system is calling a meeting with social partners regarding the lack of control over sick leave. The Secretary of State will meet on Monday with unions and employers’ associations after the Fiscal Authority’s report blames the Social Security system for failing to control sick leave.
  • This is how other statutes governing the medical profession in Europe work. In neighboring countries with different terminology, doctors have exclusive regulations and negotiating bodies. According to FEMS (European Federation of Salaried Doctors), only Croatia and Romania have the same structure as Spain.

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly’s Mounjaro takes over from Novo Nordisk as the top-selling obesity medication.
  • National News
    • Asisa will increase its doctors’ compensation by 7.3% by 2026. The insurer will apply the increase retroactively from January 1st, with increases that can exceed 16% depending on the specialty and level of service.
    • Spain will spend as much on health insurance as on car insurance in 2027. In 2025, health insurance premiums increased by 11.43%, to €13.443 billion, the highest growth among the main non-life insurance lines.

Biomedicine

  • More than a third of cancers originate from preventable risks. Tobacco, infections, and alcohol are the main causes. The study published in Nature Medicine says that of the 20 million cancers diagnosed in 2022, 38% originated from preventable causes. It is the largest study to date on preventable causes of cancer and confirms tobacco as the greatest risk factor (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/02/04/more-than-a-third-of-cancers-arise-from-preventable-risks). Access the original article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-026-04219-7
  • Cancers, immunotherapy, the revolutionary treatment that presents risks. Emerging in the early 2010s, this treatment produces toxicities in 10-50% of patients (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/02/03/cancers-les-immunotherapies-des-traitements-revolutionnaires-qui-presentent-des-risques_6665255_1650684.html)
  • Electronic cigarettes: a comprehensive study outlining the risks. After reviewing 3,000 articles, the French Agency for Health Safety says that vaping poses short- and long-term health risks, while acknowledging its value in smoking cessation (https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2026/02/04/cigarette-electronique-l-anses-rend-un-avis-prudent-sur-les-risques-sanitaires-du-vapotage_6665288_3244.html)
  • A brain implant allows a person blinded by optic nerve damage to regain their sight. Scientists at the Miguel Hernández University of Elche stimulated the visual cortex of a blind man until he was able to perceive light, movement, and even large letters (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2026-02-03/un-implante-en-el-cerebro-permite-recuperar-la-vision-a-un-hombre-ciego-por-una-lesion-en-el-nervio-optico.html)
  • CRISPR allows targeting tumors with amplified oncogenes and points to precision therapies. Preclinical results from a study by the CNIO and CIEMAT show that gene editing points to new precision therapies against resistant cancers (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/05/crispr-permite-atacar-tumores-con-oncogenes-amplificados-y-apunta-a-terapias-de-precision)

Global Health

  • Venezuela: health after the political earthquake. More than 20 million Venezuelans live in abject poverty, without access to medicine. The current crisis is chronic and a result of the corruption and mismanagement of the Chávez and Maduro governments (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00249-7/fulltext)
  • Biblical diseases may resurface in Africa. Parasites and infections that cause blindness and other disabilities had been nearly eliminated in some countries, but the distribution of medicines to treat and prevent them has been halted in many places by 2025, following the end of US aid (USAID) (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/03/health/neglected-tropical-diseases-usaid-ntds-river-blindness.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • TrumpRx, the online drug store, launches. According to the New York Times, researchers say the public may end up paying too much if they use this store. The website will not sell medications, but will only indicate where they can be purchased and at what price. It is backed by agreements with some pharmaceutical companies. The website will offer information on 43 medications, from insulin to obesity therapies. It is unlikely that Americans will save money with this method; many medications are covered by insurance, and cheaper generic versions of many others are available. Around 85% of Americans have drug insurance coverage (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/health/trumprx-online-drugstore-prices.html)
    • The FDA launches PreCheck incentives to boost domestic pharmaceutical manufacturing. “After 35 years of globalists moving pharmaceutical manufacturing abroad, the FDA is taking bold steps to bring it back,” says FDA Commissioner Marty Makary (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/01/la-fda-lanza-los-incentivos-precheck-para-relanzar-la-fabricacion-farmaceutica-nacional-de-ee-uu)
    • Millions of Americans lose their health insurance as COVID-19 subsidies disappear. With insurance prices rising, around 4.8 million Americans could lose their coverage (https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2826%2900251-5)
    • In the USA, science skeptics are now in power. According to The Economist, the American government seems to want less clean energy and more preventable diseases (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/02/04/in-america-science-sceptics-are-now-in-charge)
    • The right to die is spreading in the USA. States where a third of the population lives may soon allow assisted dying (https://www.economist.com/united-states/2026/02/02/the-right-to-die-is-spreading-in-america)
  • China
    • More and more foreigners are choosing to go to China for healthcare. The influx of tourists is creating problems for locals (https://www.economist.com/china/2026/02/05/why-more-foreigners-are-seeking-health-care-in-china)
  • United Kingdom
    • The NHS deal with the United States will cost the UK £1 billion over the next three years. The science minister says the NHS will raise this money outside its regular budget (https://www.ft.com/content/624bf05e-5a37-4b17-96ec-3f64c0a624fa)
    • A growing number of adults in the UK are turning away from alcohol, which is driving the trend. 24% of British adults say they don’t drink (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s207)
    • Residents vote for six more months of labor demands with strikes (https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s218)
  • France
    • The right to assisted dying is again approved by MPs in committee. After being rejected in the Senate, it returns to the Congress for a second reading (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/02/05/le-droit-a-l-aide-a-mourir-est-a-nouveau-approuve-par-les-deputes-en-commission_6665440_3224.html)
    • Participatory health centers, deployed in 2021 in disadvantaged neighborhoods, at risk due to budget cuts (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/02/05/acces-aux-soins-inquietude-autour-des-26-centres-de-sante-participatifs-un-dispositif-medical-dans-des-quartiers-defavorises_6665528_3224.html)
  • Brazil
    • Brazil mistakenly discovers that 13,000 medical students about to graduate lack the basic knowledge required to practice. A third of university courses failed the first national assessment of medical education. The faculties with the worst scores are municipal or private (https://elpais.com/america/2026-02-02/brasil-descubre-con-alarma-que-13000-alumnos-a-punto-de-acabar-medicina-no-saben-lo-minimo-para-ejercer.html)
    • It appears that the possibility of implementing the Spanish MIR (Medical Residency) model is being analyzed. The debate over a mandatory exam to practice medicine in Brazil has reopened comparisons with the Spanish system of Specialized Health Training, where access to and professional accreditation as a specialist have been regulated by national exams for decades (https://www.consalud.es/formacion/brasil-hacia-el-modelo-mir-espanol-para-garantizar-la-calidad-medica.html)
  • WHO
    • The WHO code on international recruitment of doctors does not strengthen poor health systems. A study published in ‘JAMA Health Forum’ concludes that the regulation temporarily reduced emigration from countries with a shortage of doctors, but did not improve staffing levels (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/codigo-oms-contratacion-internacional-medicos-refuerza-sistemas-sanitarios-pobres.html). Access the original JAMA article: https://doi.org/10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.6718
    • The WHO’s list of priority pathogens: key to curbing antimicrobial resistance. A publication in Science Direct analyzes the list (https://www.consalud.es/pacientes/la-lista-de-patogenos-prioritarios-de-la-oms-clave-para-frenar-la-resistencia-a-los-antimicrobianos.html).

National Health Policy

  • Central Government Initiatives
    • The proposed patients’ rights law is progressing, with association support. The Spanish Patients’ Forum and the POP acknowledge the Ministry’s effort to provide a differentiated and cross-cutting perspective for these organizations (https://diariofarma.com/2026/02/04/la-propuesta-de-sanidad-para-la-ley-de-pacientes-avanza-con-el-apoyo-de-las-asociaciones)
  • Initiatives of the Autonomous Communities
    • The Government of Cantabria and FENIN advance a plan to turn the region into a healthcare innovation hub (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/cantabria/el-gobierno-de-cantabria-y-fenin-avanzan-un-plan-para-convertir-la-region-en-hub-de-innovacion-sanitaria.html)
    • Strengthening staff or improving productivity: electoral proposals regarding waiting lists in Aragon. It seems the PP is focusing on attracting and retaining professionals, increasing the availability of operating rooms, and coordinating specialized services, while the PSOE is prioritizing increased funding and more staff (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/aragon/reforzar-plantillas-o-incentivos-de-productividad-propuestas-electorales-ante-las-listas-de-espera-en-aragon.html)
    • Mental health and reducing waiting lists are among the objectives of the SERGAS management agreements (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/consulta/salud-mental-reducir-listas-espera-objetivos-acuerdos-gestion-sergas.html)
  • Sick leave
    • Following the AIREF report, the Social Security system is convening with social partners to address the lack of control over sick leave. The Secretary of State will meet on Monday with unions and employers following the report from the Independent Authority for Fiscal Responsibility (AIReF) that blames the Social Security system for failing to control sick leave. (https://www.elconfidencial.com/economia/2026-02-06/seguridad-social-convoca-agentes-sociales-descontrol-bajas-medicas_4298747/) Access the AIReF spending review report: https://www.airef.es/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/SpendingReview-2022-2026-fase-2/SR2226F2_IT.pdf
  • MIR Exam
    • The 2026 exam breaks records for annulled questions (https://theobjective.com/sanidad/2026-02-07/examen-mir-record-preguntas-anuladas/)
  • Framework Statute
    • This is how the other statutes of the The medical profession in Europe. In neighboring countries with different terminology, doctors have their own exclusive rules and negotiation forums. According to the FEMS (European Federation of Medical Students), only Croatia and Romania are in the same situation as Spain. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/asi-son-estatutos-profesion-medica-europa.html)
    • Murcia points to the government as responsible for the conflict over the Framework Statute (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/murcia/murcia-senala-al-gobierno-como-responsable-del-conflicto-por-el-estatuto-marco.html)
    • Vox wants the parties in Congress to take a position on the Statute for doctors (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260204/vox-quiere-partidos-congreso-posicionen-den-opinion-estatuto-marco-propio-medicos/1003744116090_0.html)
  • Cancer
    • The Spanish Association Against Cancer says that everything related to cancer is being deprioritized. According to the president of this association, Europe is deprioritizing cancer (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/02/04/698210d6e4d4d8413b8b4584.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly’s Mounjaro takes over from Novo Nordisk as the top-selling obesity drug (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260205/mounjaro-lilly-coge-relevo-novo-nordisk-mayor-superventas-obesidad/1003744117073_0.html)
    • Pfizer will lose €1.3 billion in 2026 due to the expiration of several patents and competition from generics and biosimilars (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260204/pfizer-perdera-millones-caducidad-varias-patentes-competencia-genericos-biosimilares/1003744115331_0.html)
  • National
    • Asisa Asisa will raise its doctors’ salaries by 7.3% by 2026. The insurer will apply the increase retroactively from January 1st, with increases that can exceed 16% depending on the specialty and level of service (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/nacional/asisa-eleva-un-73-la-retribucion-de-sus-medicos-para-2026.html)
    • Ribera Povisa consolidates its leading position in Galicia after handling more than 400,000 consultations in 2025 (https://www.consalud.es/industria/sanidad-privada/ribera-povisa-consolida-su-referencia-en-galicia-tras-atender-mas-de-400000-consultas-en-2025.html)
    • Spain will spend as much on health insurance as on car insurance in 2027. In 2025, health insurance premiums increased 11.43%, to 13,443 million euros, the largest growth among the main non-life branches (https://kiosco.eleconomista.es/e-paper/viewer.aspx?publication=Sanidad&date=05_02_2026&tpuid=690#page/6)