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

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Dementia is being defeated.
  • Global health: African countries under pressure sign the Trump America First Deal health agreement.
  • International health policy: The NHS’s AI policy: means £10 billion in investment.
  • National health policy: Notable increase in sick leave in Spain, largely attributable to delays in the healthcare system.
  • Business: Investment funds are on a buying spree in Spain, targeting private healthcare.

Biomedicine

  • How dementia is being defeated. The Economist article says that the incidence among the elderly is falling rapidly. According to their analysis published in JAMA, while 40 years ago 3 out of 10 people aged 85-89 had dementia, now it’s only one.
  • Obesity is inherited: how genes determine our relationship with food. More than 3,000 genetic variants determine a predisposition to weight gain. A genetic predisposition that has been reinforced in recent years by environmental factors.
  • Liquid saliva biopsy brings early detection of head and neck cancer closer.

Global Health

  • African countries under pressure sign the Trump America First Deal health agreement; a few reject it. The multilateral approach is being replaced by bilateral agreements with countries, of which some 30 have already signed, driven by the need for aid.
  • Ending HIV: a real possibility. In a new United Nations declaration, countries commit to ending HIV by 2030.
  • The out-of-control Ebola epidemic is spreading in the Democratic Republic of Congo at a record rate.
  • Cancer is expected to increase globally, according to the WHO report.

International Health Policy

  • The NHS’s AI policy: what the £10 billion investment means and what the concerns are. The initiative includes a triage tool to direct the patient to the appropriate service, a “write” tool to transcribe the conversation with the patient, and the NHS Hospital online initiative.
  • The UK launches a national dementia registry to boost the search for treatments.
  • While RFK, Jr. wants the population to have access to more preventative care, some experts say it’s a bad idea. RFK Jr. counts test manufacturers among his allies.
  • Germany puts the death toll from the June heatwave at more than 5,000. The high number of fatalities highlights the country’s lack of preparedness for extreme temperatures.
  • Record-breaking temperatures in Europe: Is the continent experiencing a new climate? Nature asks experts if super-hot summers will be the new norm in London, Paris, and Berlin.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Ministry of Health approves the new euthanasia manual to expedite urgent cases, despite opposition from the Community of Madrid.
  • All the sister autonomous communities oppose the Ministry of Health over the Framework Statute.
  • Several autonomous communities reject the elimination of 24-hour on-call shifts for doctors, deeming it unfeasible. The Minister of Health has reiterated that eliminating 24-hour on-call shifts has been one of her ministerial team’s main objectives since the beginning of the legislature.
  • The IDIS Foundation launches the data space on Private Healthcare in Spain after completing its development, a sector-wide initiative that marks a milestone in the management, governance, and use of healthcare information in Spain.

Companies

  • International
    • Moderna signs a contract with Brussels for the supply of up to 24 million doses of its RSV vaccine.
    • Blackstone and TPG seek more than $4 billion to acquire Hologic.
  • National
    • Investment funds are on a buying spree in Spain, targeting private healthcare. According to market sources, there will be at least one major transaction, a significant acquisition, between the end of 2026 and mid-2027.

Biomedicine

  • How to prevent dementia? What science really says. The number of dementia cases is projected to fall from 57 million in 2019 to 153 million in 2050. Studies analyzed by Nature examine the effects of diet, exercise, and social activity (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-02098-z)
  • How dementia is being defeated. The Economist article states that the incidence among the elderly is falling rapidly. According to their analysis published in JAMA, while 40 years ago 3 out of 10 people aged 85-89 had dementia, now it is only one (https://www.economist.com/briefing/2026/07/09/how-dementia-is-being-defeated)
  • From cloning to gene editing: the lasting impact of Dolly the sheep. Dolly the sheep sparked current discussions on reproductive technology (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-02096-1)
  • Ending HIV: a real possibility. In a new United Nations declaration, countries commit to ending HIV by 2030 (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01375-9/fulltext)
  • A misguided bet by the WHO on complementary and alternative medicine. The use of traditional medicine must meet efficacy and safety standards (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj-2026-100062)
  • What’s really going on with mental health? (https://www.ft.com/content/063b7eed-3f13-43d4-8f12-ff6439b825e8?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • The genes that can avert a fatal diagnosis (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/07/genetic-outliers/687821/)
  • Preconception genetic screening: The American Academy of Medicine recommends opening access to couples with no family history (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/07/10/depistage-genetique-preconceptionnel-l-academie-de-medecine-recommande-d-ouvrir-l-acces-aux-couples-sans-antecedents-familiaux_6722448_1651302.html)
  • Obesity is inherited: how genes determine the relationship with food. More than 3,000 variants determine the predisposition to weight gain. A genetic prophecy that has been reinforced in recent years by environmental factors (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-07-08/la-obesidad-se-hereda-como-los-genes-determinan-la-relacion-con-la-comida.html)
  • Liquid saliva biopsy brings early detection of head and neck cancer closer (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/otorrinolaringologia/biopsia-liquida-saliva-acerca-deteccion-precoz-cancer-cabeza-cuello.html)

Global Health

  • Ending HIV: a real possibility. In a new United Nations declaration, countries commit to ending HIV by 2030 (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01375-9/fulltext)
  • The American response to Ebola and the future of global health leadership. The reduction in US aid (USAID) related to the virulence of the infection (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01291-2/fulltext)
  • Children in all policies, an important report from The Lancet (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00856-1/fulltext)
  • African countries under pressure sign the Trump America First health agreement; a few reject it. The multilateral approach is being replaced by bilateral agreements with countries, of which some 30 have already signed, driven by the need for aid (https://www.bmj.com/content/394/bmj-2026-100192)
  • Congolese residents hopeful as first Ebola treatment trials begin (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/05/residents-in-congo-cling-to-hope-as-ebola-treatment-trial-begins-00987135)
  • The ever-out-of-control Ebola epidemic is spreading in the DRC at a record pace (https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2026/07/10/l-epidemie-d-ebola-toujours-hors-de-controle-se-propage-en-rdc-a-une-vitesse-record_6722502_3212.html)
  • The Ebola epidemic: deaths reach 600, according to the WHO (https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2026/07/09/epidemie-d-ebola-en-rdc-le-bilan-atteint-600-morts-selon-l-oms_6722070_3212.html)
  • Cancer is expected to increase globally, according to the WHO report (https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2026/jul/08/health-who-global-persistent-inequities-progress-cancer-prevention-diagnosis-treatment-care). Access the WHO’s 2026 cancer report: (https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240123977)
  • The WHO estimates that 20% of the population will develop cancer and 92% will be affected by the disease. (https://www.expansion.com/directivos/estilo-vida/salud/2026/07/08/6a4e44c7e5fdea6f3a8b4577.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Elderly Care in the USA: The Staffing Crisis (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2604122)
    • While RFK Jr. wants more access to preventative care, some experts say it’s a bad idea. RFK Jr. counts test manufacturers among his allies (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/05/rfk-preventive-kidney-alzheimers-colon-cancer-00986644)
    • Efforts to Help Smokers Quit Under Trump. The CDC’s Office for Tobacco Control has been shut down for over a year (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/us/trump-anti-smoking-cuts.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • British pharmacies report high demand for weight-loss pills (https://www.ft.com/content/5bb61b31-e168-41a4-b7f1-278122d001ee?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • UK launches national dementia registry to boost the search for treatments (https://www.ft.com/content/e45a07e4-8c63-4505-99b9-8dc24a811444?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Within the NHS, in trials of psychedelic drugs (https://www.ft.com/content/0a2da1de-1333-4d7c-a755-c8ebb3fbbc56?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • The NHS AI policy: what the £10 billion investment means and what the concerns are. The initiative includes a triage tool to send the patient to the right service, “Write” to transcribe the conversation with the patient, and the NHS Hospital online initiative (https://www.bmj.com/content/394/bmj-2026-100255)
    • The healthcare costs of the UK-US drug price agreement. According to the authors of this article, this agreement will divert money from healthcare and result in thousands of excess deaths (https://www.bmj.com/content/394/bmj-2026-340588)
    • Consultants (heads of hospital departments) vote for an “industrial action” (strike) in England (https://www.bmj.com/content/394/bmj-2026-100209)
  • France
    • Assisted dying: The Senate definitively abandons its attempt to amend the National Assembly’s text; the result will be announced on July 15 (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/07/08/aide-a-mourir-le-senat-renonce-definitivement-a-modifier-le-texte-de-l-assemblee-nationale_6721690_3224.html)
    • Mortality Perinatal mortality: always worrying figures and causes to explore (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/07/08/mortalite-perinatale-malgre-des-chiffres-toujours-inquietants-les-causes-restent-encore-a-explorer_6721555_3224.html)
  • Germany
    • Germany puts the death toll from the June heatwave at more than 5,000. The high number of fatalities highlights the country’s lack of preparedness for extreme temperatures (https://elpais.com/clima-y-medio-ambiente/2026-07-09/alemania-cifra-en-mas-de-5000-las-muertes-por-la-ola-de-calor-de-junio.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Government
    • The Ministry of Health approves the new euthanasia manual to expedite urgent cases, despite opposition from the Community of Madrid. This is one of 16 agreements reached at Friday’s Interterritorial Council meeting, although the Framework Statute dominated much of the discussion, to the point that the Minister announced a new plenary session of the Interterritorial Council next week (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/07/10/6a510af9e9cf4ac35c8b4589.html)
  • Regional Governments
    • Madrid strengthens its Virtual Health Card with the ability to view medical tests. The Virtual Health Card already has more than 3.9 million registered users who access its 76 services and nearly 228 features (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/c-madrid/madrid-refuerza-su-tarjeta-sanitaria-virtual-con-la-visualizacion-de-pruebas-medicas.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • All the sister autonomous communities against the Ministry of Health over the Framework Statute (https://www.consalud.es/politica/ministerio-sanidad/todas-las-ccaa-hermanadas-frente-al-ministerio-por-el-estatuto-marco-monica-garcia-esta-sola.html)
    • Feijóo demands the dismissal of Mónica García over the doctors’ conflict and accuses Sánchez of “washing his hands” (https://www.consalud.es/politica/feijoo-exige-el-cese-de-monica-garcia-por-el-conflicto-con-los-medicos.html)
  • On-call shifts for doctors
    • Several autonomous communities have rejected the proposal to eliminate 24-hour on-call shifts for doctors, deeming it unfeasible. The Minister of Health has reiterated that eliminating 24-hour on-call shifts has been one of her ministerial team’s main objectives since the beginning of the legislature (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/ministerio-sanidad/el-rechazo-de-varias-ccaa-a-suprimir-las-guardias-de-24h-es-irrealizable-8180)
  • Sick leave
    • 14 charts to explain the increase in sick leave in Spain. Employers and unions agree that the backlog in the public healthcare system is one of the main reasons for the rise in temporary disability claims, which Feijóo has described as “a cancer” (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-07-08/14-graficos-para-explicar-el-aumento-de-las-bajas-laborales-en-espana.html)
    • Escrivá (Bank of Spain) calls for greater intervention by mutual insurance companies to reduce absenteeism (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/economia/empleo/20260708/escriva-banco-espana-reclama-intervencion-mutuas-reducir-absentismo-laboral/1003744314440_0.html)
    • SEMFYC calls for an end to the “monopoly” of primary care in sick leave claims. Semfyc proposes allowing three days of self-justified sick leave and that any doctor can issue the sick leave certificate to reduce the bureaucratic burden. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/semfyc-pide-acabar-monopolio-atencion-primaria-bajas-laborales.html)
  • Data Space on Private Healthcare in Spain
    • The IDIS Foundation launches the data space on Private Healthcare in Spain after completing its development, a sector-wide initiative that marks a milestone in the management, governance, and use of healthcare information in Spain (https://www.consalud.es/industria/sanidad-privada/la-fundacion-idis-lanza-el-espacio-de-datos-sobre-la-sanidad-privada-en-espana.html)
  • Profarma Plan
    • The government consolidates Profarma as a cornerstone of its strategy to strengthen the pharmaceutical industry (https://www.consalud.es/industria/sanidad-destaca-los-beneficios-del-plan-profarma-en-i-d-desarrollo-industrial-y-acceso-a-medicamentos.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Blackstone and TPG seek more than $4 billion to buy Hologic (https://www.ft.com/content/1096b05f-13c1-466c-90c1-54dc2d0728aa?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Bayer sells its contraception business to Apollo for $3 billion (https://www.ft.com/content/2ac9c03f-f810-4514-a11e-5802e86c0d12?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Vertex buys Crinetics for its endocrinology portfolio in a deal valued at €8.75 billion (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260707/vertex-compra-crinetics-portfolio-endocrinologia-operacion-valorada-millones-euros/1003744312581_0.html)
    • Moderna closes a contract with Brussels for the supply of up to 24 million doses of its RSV vaccine (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260710/moderna-cierra-contrato-bruselas-suministro-millones-dosis-vacuna-vrs/1003744316765_0.html)
    • Europe asks for the withdrawal of an Amgen drug from the market due to “incorrect and misleading” data, and the US is considering doing so (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260706/europa-pide-retirar-mercado-medicamento-amgen-datos-incorrectos-enganosos-eeuu-baraja-hacerlo/1003744309876_0.html)
  • National
    • Investment funds are on a buying spree in Spain, targeting private healthcare. According to market sources, there will be at least one major transaction, a significant acquisition, between the end of 2026 and mid-2027 (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260706/fondos-inversion-compras-espana-objetivo-sanidad-privada/1003744309828_0.html)

7 days in healthcare (June 22nd-28th, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: The rise in cancers among young adults.
  • Global Health: One year after Trump suspended USAID aid, African health systems are operating under emergency protocols.
  • International Health Policy: The UN warns of the growth of the global drug market.
  • National Health Policy: Dynamic pricing, spending caps, and conditional payments: a new way to finance medicines in Spain.
  • Business: The mayor of Gijón states that Quirón has revived its hospital project in Gijón.

Biomedicine

  • Cancers in young adults. Although cancer remains predominantly a disease of older people, a study in The Lancet confirms the rise in cancer among young adults aged 20-49. In an analysis conducted in Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Australasia, cancer incidence increased between 2003 and 2017 in six of the 13 cancers analyzed: thyroid, breast, colorectal, kidney, endometrial, and leukemia.
  • A new technology opens the door to curing almost from conception and paves the way for designed babies. For the first time, researchers have successfully “switched off” a key gene in normal human embryos using a new, more precise and safer gene-editing tool.

Global Health

  • The Economist: Ebola has exposed Africa’s fragile health systems. After a year of suspended USAID aid, African health systems are operating on a state of emergency.
  • The Ebola epidemic has now claimed 304 lives, according to the latest estimates from authorities. The virus has infected 1,115 people, according to the National Institute of Public Health.
  • Ending AIDS is not a problem of resources, but of political will and humanity, according to an opinion piece published in Le Monde.

International Health Policy

  • The UN warns of the growth of the global drug market. The World Drug Report states that the consumption of these substances causes almost half a million deaths annually.
  • US national projections for health spending 2025-2034. In 2034, US health spending will reach $9 trillion and 20.6% of GDP, compared to $5.3 trillion and 18.0% of GDP in 2024. This increase is due to greater consumption of health services and goods. The percentage of the population covered by insurance is projected to reach 90.5% in 2034, up from 91.8% in 2024.
  • Systemic deficiencies in British maternity wards result in thousands of deaths and injuries. Donna Ockenden led the report that denounces this serious situation.
  • A growing number of young people in the UK are turning to private healthcare. Waiting lists, overcrowded hospitals, and increased demand from the elderly population are driving young people to the private sector.
  • Healthcare in Costa Rica is teetering on the brink. Hospital overcrowding, kilometer-long waiting lists, and warnings from the IMF are jeopardizing the Costa Rican Social Security System (CCSS), the pillar that sustains the country’s stability.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Dynamic pricing, spending caps, and conditional payments. The Ministry of Health is revolutionizing how medicines are financed. The Ministry has opened the updated drug pricing system in Spain to public consultation.
  • Ayuso presents Cardiology Madrid 365, an advanced model for monitoring heart disease. When a high risk is detected, it acts immediately by activating teleconsultations, adjusting treatment, making urgent referrals, and providing specialist assessments.
  • Families are redirecting their spending: more on healthcare and education, less on restaurants and accommodations. Data reflects a reduction in consumption at bars, restaurants, and hotels, while spending on private healthcare and education is increasing.

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly and Bayer criticize Germany for spending on new drugs. These two companies support Trump’s push for Europe to raise drug prices.
  • National
    • The mayor of Gijón states that Quirón has reactivated its hospital project in Gijón after months of stagnation. “The owners have contacted us and are again showing interest in fulfilling the agreement they signed with the City Council.”

Biomedicine

  • Cancers in young adults. Although cancer remains predominantly a disease of older people, a study in The Lancet confirms the rise in cancer among young adults aged 20-49. In an analysis conducted in Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Australasia, the incidence of cancer increased between 2003 and 2017 in six of the 13 cancers analyzed: thyroid, breast, colorectal, kidney, endometrial, and leukemia cancers (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01279-1/fulltext)
  • How HIV reprograms the cells it occupies to force entry into the nucleus. A team from University College London demonstrates how the virus infects resting immune cells. A viral adaptation mechanism that could be expanded in other cases (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/06/24/comment-le-vih-reprogramme-les-cellules-qu-il-cible-pour-forcer-l-entree-dans-leur-noyau_6710208_1650684.html)
  • Cystic fibrosis patients could have a solution with a generic drug. The generic medication discovered in Bangladesh is a fraction of the price in the USA (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/health/cystic-fibrosis-drug-triko-trikafta.html)
  • A new technology opens the door to curing almost from conception and opens the door to designer babies. Scientists have successfully switched off a key gene in normal human embryos for the first time using a new, more precise and safer gene-editing tool (https://www.abc.es/salud/tecnologia-genetica-jubila-crispr-logra-editar-genes-20260625170005-nt.html)

Global Health

  • Protecting health in hot cities. A Brazilian project aims to mitigate urban heat islands and their associated mortality risks (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01281-X/fulltext)
  • The Economist: Ebola has exposed Africa’s fragile health systems. After a year of suspended USAID aid, African health systems are operating on an emergency model (https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2026/06/25/ebola-has-put-africas-fragile-health-systems-in-the-spotlight)
  • The mystery of the origin of this Ebola outbreak. It is believed that the Bundibugyo virus comes from an animal species, but that species is unknown (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/24/science/ebola-bundibugyo-animal-reservoir.html)
  • The Ebola epidemic has now claimed 304 lives, according to the latest estimates from authorities. The virus has infected 1,115 people, according to the National Institute of Public Health (https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2026/06/26/l-epidemie-d-ebola-en-rdc-a-fait-304-morts-selon-le-dernier-bilan-des-autorites_6715861_3212.html)
  • Ending AIDS is not a matter of resources, but of political will and humanity, according to an opinion piece published in Le Monde (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/06/22/la-fin-du-sida-n-est-plus-une-question-de-ressources-necessaires-mais-de-volonte-politique-et-d-humanite_6706468_3232.html)
  • A large study links some food preservatives to increased risk of cancer. The French NutriNet-Santé cohort identifies modest associations between the intake of these additives and the risk of cancer, reopening the scientific and regulatory debate (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-06-23/un-gran-estudio-relaciona-algunos-conservantes-alimentarios-con-mayor-risk-de-cancer.html)
  • Foodborne illnesses: a major challenge, more than 350,000 deaths per year. Gastrointestinal foodborne illnesses continue to cause considerable morbidity and mortality worldwide despite advances in recent years (https://www.consalud.es/pacientes/infecciosas/las-enfermedades-de-transmision-alimentaria-un-desafio-en-el-mundo-mas-de-350-mil-muertes-al-ano.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • US National Projections of Health Spending 2025-2034. In 2034, health spending in the USA will be $9 trillion and will reach 20.6% of GDP, compared to $5.3 trillion and 18.0% of GDP in 2024. This phenomenon is due to increased consumption of health services and goods. The percentage of the population covered by insurance is projected to reach 90.5% in 2034, up from 91.8% in 2024 (https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2026.00642)
    • Podcast: Why healthcare costs are rising so much in the USA (https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hp20260624.69450/full/)
    • Trump issues an order to reduce pesticides. The order calls for more studies, does not include federal funding, and does not foresee new regulations (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/25/us/politics/trump-order-pesticides-rfk.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • The five ways Brexit changed the NHS: finances, immigration of healthcare professionals to the UK shifted from EU to non-EU, drug shortages and problems with social services, and less funding for research (https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/news-item/the-five-ways-that-brexit-changed-the-nhs)
    • Hospitals in the UK cancel operations due to lack of air conditioning. Record-breaking June temperatures affected up to 4,000 surgical procedures (https://www.ft.com/content/fb187483-f496-4432-976e-0aaa9d0506fd?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Systemic deficiencies in maternity wards result in thousands of deaths and injuries. Donna Ockenden led the report that exposes this serious situation (https://www.ft.com/content/0975e178-aed7-41e2-bd5f-5ca635330aa0?syn-25a6b1a6=1). For access to the original report: https://www.ockendenmaternityreview.org.uk
    • A growing number of young people in the UK are turning to private healthcare. Waiting lists, overcrowded hospitals, and increased demand from the elderly population are driving young people toward the private sector (https://www.ft.com/content/c26a12d5-9d37-4799-9436-6d07ec917191?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Nigel Farage launches an anti-WHO campaign, raising suspicions of his involvement with an American lobbying group (https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jun/27/nigel-farage-action-on-world-health-campaign-who-us-board)
  • France
    • Cancers and cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in France. Mortality in France reaches a historically low level: 777.9 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/06/23/les-cancers-et-les-maladies-cardiovasculaires-premieres-causes-de-deces-en-france-en-2024_6708568_3224.html)
  • Costa Rica
    • Healthcare teeters on the brink of collapse in Costa Rica. Hospital overcrowding, kilometer-long waiting lists, and IMF warnings are jeopardizing Costa Rica’s Social Security System, the pillar that sustains the country’s stability (https://elpais.com/america/2026-06-24/el-motor-del-bienestar-de-costa-rica-en-cuidado-intensivo-la-sanidad-social-se-asoma-al-abismo.html)
  • India
    • Drug shortages are forcing doctors to ration chemotherapy. The problem is largely caused by the conflict in Iran (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01280-8/fulltext)
  • United Nations

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Ministry of Health is finalizing the new MIR (Medical Residency) regulations. The new draft eliminates the requirement for a maximum standard workweek of 37.5 hours and leaves everything to collective bargaining agreements. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260622/sanidad-ultima-nueva-normativa-mir-eliminacion-jornada-maxima-horas-proteccion-laboral/1003744295517_0.html)
    • Dynamic pricing, spending caps, and conditional payments. The Ministry of Health is revolutionizing how medicines are financed. The Ministry has opened the updated drug pricing system in Spain to public consultation (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260619/precios-dinamicos-techos-gasto-pagos-conditionales-sanidad-revoluciona-finan-medicamentos/1003744292131_0.html)
    • The Ministry of Health estimates savings of €1.5 billion from the application of dynamic pricing. Specifically, they indicate that these savings would not occur in a single year, but rather by adding up the effects expected throughout the period 2026-2030 (https://www.diariomedico.com/farmacia/politica/sanidad-estima-ahorro-155352-millones-euros-fruto-sistema-precios-dinamicos.html)
    • The PP, PSOE, and Sumar parties have agreed to keep drug prices secret before the Supreme Court ruling. Spain has one of the lowest drug prices in the European Union. Pharmaceutical companies sell their drugs at higher prices in countries like Germany, the United Kingdom, and France. If this information were made public, it could lead health authorities in those countries to demand the same price from laboratories (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13985767/06/26/pp-psoe-y-sumar-pactan-mantener-en-secreto-el-precio-real-de-los-medicamentos-antes-del-fallo-del-supremo.html)
  • Regional governments
    • Ayuso presents Cardiology Madrid 365, an advanced model for monitoring heart disease. When a high risk is detected, it acts immediately by activating teleconsultations, adjusting treatment, making urgent referrals, and conducting specialist assessments (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/c-madrid/ayuso-presenta-cardiologia-madrid-365-el-modelo-mas-avanzado-de-atencion-en-espana-frente-a-enfermedades-del-corazon.html)
    • The Galician Health Service (SERGAS) proposes a new area structure to strengthen Primary Care. The draft presented establishes that all health areas will have a Primary Care Directorate (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/sergas-propone-nueva-estructura-areas-salud-rezandor-ap.html)
  • Medical conflict over the Medical Statute
    • Doctors take their request for a Medical Statute to the Moncloa Palace and ask for Pedro Sánchez’s involvement. After five weeks of a national strike, the Medical Strike Committee has asked the Prime Minister to intervene to unblock negotiations on the Framework Statute and promote an inter-ministerial working group to move towards an agreement with the medical community (https://www.consalud.es/profesionales/los-medicos-elevan-el-conflicto-del-estatuto-marco-a-moncloa-y-piden-la-implicacion-directa-de-pedro-sanchez.html).
    • The Framework Statute (the one supported by non-medical unions) faces a difficult future without the backing of the Treasury, the Civil Service, and Social Security. The lack of commitments regarding retirement and salary increases associated with the new classification fuels skepticism within the healthcare sector, which fears that the reform will be limited to regulatory changes without real effects (https://www.consalud.es/politica/el-nuevo-estatuto-marco-encara-un-dificil-futuro-sin-el-compromiso-de-hacienda-funcion-publica-y-seguro-social-2026-06-19.html)
  • Health in family spending in Spain
    • Families are redirecting their spending: more on healthcare and education, less on restaurants and accommodation. Data reflects a reduction in consumption at bars, restaurants, and hotels, while spending on private healthcare and education is increasing. In 2025, average household spending will even contract slightly in real terms (https://www.elconfidencial.com/economia/2026-06-26/las-familias-reorientan-sus-gastos-sanidad-y-educacion_4379010/)

Companies

  • International
    • Stripe and Anthropic invest in fighting respiratory disease. The consortium is putting $500 million into the discovery of new drugs and air cleaning systems (https://www.ft.com/content/db7499ef-4608-4bd7-87d2-6b15a0ebd353?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • German group Merck will buy Bio-Techne for $11.3 billion (https://www.ft.com/content/4d5030cb-a61e-4d15-a5b5-c4c7c6bca471?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly rolls out weight loss funding in the App Store for scientists (https://www.ft.com/content/d524396a-4986-46e9-9a93-a982e330d157?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly and Bayer criticize Germany for spending on new drugs. These two companies support Trump’s push for Europe to raise drug prices (https://www.ft.com/content/1c2ba206-6111-464c-98e9-711741e33037?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Brussels launches an antitrust investigation into Sanofi (https://www.ft.com/content/5342c8a1-5b14-4ceb-9fee-50b73e0c161d?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly’s sales will grow six times faster than its competitors’ thanks to its obesity treatments (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260625/ventas-lilly-creceran-veces-rapido-competidores-gracias-tratamientos-obesidad/1003744298634_0.html)
  • National News
    • The Abarca family rules out bringing in new funds or investors for its hospitals. They want to remain in the regions where they already operate (Madrid, Galicia, León, Catalonia, Andalusia), without exploring new ones (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260625/familia-abarca-descarta-dar-entrada-fondos-nuevos-inversores-hm-hospitales-no-necesidad/1003744298256_0.html)
    • HM Hospitals acquires the Cruz Groga group in Catalonia. Following the completion of the transaction, HM Hospitals will have a healthcare network in Catalonia comprised of four hospitals, three in the city of Barcelona and one in Mataró; and seven outpatient clinics, six of them in the province of Barcelona and one in the province of Girona (https://forbes.es/health/959976/hm-hospitales-integra-grupo-creu-groga/)
    • Moody’s raises Almirall’s rating based on growth forecasts through 2030. The agency highlights the pharmaceutical company’s low leverage. It also anticipates that the company will complement internal development with strategic acquisitions, if necessary (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-06-25/moodys-eleva-el-rating-de-almirall-ante-las-previsiones-de-crecimiento-hasta-2030.html)
    • Hipra prepares for growth and global expansion in its nascent human health business. Executives at the veterinary-based firm are banking on the opening of the European market in 2027 to boost sales of their COVID-19 vaccine (https://cincodias.elpais.com/extras/ciencia-salud/2026-06-19/hipra-prepara-la-expansion-y-el-crecimiento-global-de-su-incipiente-negocio-de-salud-humana.html)
    • Prim is preparing to invest more than €100 million in acquiring companies by 2031 (https://www.eleconomista.es/tecnologia/noticias/13987622/06/26/fernando-oliveros-ceo-de-grupo-prim-vamos-a-invertir-al-menos-100-millones-en-la-compra-de-una-decena-de-empresas-hasta-2031.html)
    • The mayor of Gijón states that Quirón has Moriyon has reactivated its hospital project in Gijón after months of no progress. “The owners have contacted us and are again showing interest in carrying out the agreement they signed with the City Council” (https://www.elcomercio.es/gijon/moriyon-asegura-quiron-reactivado-proyecto-hospital-nuevo-20260626150940-nt.html)

 

 

7 days in healthcare (June 15th-21s6, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: AI Large Language Models (LLMs) are capable of outperforming most real-world clinical reasoning experiences.
  • Global Health: The Ebola epidemic is not an inevitability, but the first consequence of a deliberately created void.
  • International Health Policy: The anti-obesity drugs Wegovy and Mounjaro will be reimbursed by Social Security in France starting Monday.
  • National Health Policy: For the first time, the People’s Party (PP) is leaning towards adapting the labor framework to the specific needs of doctors.
  • Business: The pharmaceutical industry faces losses of nearly €438 billion due to patent expirations.

Biomedicine

  • The value of LLMs in clinical reasoning. 65 years ago, cases involving complex clinical reasoning were the gold standard for evaluating physicians’ abilities. A study published in Science shows that AI, using Large Language Models (LLMs), is capable of outperforming most real-world clinical reasoning.
  • AI matches or surpasses doctors in diagnosis. Two AI tools improve upon doctors’ diagnostic accuracy and treatment suggestions. One is MIRA, developed by researchers in Germany, and the other is AMIE, based on Google Gemini.
  • A new drug targets one of the changes in cancer. It is for treating pancreatic cancer, is called “daraxonrasib,” and was developed by a Californian company called Revolution Medicines.

Global Health

  • USAID: The Ebola epidemic is not an inevitability, but the first bill for a deliberately created void. In 2024, USAID had donated $1.2 billion to the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 2025, that number dropped to $67 million. The US withdrawal benefits China, according to historian Mauro Campus, in an opinion piece for Le Monde.
  • Migration: a reality, not an emergency. The review published in The Lancet states that migration and forced displacement continue to grow, and in 2024 more than 300 million people were international migrants. If they were a nation, they would be the fourth most populous. Human mobility is not an aberration but a fact of modern existence. It should not be treated as an extraordinary problem.
  • The Ebola epidemic: one month after it began, the death toll has surpassed 200 in the Democratic Republic of Congo, with a mortality rate of 23%. There is neither a vaccine nor a specific treatment for this type of virus.

International health policy

  • The anti-obesity medications Wegovy and Mounjaro will be reimbursed by Social Security in France starting Monday. Social Security will cover 65% of the cost for patients with massive obesity without comorbidities or severe obesity with comorbidities.
  • France intends to make antibiotic resistance a strategic health security priority during its G7 presidency, considering it a global health and economic threat of the greatest magnitude.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • For the first time, the People’s Party (PP) is leaning towards specific labor regulations for doctors. Feijóo will make healthcare a “national priority” in the face of the new week of doctors’ strike. PP spokesperson and Deputy Secretary for Culture and Sport, Borja Sámper, stated this Monday, coinciding with the start of another week of doctors’ strike over the Framework Statute, that Alberto Núñez Feijóo will make healthcare a “national priority.” The PP leader conveyed his party’s support for some of the demands of the medical community and defended the need to adapt the labor framework to the specific needs of these professionals.
  • The pharmaceutical reform bill is open for public consultation. The draft royal decree introduces dynamic pricing to strengthen competition in medicines that have already lost exclusivity and to encourage a gradual decrease in prices linked to the entry of generics and biosimilars.
  • Medical unions will call an indefinite strike after the summer due to the “total lack of proposals” from the Ministry of Health. The Strike Committee warns of an escalation of the conflict to “maintain the demands of the group” if no progress is made in the coming weeks.

Companies

  • International
    • The pharmaceutical industry faces losses of almost €438 billion due to the expiration of patents. To mitigate the blow, companies are focusing their efforts on acquiring pharmaceutical companies.
  • National
    • The CEOE (Spanish Confederation of Employers’ Organizations) is launching a full-scale attack against absenteeism: it is demanding that Social Security cover sick leave and replacements from the first day. Around twenty business leaders are proposing measures such as limiting bonuses and reinstating dismissal for absenteeism.

Biomedicine

  • AI matches or surpasses doctors in diagnosis. Two AI tools are improving on doctors in diagnostic accuracy and treatment suggestions. One is MIRA, developed by researchers in Germany, and the other is AMIE, based on Google Gemini (https://www.ft.com/content/734a45ee-86c4-47e1-8323-569bc14dcdd7?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • The value of LLM models in clinical reasoning. Sixty-five years ago, cases with complex clinical reasoning were the gold standard for evaluating doctors’ abilities. A study published in Science shows that AI, with Large Language Models (LLMs), is able to outperform most real-world clinical reasoning exercises (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/06/ai-healthcare-uber-moment/687567/). Access the original Science study: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz4433
  • Ancient DNA studies are rewriting the history of the plague. The study published in Nature shows that this disease did not necessarily originate in large human settlements (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/06/17/ancient-dna-is-rewriting-the-history-of-plague)
  • A new drug targets one of the key changes in cancer. It is used to treat pancreatic cancer, is called “daraxonrasib,” and was developed by a Californian company called Revolution Medicines (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2026/06/12/a-new-drug-targets-one-of-cancers-master-switches)
  • Orphan drugs generate six times more years of healthy life than conventional drugs. Patients, laboratories, and academics are calling for consideration of the long-term social impact of drugs targeting rare diseases (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260619/medicamentos-huerfanos-generan-veces-anos-vida-calidad-convencionales/1003744291085_0.html)
  • With the same genes, a young person from Generation Z gains twice as much weight as a baby boomer. A study in the United Kingdom shows that the environment increases the predisposition to weight gain and widens the inequality gap in new generations (https://www.abc.es/salud/genes-joven-generacion-engorda-doble-baby-boomer-20260618200007-nt.html)
  • A new vaccine shows promise against herpes, chlamydia, and other sexually transmitted diseases. US scientists have designed nanoparticles that act as a molecular “beacon” to recruit elite defenses in the reproductive tract, a promising advance in the face of record-breaking infections in Spain and Europe (https://www.abc.es/salud/nueva-vacuna-abre-via-frenar-epidemia-herpes-20260619200002-nt.html)

Global Health

  • UNAIDS: HIV control dealt a severe blow by funding cuts. 2025 was disastrous for HIV control programs. UNAIDS is calling on governments and donors to renew their commitment to prevent a resurgence of the epidemic (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01238-9/fulltext)
  • Migration: a reality, not an emergency. The review published in The Lancet states that migration and forced displacement continue to grow, and in 2024 more than 300 million people were international migrants. If they were a nation, they would be the fourth most populous. Human mobility is not an aberration but a fact of modern existence. It should not be treated as an extraordinary problem (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01240-7/fulltext)
  • The Ebola outbreak caused by Bundibugyo: challenges and priorities for epidemic preparedness and response. This article in The Lancet analyzes immediate and long-term priorities (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01141-4/abstract)
  • USAID: The Ebola epidemic is not an inevitability, but the first bill of a deliberately created void. In 2024, USAID had donated $1.2 billion to the DRC. In 2025, that figure dropped to $67 million. The US withdrawal benefits China, according to historian Mauro Campus, in an opinion piece for Le Monde (https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2026/06/19/usaid-l-epidemie-d-ebola-n-est-pas-une-fatalite-mais-la-premiere-facture-d-un-vide-deliberement-creuse_6704910_3232.html).
  • The Ebola epidemic: one month after it began, the death toll in the DRC has surpassed 200, with a mortality rate of 23%. There is neither a vaccine nor a specific treatment for this type of virus (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/06/18/un-mois-apres-le-debut-de-l-epidemie-d-ebola-en-republique-democratique-du-congo-le-bilan-depasse-200-morts_6704568_1651302.html)
  • The myth of leishmaniasis as a purely veterinary disease: the largest human outbreak in Europe began in Spain in 2009. Many people associate this disease with dogs, but the parasite Leishmania infantum is endemic in our country, is transmitted by the bite of a small insect, and more and more animals are being discovered that can host it (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/06/14/6a29e71ee9cf4a99328b456d.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The Trump Administration intends to delay HIV aid to South Africa, citing “insufficient measures taken following the administration’s request” (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/18/pepfar-south-africa-white-afrikaners-hiv-aids-00968479)
  • United Kingdom
    • UK officials are considering changing certain benefits Financial assistance for illness, including support at work or mental health support (https://www.ft.com/content/19b6eb96-a558-41f7-853c-39d336c90023?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • France
    • The anti-obesity medications Wegovy and Mounjaro will be reimbursed by Social Security starting Monday. Social Security will cover 65% of the cost for patients with massive obesity without comorbidities or severe obesity with comorbidities (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2026/06/14/les-medicaments-antiobesite-wegovy-et-mounjaro-seront-rembourses-en-france-a-partir-de-lundi_6702600_1651302.html)
    • The Constitutional Council closes the door to a referendum on end-of-life issues (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/06/17/fin-de-vie-pourquoi-le-conseil-constitutionnel-ferme-la-porte-a-un-referendum_6704276_3224.html)
  • G7
    • France intends to make antimicrobial resistance a priority during its G7 presidency strategic health security, considering it represents a global health and economic threat of the greatest scope (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/06/14/la-presidence-du-g7-constitue-une-occasion-unique-pour-la-france-de-faire-de-l-antibioresistance-une-priorite-strategique-de-securite-sanitaire_6702747_1650684.html)
  • EU

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Ministry of Health establishes a common vaccination strategy for migrants and refugees in Spain. The Ministry of Health is unifying criteria for immunizing newly arrived migrants with initial doses in the early weeks, prioritizing MMR, polio, tetanus, and diphtheria vaccines, with accelerated schedules and coordination between regional governments and reception centers (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-06-16/vacunacion-migrantes-refugiados-espana-1tps_4373489/)
    • The government will include autism in the list of illnesses that qualify for childcare benefits (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260620/gobierno-incluira-autismo-listado-enfermedades-dan-acceso-prestacion-cuidado-menores/1003744293210_0.html)
    • The pharmaceutical reform bill is open for public consultation. The draft royal decree introduces dynamic pricing to strengthen competition in medicines that have lost their exclusivity and to promote a gradual decrease in prices linked to the entry of generics and biosimilars (https://www.consalud.es/politica/ministerio-sanidad/sanidad-abre-a-audiencia-publica-la-norma-que-regulara-la-financiacion-y-precios-de-los-medicamentos.html)
  • Regional governments
    • Three public hospitals in Madrid, national centers for obtaining stem cells for bone marrow transplants. La Paz, 12 de Octubre, and Gregorio Marañón hospitals have been designated for their experience, technical capacity, and high specialization in areas such as advanced therapies (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/c-madrid/eligen-tres-hospitales-publicos-madrilenos-como-centros-nacionales-para-obtener-celulas-madre-destinadas-a-trasplante-de-medula.html)
    • The Torrejón Hospital is asking the Community of Madrid not to accept new resident physicians as a cost-saving measure. It appears that in other regions, the salaries of resident physicians (MIRES) are covered by the regional governments (https://elpais.com/espana/madrid/2026-06-16/el-hospital-de-torrejon-pide-a-la-comunidad-de-madrid-no-recibir-nuevos-medicos-residentes-como-medida-de-ahorro.html)
  • Medical conflict over the Statute
    • Medical unions will call an indefinite strike after the summer due to the “total absence of proposals” from the healthcare system. The Strike Committee is threatening to escalate the conflict to “maintain the demands of the group” if no progress is made in the coming weeks (https://www.eldiario.es/sociedad/medicos-amenazan-huelga-indefinida-verano-ausencia-total-propuestas-sanidad_1_13302847.html)
  • Euthanasia
    • Deaths by euthanasia increased by 32% last year. 565 people received euthanasia in Spain in 2025 (https://elpais.com/expres/2026-06-18/las-muertes-por-eutanasia-crecieron-un-32-el-ano-pasado.html)
  • Feijóo’s statements on healthcare
    • Feijóo promises to respect the law on abortion time limits and “improve” the law regarding access to euthanasia. The leader of the People’s Party (PP) aspires to legislation regarding euthanasia that has “consensus” with “scientific societies,” “medical organizations,” “healthcare professionals,” and political groups, unlike the current law. It should be remembered that the euthanasia law was processed as a proposed law, not a bill, without any mandatory report (https://www.consalud.es/politica/feijoo-promete-respetar-la-ley-de-plazos-para-el-aborto-y-perfeccionar-la-relativa-al-acceso-a-la-eutanasia.html).
    • Feijóo will make healthcare a “national priority” in the face of the new week of doctors’ strike. The PP spokesperson and Deputy Secretary of Culture and Sport, Borja Sámper, stated this Monday, coinciding with the start of a new week of doctors’ strike over the Framework Statute, that Alberto Núñez Feijóo will make healthcare a “national priority.” The Popular Party leader has conveyed his party’s support for some of the demands of the medical community and has defended the need to adapt the labor framework to the unique characteristics of these professionals (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/feijoo-convertira-sanidad-prioridad-nacional-ante-huelga-medica-estatuto-marco/)

Companies

  • International
    • Abbie closes a deal for nearly $11 billion to acquire biotech firm Apogee Therapeutics, developer of anti-inflammatory therapies (https://www.ft.com/content/cb5e94aa-1687-47fe-b55a-82e273e8b1bd?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Pharmaceutical patent applications decline for the second consecutive year, falling 6.5% in 2025. The explanation lies in the stabilization following Covid, higher R&D costs, and the advance of countries like China and India. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260615/solicitudes-patentes-farmaceuticas-retroceden-segundo-ano-consecutivo-cayeron/1003744278143_0.html)
    • The pharmaceutical industry faces losses of almost 438 billion euros due to patent expirations. To mitigate the blow, companies are focusing their efforts on acquiring pharmaceutical companies. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260619/industria-farmaceutica-enfrenta-perdidas-millones-euros-fin-patentes/1003744290775_0.html)
    • Novo Nordisk hopes to get Wegovy’s pill approved in China to overtake its competitor Lilly. The Danish pharmaceutical company is already ahead of its American counterpart in the US and UK markets. Both are betting on the success of oral treatment compared to injections (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-06-17/novo-nordisk-espera-aprobar-la-pastilla-de-wegovy-en-china-para-adelantar-a-su-competidora-eli-lilly.html)
    • According to Cathie Wood, CEO of ARK, the return on investment in the pharmaceutical sector will increase from 5% to 30% due to AI (https://www.eleconomista.es/mercados-cotizaciones/noticias/13978875/06/26/cathie-wood-ark-la-burbuja-tecnologica-creo-mucho-miedo-en-la-industria-de-la-inversion-y-eso-hoy-es-algo-bueno.html)
  • National News
    • Grifols defends the IPO of its Biopharm business in the USA It will allow value to surface and debt to be reduced (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2026-06-18/grifols-defiende-que-la-salida-a-bolsa-del-negocio-de-biopharma-en-ee-uu-permitira-aflorar-valor-y-reducir-deuda.html)
    • Rovi specializes in the manufacture of injectable medications for obesity (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260618/rovi-especializa-fabricacion-inyectables-obesidad-clientes-ademas-roche/1003744289803_0.html)
    • The Valencian Regional Government is preparing multi-million euro claims against Sanitas and Ribera for the concessions. The Valencian Ministry of Health has informed healthcare concessionaires of an adjustment of between 50 and 60 million euros to compensate for ‘inflated’ settlements from the years of Covid (https://www.elconfidencial.com/espana/comunidad-valenciana/2026-06-17/generalitat-sanitas-ribera-reclamacion-millonaria_4373881/)

7 days in healthcare (June 1st-7th, 2026)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: For the first time, experts from Columbia University (USA) have edited the genes of a human embryo.
  • Global Health: Hypertension control: the success story of South Korea.
  • International Health Policy: Rubio suggests the USA’s return to the global vaccination program, disagreeing with Kennedy.
  • National Health Policy: The Government approves the Framework Statute, and medical unions respond with a new strike call.
  • Business: Grifols will invest €160 million in its new plasma plant to strengthen the European supply.

Biomedicine

  • For the first time, experts from Columbia University (USA) have edited the genes of a human embryo. This new embryo editing technique has always concerned bioethics experts. It has always been controversial; on the one hand, it can be used to prevent certain diseases, but on the other, to select desired traits.
  • Pancreatic cancer: the effectiveness of an innovative treatment presented in Chicago. A new molecule, daraxonrasib, doubles survival rates for metastatic pancreatic cancer.
  • Tumor “surnames” reveal the key to treatment in precision oncology. The American Society of Oncology congress demonstrates the power of molecular alterations in each tumor to guide the therapeutic approach and predict prognosis.

Global Health

  • Hypertension control: the South Korean success story. Globally, 1.7 billion people live with hypertension, with all its known cardiovascular complications. But preventing hypertension is inexpensive. South Korea has been very successful in combining preventive measures with healthcare. The main preventive measure was reducing salt intake.
  • Article in Science: Ultra-processed foods and obesity: interpreting the evidence. A summary of five randomized trials published in the USA, UK, Denmark, and Japan demonstrates with evidence the negative health effects of these types of foods.
  • The response to Ebola: a test. According to The Lancet, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness is working on three vaccine candidates.

International Health Policy

  • Rubio suggests the return of the US to the global vaccination program, disagreeing with Kennedy. He intends to restore relations with Gavi, an international vaccine alliance, to which Kennedy had withdrawn funding a year ago. The damage the Trump Administration inflicted on global health by dismantling USAID.
  • Cuba, without medicines and in a critical situation.
  • Towards an institutional commitment to healthcare in Chile: the Minister of Health convenes all former Ministers of Health from the democratic era, including Bachelet.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Government approves the Framework Statute, and medical unions respond with a new strike call. Furthermore, doctors will hold a national rally on the first day of the strikes, which will extend from June 15 to 19.
  • The Ministry of Health and scientific societies redesign the MIR (Medical Residency) training map with new specialties.
  • Emergency care, waiting lists, and 48-hour primary care appointments: the healthcare measures included in the PP-Vox pact to form a government in Castile and León. The agreement document includes 17 healthcare commitments, among them a medical helicopter per province, a new Oncology Strategy, and the implementation of the Law on Healthcare Positions in Hard-to-Fill Areas.
  • In May, 101 heat-related deaths occurred in Spain, a record high since records began. The Ministry of Health’s high-temperature prevention plan estimates that the threshold at which mortality spikes has increased by half a degree.

Companies

  • International
    • Pfizer will pay more than $10 billion to develop 12 oncology projects with the Chinese company Innovent.
  • National
    • Grifols will invest €160 million in its new plasma plant to strengthen the European supply.

Biomedicine

  • For the first time, experts at Columbia University (USA) have edited the genes of a human embryo. This new embryo editing technique has always concerned bioethicists. It has always been controversial; on the one hand, it can be used to prevent certain diseases, but on the other, to select desired traits (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/04/science/embryos-gene-editing-crispr.html)
  • Pancreatic cancer: the effectiveness of an innovative treatment presented in Chicago. A new molecule, daraxonrasib, doubles survival rates for metastatic pancreatic cancer (https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/05/31/cancers-du-pancreas-l-efficacite-d-un-traitement-innovant-presente-a-chicago-alors-qu-un-programme-de-prevention-se-deploie-en-france_6695584_1650684.html)
  • Tumor “surnames” reveal the key to treatment in precision oncology. The American Cancer Society congress demonstrates the power of molecular alterations in each tumor to guide treatment and predict prognosis (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2026-06-03/los-apellidos-del-tumor-revelan-la-clave-del-tratamiento-en-la-oncologia-de-precision.html)
  • A blood test can detect early symptoms ten years before Alzheimer’s disease develops. The presence of certain markers significantly increases the risk of memory and cognitive decline in middle-aged individuals, according to a study. The field is moving towards a near future with widespread screenings (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2026-05-29/un-analisis-de-sangre-alerta-de-los-primeros-sintomas-diez-anos-antes-de-desembocar-en-alzheimer.html)

Global Health

  • Article in Science: Ultra-processed foods and obesity: interpreting the evidence. A summary of five randomized trials published in the USA, UK, Denmark, and Japan demonstrates with evidence the negative health effects of these types of foods (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aef3495)
  • Article in the NEJM: Wars and hunger. Evidence that malnutrition killed more children in Gaza than the war itself. Hunger as a “weapon of war,” despite the fact that starvation as a method of warfare is prohibited by the Geneva Convention (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2602465)
  • Health and humanitarianism in Gaza. Testimony of a Dutch doctor who was a WHO representative for five years in the occupied Palestinian territories (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01139-6/fulltext)
  • The population in India will soon be falling, and probably very rapidly. India’s population was 360 million in 1950. It is now 1.45 billion, one-sixth of humanity. But the low birth rate will cause it to fall dramatically in the coming years (https://www.economist.com/briefing/2026/06/04/indias-population-will-soon-be-falling-probably-quite-fast)
  • Controlling hypertension: the South Korean success story. Globally, 1.7 billion people live with hypertension, with all its known cardiovascular complications. But preventing hypertension is inexpensive. South Korea was very successful in combining preventive measures with healthcare. The main preventive measure was reducing salt intake (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01140-2/fulltext)
  • The Ebola response: a test. According to The Lancet, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness is working on three vaccine candidates (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01100-1/fulltext)
  • Ebola is spreading to new areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the outbreak is expanding (https://www.ft.com/content/ed4818b4-2fdc-4750-af80-1a0f52f67462?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • A $518 million plan to combat the Ebola epidemic from June to November has been announced by the WHO and the Africa Health Agency (https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2026/06/05/ebola-l-oms-et-l-agence-de-sante-africaine-annoncent-un-plan-de-518-millions-de-dollars-pour-lutter-contre-l-epidemie-de-juin-a-novembre_6697997_3212.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Rubio suggests the US return to the global vaccination program, disagreeing with Kennedy. He intends to restore relations with Gavi, an international vaccine alliance, to which Kennedy had withdrawn funding a year ago (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/02/us/politics/rubio-kennedy-vaccines-gavi.html)
    • In September, almost a third of Americans will live in states with legal aid in dying (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/30/well/medical-aid-in-dying.html)
    • How to stop Ebola at the World Cup? The Democratic Republic of Congo’s team, battling an Ebola epidemic, will participate in the championship (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/06/world-cup-ebola-hantavirus-cdc-diseases-00952609)
    • According to the NYT, RFK, Jr., the Secretary of Health, seems to be ignoring all the problems in his department, except for vaccines and food, the only issues he seems to be focusing on (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/07/us/politics/ebola-vaccines-kennedy-health-department.html)
  • United Kingdom
    • Cancer services left fragile after the pandemic. An international agency calls for more funding for these types of services in the UK (https://www.ft.com/content/60927948-eb62-4415-bc33-5ba3cef6e3d7?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
  • Cuba
    • Cuba, without medicines (https://elpais.com/podcasts/hoy-en-el-pais/2026-06-01/cuba-sin-medicinas-evitamos-enfermar-seria-otra-complicacion.html)
    • This is war medicine (https://www.eldiario.es/internacional/medicina-guerra-hospitales-colegios-cubanos-golpeados-bloqueo-trump_1_13279623.html)
  • Chile
    • Towards an institutional commitment in healthcare, the Minister of Health summons all former Ministers of Health from the democratic era, including Bachelet (https://elpais.com/chile/2026-06-04/de-la-foto-institucional-al-compromiso-de-estado-en-salud-publica.html)
  • European Union
    • Beyond regulation: why Europe must lead in governance and AI capabilities in healthcare (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7762(26)00113-4/fulltext)
    • The European Parliament demands the hiring of one million professionals in response to the EU’s staffing crisis and the estimated healthcare worker shortage by 2030 (https://diariofarma.com/2026/06/03/la-eurocamara-exige-incorporar-un-millon-de-profesionales-ante-la-crisis-de-personal-en-la-ue)
    • Drug shortages are becoming entrenched in Europe. The PGEU’s 2025 Drug Shortage Report warns that shortages are increasingly affecting critical therapies and how the pressure is falling directly on community pharmacies (https://elglobalfarma.com/farmacia/escasez-de-medicamentos-se-enquista-en-europa-el-70-de-los-paises-esta-en-niveles-inaceptablemente-altos/)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • Health and scientific societies redesign the MIR (Medical Residency) training map with new specialties (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260602/sanidad-sociedades-cientificas-redisenan-mapa-formacion-mir-nuevas-especialidades/1003744268541_0.html)
    • The government finalizes a €368 million plan for energy-efficient renovations of hospitals and schools (https://elpais.com/economia/2026-06-04/el-gobierno-ultima-un-plan-de-400-millones-para-rehabilitacion-energetica-de-hospitales-y-colegios.html)
    • The government approves the draft Framework Statute regulating the working conditions of nearly one million healthcare workers (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-06-02/el-gobierno-aprueba-el-anteproyecto-del-estatuto-marco-que-regula-las-condiciones-de-casi-un-millon-de-sanitarios.html)
    • Industry resolves the Profarma plan, with 43 beneficiary companies. According to the resolution of the 2025 call for proposals, nine companies have been rated as “Excellent”, ten as “Very Good”, twelve as “Good”, and another twelve as “Acceptable” (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/industria-resolucion-plan-profarma-43-companias-beneficiarias-clasificacion/)
  • Regional administrations
    • Emergency services, waiting lists, and 48-hour primary care: the healthcare measures of the PP-Vox pact to form a government in Castile and León. The agreement document includes 17 healthcare commitments, among them a medical helicopter per province, a new Oncology Strategy, and the development of the Law on Hard-to-Fill Healthcare Positions (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/medidas-sanitarias-pacto-pp-vox-gobierno-castilla-leon/)
    • Galician doctors refuse to accept an incentive for reducing employee sick leave, fearing it will generate distrust among patients (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260601/medicos-rechazan-cobrar-incentivo-reducir-bajas-trabajadores-provocara-desconfianza/1003744265527_0.html)
    • The Balearic Islands give the green light to the new Faculty of Medical Sciences at UMAC (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/baleares/el-baleares-da-luz-verde-a-la-facultad-de-ciencias-medicas-de-la-umac-8487)
  • Medical conflict over the Statute
    • The Government gives the green light to the Framework Statute and medical unions respond with a new strike call. Furthermore, doctors will hold a national rally on the first day of strikes that will run from June 15 to 19 (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260602/gobierno-da-luz-verde-estatuto-marco-medicos-responden-nueva-convocatoria-huelga-junio/1003744270075_0.html)
    • Labor unions are also raising their voices against the draft Framework Statute (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/sindicatos-clase-tambien-levantan-voz-anteproyecto-estatuto-marco.html)
    • Satse also rejects the changes introduced in the Framework Statute (https://www.diariomedico.com/enfermeria/profesion/satse-rechaza-cambios-incluidos-estatuto-marco.html)
  • Immigrants and Healthcare Use
    • According to the Ministry of Health, immigrants are healthier and use healthcare less than those born in Spain. The report ‘Health Status and Use of the Healthcare System by the Migrant Population in Spain’ shows less use of primary care and less pharmaceutical spending, but more visits to the Emergency Department (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/migrantes-mas-sanos-consumidores-sns-nacidos-espana.html). Access to the original document: https://www.lamoncloa.gob.es/serviciosdeprensa/notasprensa/sanidad14/Documents/2026/010626-informe-sistema-sanitario-migrantes.pdf
  • Document from the Spanish Medical Association on AI
    • First AI Best Practices Manual published by the OMC, a document with which the organization aims to assume a strategic leadership role in one of the most decisive transformation processes in contemporary medicine (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/medicina/manual-de-buenas-practicas-para-inteligencia-artificial-en-medicina-6390). Access to the original document: https://www.cgcom.es/publicaciones/manual_OMC_buenas_practicas_IA
  • Heat-related deaths
    • In May, 101 heat-related deaths occurred in Spain, a record high since records began. The Ministry of Health’s high-temperature prevention plan estimates that the threshold at which mortality spikes has increased by half a degree (https://elpais.com/clima-y-medio-ambiente/2026-06-03/mayo-fue-el-mes-con-mas-muertes-por-calor-desde-que-hay-registros.html)

Companies

  • International
    • Pfizer will pay more than $10 billion to develop 12 oncology projects with the Chinese company Innovent (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/pfizer-pagara-mas-10000-millones-dolares-desarrollar-12-proyectos-oncologicos-china-innovent.html)
  • National
    • Grifols, Almirall, Hipra, Insud, Rovi, PharmaMar, Bayer, GSK, and Lilly lead the latest Profarma call for proposals (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260602/grifols-almirall-hipra-insud-rovi-pharmamar-bayer-gsk-lilly-lideran-ultima-convocatoria-profarma/1003744270829_0.html)
    • Ferrer sells its Consumer Health division, including Gelocatil, to self-care giant Cooper (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260601/ferrer-vende-area-consumer-health-incluido-gelocatil-gigante-autocuidado-cooper/1003744268124_0.html)
    • Grifols will invest €160 million in its new plasma plant to strengthen European supply (https://diariofarma.com/2026/06/03/grifols-invertira-160-millones-en-su-nueva-planta-de-plasma-para-reforzar-el-suministro-europeo)

7 days in healthcare (May 25th-31st, 2026)

 

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

  • Biomedicine: Leo XIV’s first encyclical attacks technological messianism.
  • Global health: Ebola can be stopped, but only if political leaders prioritize public health.
  • International health policy: Chinese advances in drug development put the country ahead of the USA.
  • National health policy: The government approves the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, which is now published in the Official State Gazette (BOE).
  • Business: Lilly acquires three companies to develop new vaccines.

Biomedicine

  • Leo XIV’s first encyclical attacks technological messianism, criticizing, according to an article in The Economist, two concepts very much in vogue in Silicon Valley: transhumanism and posthumanism, both linked by the attempt to “improve the species.” The encyclical argues that humanity—with all its strengths and limitations—should never be surpassed.
  • First transplant of a pig liver and kidney into a patient. Genetically modified pig organs are being used in trials in the USA and China.
  • New test detects heart risk earlier than cholesterol. Measuring the count of plaque-forming particles could refine the prevention of heart attacks and strokes, according to a recent study published in JAMA.

Global Health

  • Ebola can be stopped, but only if political leaders prioritize public health. According to a Nature editorial, this deadly disease was identified 50 years ago in the Congo. It is unacceptable that it is still causing deaths.
  • The Congo’s response to Ebola is late and chaotic. It is hard to imagine a more difficult place to control an epidemic.
  • Kenyan courts suspend US plans to transfer American patients from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Kenya for Ebola quarantine.
  • A measles outbreak has killed more than 500 children in Bangladesh since March. It is the worst resurgence in decades of this preventable disease.

International Health Policy

  • Chinese advances in drug development put the country ahead of the USA. Clinical trials in China attract attention at an international oncology meeting in Chicago. Emerging Chinese biotechnology is causing alarm in the USA, as its dominance in this field may disappear.
  • The US administration advocates sending Americans exposed to Ebola to Kenya, instead of returning to the USA.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The government approves the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, which is now published in the Official State Gazette (BOE). The text of the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, approved by the Council of Ministers, recognizes a full consultation process for developers and elevates the bulk of the instructions and guidelines that will govern the process to a ministerial order. In return, the Ministries of Finance, Economy, and Industry gain their own seats on the governing bodies.
  • The CNMC (National Markets and Competition Commission) has released a document on pharmacies stating that following its recommendations would save €1.8 billion annually and create 45,000 jobs. The plan is based on: promoting the use of generic drugs to levels similar to those in other European countries would save more than €1.8 billion per year; and making it easier to open pharmacies, following models like that of Navarre, would allow for the creation of 20,000 new pharmacies and 45,000 jobs within a decade. The General Council of Pharmaceutical Colleges has reacted strongly.
  • Doctors across much of Spain will stop working overtime in surgery in protest against their working conditions. Physicians in Galicia, Navarre, the Basque Country, Madrid, Catalonia, La Rioja, and the Valencian Community are protesting against the excessive workload placed on their regions and the Ministry of Health.
  • Resident doctors (MIRs) will call a strike in September if there are no real changes to their working conditions. The MIR Association denounces that the Spanish healthcare system continues to function thanks to the extraordinary efforts of thousands of resident physicians.

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly acquires three companies to develop new vaccines for $3.3 billion
  • National
    • Sha, the dream that triumphed without a business plan.

Biomedicine

  • Leo XIV’s first encyclical attacks technological messianism, criticizing, according to an article in The Economist, two concepts very much in vogue in Silicon Valley: transhumanism and posthumanism, both linked by the attempt to “improve the species.” The encyclical argues that humanity—with all its strengths and limitations—should never be surpassed (https://www.economist.com/europe/2026/05/28/leos-first-encyclical-attacks-technological-messianism). Access the encyclical: https://www.vatican.va/content/leo-xiv/es/encyclicals/documents/20260515-magnifica-humanitas.html
  • First transplant of a pig liver and kidney into a patient. Genetically modified pig organs are being used in trials in the USA and China (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01708-0)
  • A new era in neurology. Neurological diseases are the leading cause of disability globally. It is a specialty that has changed radically in the last 20 years, thanks to genomics, molecular imaging, and biomarkers (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01036-6/fulltext)
  • From hope to uncertainty: regulating new drugs for Alzheimer’s (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)01035-4/fulltext)
  • Alzheimer’s blood tests: closer to detection, before symptoms appear. New research shows the potential of analyzing Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers in middle-aged people without dementia (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/neurologia/test-alzheimer-sangre-mas-cerca-deteccion-aparezcan-sintomas.html)
  • Scientists find a potential cure for chronic hepatitis B. Most patients recover from the infection, but those who don’t are at high risk. The new medication may cure 1 in 5 of these patients (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/28/health/hepatitis-b-chronic-bepirovirsen.html)
  • Air pollution slows lung growth in childhood (https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/29/air-pollution-slows-lung-growth-childhood-uk-study). Access the original document: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013935126006080
  • The new test allows for the detection of heart disease risk earlier than cholesterol. Measuring the count of plaque-forming particles could refine the prevention of heart attacks and strokes, according to a recent study published in ‘JAMA’.
  • (https://www.elconfidencial.com/salud/2026-05-24/analisis-de-sangre-podria-predecir-riesgo-cardiaco_4345930/). Access the original document: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.2986
  • New recommendations from American oncologists for earlier detection of colon cancer. The American Cancer Society has updated its guidelines with two new highly sensitive stool tests and evidence on blood tests (https://www.abc.es/salud/nuevas-recomendaciones-oncologos-americanos-detectar-cancer-colon-20260527011339-nt.html)

Global Health

  • Ebola can be stopped, but only if political leaders prioritize public health. According to a Nature editorial, this deadly disease was identified 50 years ago in the Congo. It is unacceptable that it is still causing deaths (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01630-5)
  • Ebola: Three Red Cross workers die as more than 1,000 cases and 200 deaths are reported (https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj-2026-743673)
  • Congo’s response to Ebola is late and chaotic. It’s hard to imagine a more difficult place to control an epidemic (https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2026/05/28/congos-response-to-ebola-is-late-and-chaotic)
  • Kenyan courts suspend US plans to transfer American patients to that country for quarantine (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/29/world/africa/us-kenya-quarantine-unit-ebola.html)
  • A measles outbreak has killed more than 500 children in Bangladesh since March. It is the worst resurgence of this preventable disease in decades (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/23/6a11cd14e9cf4ac3658b45ad.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The US administration advocates sending Americans exposed to Ebola to Kenya instead of returning to the US (https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/28/ebola-kenya-congo-uganda-epidemic-00941790)
  • China
    • Chinese advances in drug development put the country ahead of the US. Clinical trials in China attract attention at an international oncology meeting in Chicago. Emerging Chinese biotechnology is causing alarm in the USA, as its dominance in this field may disappear (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/30/business/china-lung-cancer-drugs-asco.html)
  • France
    • The obesity treatments Wegovy and Mounjaro have been reimbursed by Social Security in France since mid-June (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2026/05/28/les-traitements-contre-l-obesite-wegovy-et-mounjaro-rembourses-des-la-mi-juin-en-france-dans-un-cadre-controle_6694430_3224.html)
  • European Union
    • According to Eurostat, cardiovascular diseases account for one-third of deaths in the EU (https://www.consalud.es/pacientes/eurostat-alerta-las-enfermedades-cardiovasculares-concentran-un-tercio-de-las-muertes-en-la-ue.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The government has approved the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, which is now published in the Official State Gazette (BOE). The text of the Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, approved by the Council of Ministers, recognizes a full consultation process for developers and elevates the bulk of the instructions and guidelines that will govern the process to a ministerial order. In return, the Ministries of Finance, Economy, and Industry gain their own seats on the governing bodies (https://diariofarma.com/2026/05/29/claves-del-rd-de-ets-garantias-reforzadas-para-desarrolladores-y-mas-peso-de-hacienda). Access the text of the Official State Gazette (BOE): https://elglobalfarma.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/BOE-A-2026-11587.pdf
    • Congress approves the new pharmaceutical co-payment model (https://elglobalfarma.com/farmacia/copago-farmaceutico-congreso-convalida-nuevo-modelo/)
    • The Ministry of Health is preparing the specialty of infectious diseases, together with scientific societies and FACME. Currently, Spain is the only EU country, along with Cyprus, that does not have this specialty (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260527/sanidad-prepara-especialidad-enfermedades-infecciosas-junto-sociedades-cientificas-facme/1003744262691_0.html)
    • The government approves a budget of €172.4 million for the Strategic Framework for Primary Care (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/26/6a1578f0e4d4d83d268b458e.html)
  • Regional governments
    • Madrid announces the Vive Sanitario plan, affordable rentals for doctors. The plan, as explained by the president of the Community of Madrid, is aimed at professionals under 35 years of age with the idea of ​​attracting and retaining medical talent (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/madrid-diaz-ayuso-anuncia-plan-vive-sanitario-alquileres-precio-asequible-medicos.html)
    • Asturias approves the Mental Health bill, focused on rights and prevention (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/asturias-aprueba-proyecto-ley-salud-mental-centrado-derechos-prevencion.html)
  • CNMC and pharmacies
    • The CNMC publishes a document on pharmacies and says that if its recommendations were followed, 1.8 billion euros per year would be saved and 45,000 jobs would be created. The plan is based on: Boosting the use of generic medicines to levels similar to those of other European countries would allow savings of more than 1.8 billion euros per year; and, making the opening of pharmacies more flexible, following models such as that of Navarra, would allow the creation of 20,000 new pharmacies and 45,000 jobs in a decade (https://www.cnmc.es/index.php/prensa/impacto-estudios-medicamentos-20260525). Access to the original CNMC document: (https://www.cnmc.es/sites/default/files/6595060.pdf), access to the press release: (https://www.cnmc.es/sites/default/files/6593897.pdf), access to the infographic (https://www.cnmc.es/sites/default/files/6593897.pdf)
    • Response from the General Council of Pharmaceutical Associations: The General Council of Pharmaceutical Associations strongly rejects the previous reports and the new attempt by the National Commission on Markets and Competition (CNMC) to promote a liberalization of the pharmacy sector that is out of touch with the health and social reality of Spain. https://elglobalfarma.com/farmacia/cgcof-alerta-cnmc-liberalizacion-riesgo-acceso-equitativo-medicamentos/
  • Medical conflict over the Medical Statute
    • Mónica García seeks approval for the Medical Statute at the next Council of Ministers meeting, with doctors up in arms (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2026/05/27/6a1711d9e9cf4a47088b4589.html)
    • Doctors across much of Spain will stop working overtime in surgery in protest against their working conditions. Doctors in Galicia, Navarre, the Basque Country, Madrid, Catalonia, La Rioja, and the Valencian Community are protesting against the excessive workload imposed on their regions and the Ministry of Health (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2026-05-29/medicos-de-media-espana-dejaran-de-hacer-horas-extra-de-cirugia-en-protesta-por-sus-condiciones-laborales.html)
  • Resident Doctors (MIRs)
    • Resident doctors will call a strike in September if there are no real changes to their working conditions. The MIR Association denounces that the Spanish healthcare system continues to function thanks to the excessive effort of thousands of resident doctors (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260526/mir-convocaran-huelga-indefinida-septiembre-no-cambios-reales-condiciones-laborales/1003744259943_0.html)
  • Doctors without a specialty
    • FACME denounces the hiring of doctors without a specialty. The president of the Federation of Spanish Scientific Medical Associations expresses medical concern over the validation of degrees held by 30,000 foreigners (https://www.abc.es/sociedad/cristina-avendano-facme-utilizacion-perversa-excepcion-contratar-20260531013142-nt.html)
  • Aging and pensions
    • Aging and pensions will push public spending beyond 50% of GDP (https://www.elconfidencial.com/economia/2026-05-30/envejecimiento-pensiones-elevaran-gasto-publico-mitad-pib_4364387/)

Companies

  • International
    • The US regulator delays its decision on AstraZeneca’s new breast cancer drug (https://www.ft.com/content/eee16583-a048-4060-8d47-d764e6b6d4de?syn-25a6b1a6=1)
    • Lilly acquires three companies to develop new vaccines for $3.3 billion (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20260527/lilly-adquiere-companias-desarrollar-nuevas-vacunas-enfermedades-infecciosas-millones/1003744260790_0.html)
    • Ozempic and AI, the recipe with which healthcare hopes to recover on the stock market in 2026. (https://cincodias.elpais.com/mercados-financieros/2026-05-31/ozempic-e-ia-la-receta-con-la-que-la-salud-quiere-remontar-en-bolsa-en-2026.html)
  • National News
    • Sha, the dream that triumphed without a business plan. A pilgrimage site for celebrities and executives seeking well-being, it arose from an illness in the Bataller family and has been the driving force behind diversification into the hospitality and luxury real estate sectors (https://www.expansion.com/valencia/2026/05/29/6a1884f0e5fdea620c8b456e.html)

 

 

 

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

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy (Spain)

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

Companies

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy

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

Companies

International

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

National news

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

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

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy (Spain)

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

Companies

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy

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

Companies

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

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

 

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week included:

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy (Spain)

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

Companies

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

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy

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

Companies

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

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

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were: 

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy (Spain)

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

Companies

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy

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

Companies

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

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

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy (Spain)

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

Companies

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

Biomedicine

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

Global Health

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

International Health Policy

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

National Health Policy

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

Companies

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