7 days in healthcare (April 14th-20th, 2025)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week were:

  • Biomedicine: Lilly successfully tests an anti-obesity pill that will compete with previous injection therapies.
  • Global Health: WHO members, without the US, reach an agreement on the Pandemic Treaty.
  • International Health Policy: Trump promises drug price cuts, but disrupts the price negotiation process with Medicare, which could lead to increased pharmaceutical spending.
  • National Health Policy: Illa meets with pharmaceutical companies to analyze the impact of Trump’s tariff measures and offer assistance.
  • Companies: Johnson & Johnson, Roche, and AstraZeneca, leaders in drugs for rare diseases.

Biomedicine

  • Lily’s weight-loss pill. Lilly has shown promising results with an anti-obesity pill, with essentially the same results as the popular injections for treating obesity and diabetes.
  • Chinese patients are swapping human doctors for clones of famous doctors. A Chinese company (Ant Group, a subsidiary of Alibaba) is making clones of the country’s top 100 doctors available, who can answer questions 24 hours a day.
  • They are creating “glasses” that use AI to guide blind people. A new visual aid makes it possible to interpret external information and guide blind people.

Global Health

  • WHO members, without the US, reach an agreement on the Pandemic Treaty. Member states approved the Treaty, without US participation, following Trump’s announcement of his withdrawal from the WHO. The US is also not expected to ratify the Treaty. The approved Treaty is more limited in scope than the one previously presented.
  • The US withdrawal from the WHO. NEJM article: How President Trump is weakening global health. The decision will have catastrophic effects on domestic and global health.

International Health Policy

  • Trump takes the first step toward imposing tariffs on chips and pharmaceuticals, goods that had been exempt from the tariffs approved on April 2. In the case of medicines, Trump has argued that the tariffs should be applied to strengthen American drug production.
  • Trump intends to lower drug prices through Medicare and some imports. What he proposes is to make it easier for states to import drugs from Canada. But the executive order overrides all regulations governing drug price negotiations with Medicare, passed during the Biden Administration. It is estimated that this could lead to a significant increase in drug prices.
  • The British Supreme Court answers the question of what constitutes a woman. According to the Court, for the purposes of the Equality Act, which covers discrimination in employment, education, and public services, the term “woman” refers to a biological woman. This overrides legislation that allowed a person to be declared “female” with sex dysphoria or by declaration of two doctors.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Illa meets with representatives of the pharmaceutical industry and offers support against Trump’s tariffs. The meeting, which was also attended by the Regional Minister of Health, Olga Pané, was attended by representatives of the pharmaceutical companies Boehringer Ingelheim Spain, Sandoz, Amgen, Menarini, Almirall, Ferrer, Esteve, Grifols, Reig Jofre, Chiesi Spain, Kern Pharma, Merck Sharp and Dohme Spain, Farmaindustria, and Biosim. Illa informed them that the Responem Plan promoted by the Catalan government establishes monitoring mechanisms to be able to “react effectively.”
  • Olga Pané’s roadmap for reforming Catalan healthcare. The healthcare measures are included in the Government Plan for the 15th Legislature and consist of six objectives and 63 measures.
  • Pané will reform the critical patient care model. A governance model is established for the entire critical care system in Catalonia.

Companies

  • International
    • Johnson & Johnson, Roche, and AstraZeneca will lead the way in treatments for rare diseases by 2030. In that year, medications for rare diseases will represent a fifth of prescription drug sales, according to Evaluate.
  • National
    • If current trends continue, the hospital pharmaceutical market will surpass the prescription market in five years, according to the FEFE Drug Observatory.

Biomedicine

  • Nature editorial: Let’s not rush into promising stem cell therapies. It’s important that these therapies, including others for Parkinson’s, not reach the clinic too quickly until we are assured of the highest standards of safety and efficacy (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01176-y)
  • What to know about Lilly’s weight-loss pill. Lilly has shown promising results with an anti-obesity pill, with essentially the same results as popular injections for treating obesity and diabetes (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/17/health/weight-loss-pill-eli-lilly.html)
  • The race to transform brain waves into intelligible language. Neuroscientists are fighting to give voice to brain waves (https://www.ft.com/content/9c21afa6-bd1e-4edb-867d-e6c3067ae486)
  • A new weapon against gonorrhea, after 30 years without new therapeutic alternatives. An antibiotic discovered to treat urinary tract infections could also be useful for treating gonorrhea (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/04/14/67fa87c8e4d4d84b4a8b45b1.html)
  • A key mechanism in the aggressiveness of pancreatic cancer has been identified. Pancreatic cancer appears to build a wall around itself, helping it hide from the immune system and continue to grow unabated (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-04-15/identificado-un-mecanismo-clave-en-la-agresividad-del-cancer-de-pancreas.html). Access the original article: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2424051122
  • Chinese patients are swapping human doctors for clones of famous doctors. A Chinese company (Ant Group, a subsidiary of Alibaba) is making clones of the country’s top 100 doctors available, who can answer questions 24 hours a day (https://www.elconfidencial.com/tecnologia/novaceno/2025-04-20/china-medicos-inteligencia-artificial-famosos_4110118/).
  • LSD to treat schizophrenia. An analogue of this drug is being developed, but without hallucinogenic potential (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/lsd-tratar-esquizofrenia-20250415111947-nt.html).
  • Initial success of two stem cell transplants against Parkinson’s disease (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2025-04-16/exito-inicial-de-dos-trasplantes-de-celulas-madre-contra-el-parkinson.html). Access the original article in Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08700-0
  • The blood test that warns if melanoma recurs (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/test-sangre-avisa-reaparece-melanoma-20250416003300-nt.html)
  • They create “glasses” that use AI to guide blind people. A new visual aid allows interpreting external information and guiding blind people (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/04/14/67fb9d6dfdddff0b438b4588.html)

Global Health

  • NEJM article: The US withdrawal from the WHO. How President Trump is weakening global health. The decision will have catastrophic effects on domestic and global health (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2501790
  • Microplastics have not yet earned their bad reputation. Although there are some worrying results, we still do not know the full impact of microplastics (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/04/16/microplastics-have-not-yet-earned-their-bad-reputation)
  • Nature editorial: Now is the time to track drug-resistant fungal infections. Research efforts must be made to combat fungal pathogens (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01177-x)
  • WHO members reach agreement on the Pandemic Treaty. Member states approved the Treaty, without the participation of The United States, following Trump’s announcement of its withdrawal from the WHO, is also not expected to ratify the Treaty. The approved Treaty is more limited in scope than the one previously presented. “It shows that with or without the United States, the world recognizes that pandemics require global solidarity,” said Nina Schwalbe, an international consultant involved in the approval (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/16/health/pandemic-treaty-who.html).
  • Measles outbreaks in Canada and Mexico carry a poor prognosis (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/17/health/measles-texas-mexico-canada.html).
  • The UN is working to protect the rights of older persons with an international convention. The idea is to launch an instrument that prevents discrimination based on age, such as access to healthcare (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-17/la-onu-trabaja-para-proteger-los-derechos-de-las-personas-mayores-con-una-convencion-internacional.html)

International Health Policy

  • Trump’s Trade War and Its Impact on Healthcare
    • Trump takes the first step toward imposing tariffs on chips and pharmaceuticals, goods that had been exempt from the tariffs approved on April 2. In the case of medications, Trump has argued that tariffs should be applied to strengthen American drug production (https://elpais.com/internacional/2025-04-14/trump-da-el-primer-paso-para-imponer-aranceles-a-los-chips-y-los-productos-farmaceuticos.html)
  • USA
    • Trump intends to lower drug prices through Medicare and some imports. What he proposes is to make it easier for states to import medications from Canada. But the executive order overrides all regulations for drug price negotiations with Medicare, approved during the Biden administration. It is estimated that this could mean a significant increase in drug prices (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/15/health/trump-executive-order-prescription-drug-pricing.html)
    • Trump declares on his website that the origin of COVID was a laboratory leak (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/18/science/trump-covid-website-lab-leak.html)
    • The Trump Administration proposes severe cuts to the Department of Health. The cuts would total $40 billion and would defund dozens of programs, including those for autism, teen pregnancy, lead poisoning, opioid recovery, and rural hospitals. The cuts initially spare Medicare and Medicaid (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/17/us/politics/trump-administration-proposes-health-department-cuts.html)
    • Just as fentanyl deaths decline, meth is coming from Maine. This powerful stimulant keeps users sleepless for days and can trigger psychosis and violence (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/16/health/meth-maine-fentanyl.html)
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • The British Supreme Court answers the question of what constitutes a woman. According to the Court, for the purposes of the Equality Act, which covers discrimination in employment, education, and public services, the term “woman” refers to a biological woman. This overturns legislation that allowed a person to be declared a “woman” with gender dysphoria or by declaration by two doctors (https://www.economist.com/britain/2025/04/16/what-is-a-woman-britains-supreme-court-gives-its-answer)
    • Chinese researchers revealed to have access to half a million medical records of British primary care physicians (GPs) (https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/apr/15/revealed-chinese-researchers-access-half-a-million-uk-gp-records)
    • British hospitals introduce heart failure treatments that reduce mortality by 62%. The treatment consists of higher doses of drugs at the beginning of treatment (https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/apr/16/hospitals-britain-heart-failure-treatment)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration Initiatives
    • Prohibition of serving sugary foods and pastries in school cafeterias. This is the announcement of a law, which will have to be approved (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/04/15/67fe4edfe4d4d87d778b45bc-video.html)
    • The Ministry has several open fronts: from the Drug Law to the Framework Statute, with the strong opposition of the pharmaceutical sector and medical groups (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250419/frentes-abiertos-sanidad-ley-medicamento-estatuto-marco/1003743716001_0.html)
    • The Ministry expects the Public Health Agency to be completed in a month and a half (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/agencia-salud-publica-hecha-congreso-padilla/)
  • Autonomous community initiatives
    • La Rioja manages to retain 84% of its population their family MIRs (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/la-rioja/rioja-logra-retener-84-sus-mir-en-medicina-familiar-comunitaria-plan-funciona_157153_102.html)
    • The surgical wait time at the SACYL: the best figure in the last five years (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/castilla-y-leon/espera-quirurgica-en-sacyl-presenta-mejor-cifra-ultimos-cinco-anos-81dias_157191_102.html)
    • Implementation of the Unified Medical Record Viewer in the Canary Islands (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/canarias/canarias-concluye-la-implantacion-del-visor-de-historia-clinica-unificada-6355)
    • Illa receives representatives of the pharmaceutical sector and offers support against Trump’s tariffs. The meeting, which also included the Regional Minister of Health, Olga Pané, was attended by representatives from the pharmaceutical companies Boehringer Ingelheim Spain, Sandoz, Amgen, Menarini, Almirall, Ferrer, Esteve, Grifols, Reig Jofre, Chiesi Spain, Kern Pharma, Merck Sharp and Dohme Spain, Farmaindustria, and Biosim. Illa informed them that the Responem Plan promoted by the Catalan government establishes monitoring mechanisms to be able to “react effectively.” (https://diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/illa-recibe-representantes-sector-farmaceutico-ofrece-apoyos-frente-aranceles-trump.html)
    • Olga Pané’s roadmap for reforming the Catalan healthcare system. The healthcare measures are included in the Government Plan for the 15th Legislature and consist of six objectives and 63 measures (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/cataluna/los-6-objetivos-y-63-medidas-de-pane-para-reformar-la-sanidad-catalana-3145). Government Plan: https://govern.cat/govern/docs/Seguiment_Pladegovern.pdf
    • Pané will reform the critical patient care model. A governance model is established for the entire critical care system in Catalonia (https://diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/cataluna-pane-reformara-modelo-atencion-paciente-critico.html)
  • “Not to do” policies
    • 23 hospitals join forces to implement ineffective or harmful measures. The initiative has managed to reduce blood transfusions and preoperative examinations by half (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-16/23-hospitales-se-unen-para-dejar-de-hacer-cosas-ineficaces-o-que-pueden-perjudicar-al-paciente.html)
  • Healthcare, the second most pressing issue
    • According to the CIS (National Institute of Statistics and Census), healthcare is the second most pressing issue for Spaniards, surpassing housing. The report highlights that citizens perceive the National Health System to be deficient. Many frequent patient complaints tend to include a lack of staff in primary care, waiting times, or access to specialists. All of these problems seem to generate increasing distrust and a general feeling of insecurity regarding the quality and accessibility of healthcare, a factor that directly affects the population’s well-being. (https://gacetamedica.com/politica/cis-sanidad-segundo-problema-afecta-espanoles/)

Companies

  • International News
    • UnitedHealth shares fall 20% after insurers’ profit forecasts (https://www.ft.com/content/a8ab05e8-515f-4f43-9a82-a258bc0073d5)
    • Pfizer halts development of its obesity drug (https://www.ft.com/content/159502e7-0c4b-4024-8b77-33dbcf01fea2)
    • Johnson & Johnson warns that drug tariffs could lead to shortages (https://www.ft.com/content/3d1cebdd-3670-4e8d-9bfc-2a6398ede14b)
    • New drugs expected from the EMA for 2025, from Alzheimer’s to cancer drugs (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/04/17/6800d8cdfc6c83ae548b45ad.html)
    • Johnson & Johnson, Roche, and AstraZeneca will lead the treatment of rare diseases by 2030. In that year, drugs for rare diseases will represent a fifth of prescription drug sales, according to Evaluate (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250417/johnson-astrazeneca-roche-lideraran-mercado-terapias-enfermedades-raras/1003743715267_0.html)
  • National
    • If current trends continue, the hospital pharmaceutical market will surpass the prescription market in five years, according to the FEFE Drug Observatory. (https://elglobalfarma.com/farmacia/si-continuan-las-tendencias-de-crecimiento-actuales-el-mercado-hospitalario-superara-al-de-recetas-en-cinco-anos/)
    • The Ministry of Health will force down prices on neurological therapies, statins, and antacids (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13322478/04/25/sanidad-forzara-precios-a-la-baja-en-terapias-neurologicas-estatinas-o-antiacidos.html)
    • Cinfa increases its sales by 10% and consolidates its leadership in the pharmacy channel (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13315995/04/25/cinfa-sube-sus-ventas-un-10-en-2024-y-consolida-su-liderazgo-en-el-canal-farmacia.html)

7 days in healthcare (April 7th-13th, 2025)

 

Summary

The most impactful health news of the week were:

  • Biomedicine: The Lancet proposes rethinking coronary artery disease to save lives, based not so much on symptoms but on atheroma.
  • Global Health: Public health under Trump 2.0: in the short term, chaos; in the long term, a disaster for public health both domestically and internationally.
  • International Health Policy: A dark moment for American science, with opportunities for Europe to attract scientists.
  • National Health Policy. The Council of Ministers approves the draft Drug Law, which is rejected by the entire pharmaceutical sector and appears to contradict the announced Strategic Plan for the Pharmaceutical Industry.
  • Business: Ribera reaches a five-year agreement with SERGAS for Povisa.

Biomedicine

  • Rethinking coronary artery disease. Editorial in The Lancet. The change would consist of shifting from the clinical assessment of occlusion to atheroma. The change would involve monitoring individuals who may have arteriosclerosis, even without symptoms. According to a commission of 25 experts, this change in approach could save up to 8.7 million lives annually.
  • NEJM Review: Generative AI in Medicine. This review analyzes the short-, medium-, and long-term opportunities for AI in medicine. In the short term: patient education and information synthesis; in the medium term, aids in medical diagnosis; in the long term, virtual health assistants, disease monitoring, and medical education.

Global Health

  • Public Health Under Trump 2.0: An Unmitigated Disaster. According to an editorial in The Lancet Public Health, the short-term effects are confusion, uncertainty, and chaos; in the long term, a disaster for public health both domestically and internationally. This began with the withdrawal from the WHO and the Paris Climate Agreement; the freezing of millions of dollars for American national and international health programs; and the attacks on the CDC and the National Institute of Health (NIH), which threaten to undermine decades of progress and leadership. Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is known for denying scientific evidence. His first 50 days have seen decisions that undermine science; they weaken the protection of vulnerable populations, risk increasing health inequalities, and threaten public health nationally and internationally. This is the meaning of the slogan “Make America Healthy Again.”

International Health Policy

  • The pharmaceutical industry “obeys” Trump and begins investing in the US to avoid tariffs. This can be seen in companies such as the Swiss company Novartis, which has announced investments of $23 billion in the US, as well as J&J, which has announced investments worth €50 billion. This could have an impact on Europe, as Europe’s largest export to the US is medicine.
  • A dark moment for American science. Right-wing populism contains a strong dose of skepticism toward science, at least in certain fields. This could impact public health and the economy, as the American scientific drive was at the foundation of its business development. In recent weeks, thousands of healthcare employees have been laid off, as well as those at the FDA, CDC, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This offers opportunities for other countries, primarily European, to attract American scientists.
  • Starmer promises a centralized service for scientists to access data, with a public investment of 600 million pounds. The service will be hosted on the Wellcome Genome Campus in Cambridge.
  • Concern and caution in the European Union regarding a possible pharmaceutical exodus to the United States.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Government approves the new draft of the Drug Law. Main changes: prescription by active ingredient, with the possibility of changes in the drugs to be dispensed by pharmacists; changes in the prices of off-patent drugs, introducing the concept of “selected prices,” which can be changed every six months; limited prescribing possibilities for nurses and physical therapists. The entire pharmaceutical sector opposes the law: pharmaceutical professionals, pharmaceutical employers, and distributors alike. In principle, the principles of the law seem far removed from what was promised in the Strategic Plan for the Pharmaceutical Industry, so emphatically announced by the government after a couple of meetings between President Sánchez and the top global executives of the pharmaceutical industry. This plan, following Trump’s tariff policies and the provisions of this law, appears to have become a dead letter.
  • Osakidetza’s offer to retain doctors: €56,629 salary and 28 days of vacation.

Companies

  • International
    • The former Novartis subsidiary threatens the revenue of one of Bayer’s best-selling drugs.
  • National
    • Significant success for Ribera. SERGAS and Povisa sign the new healthcare contract in Vigo for 195 million euros. The hospital will earn 17% more each year with the new agreement. This will serve an estimated population of 116,000 people.

Biomedicine

  • Problems with AI drug development, according to an editorial in Science. The future of drug discovery may be AI, but the present is not yet. AI is in its infancy in this field. For AI to mature, developers need high-quality, non-proprietary databases to test and validate models, managed by independent organizations. Current AI models have proven effective in only a few areas due to the lack of standardized data (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adx0339)
  • NEJM Review: Generative AI in Medicine. This review analyzes the short-, medium-, and long-term opportunities for AI in medicine. In the short term: patient education and information synthesis; in the medium term, medical diagnostic aids; in the long term, virtual health assistants, disease monitoring, and medical education (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsb2503956)
  • Rethinking Coronary Artery Disease. Editorial in The Lancet. The shift would involve moving from the clinical assessment of occlusion to atheroma. The shift would involve following individuals who may have arteriosclerosis, even without symptoms. According to a commission of 25 experts, this change in approach could save up to 8.7 million lives annually (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00497-0/fulltext)
  • A simple 5-pound blood test can prevent thousands of heart attacks, according to a study. Researchers suggest that troponin testing can detect silent damage and predict the risk of future cardiovascular events. This could prevent thousands of heart attacks and strokes. This protein is found in the heart muscle and is released into the blood when the heart is damaged (https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/apr/07/simple-blood-test-help-prevent-thousands-heart-attacks-study)
  • Scientists recreate brain circuitry in the lab for the first time. This holds promise for new pain treatments (https://www.ft.com/content/f8d5404c-5a24-4e3a-9e0b-6987153cd41e)
  • Gene therapy to slow Parkinson’s disease with an injection. The trial seeks to restore the function of dopamine-producing neurons. It has been in development for 36 months, and results are expected by the end of 2027 (https://www.larazon.es/salud/terapia-genica-frenar-parkinson-inyeccion_2025041167efbb5eeec2d30001456a7d.html)
  • A new method allows Alzheimer’s disease to be detected with a blood test in people with symptoms. Detecting the disease with a simple blood test is getting closer, using the p-tau217 biomarker (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2025-04-09/un-nuevo-metodo-permite-detectar-el-alzheimer-con-un-analisis-de-sangre-a-personas-con-sintomas.html)

Global Health

  • Public Health under Trump 2.0. According to an editorial in The Lancet Public Health, the short-term effects are confusion, uncertainty, and chaos; in the long term, a disaster for public health both domestically and internationally. It began with the withdrawal from the WHO and the Paris Climate Agreement; the freezing of millions for American national and international health programs; and the attacks on the CDC and the NHI, which threaten to undermine decades of progress and leadership. Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is known for denying scientific evidence. His first 50 days have seen decisions that undermine science. They weaken the protection of vulnerable populations, risk increasing health inequalities, and threaten public health nationally and internationally. This is the meaning of the slogan “Make America Healthy Again” (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(25)00071-4/fulltext).
  • All federal experts on HIV prevention in children abroad have been fired. This could affect more than 500,000 children and more than 600,000 pregnant women living with HIV (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/08/health/cdc-hiv-mothers.html)
  • Trump’s cuts leave Liberia’s healthcare system on the brink due to a lack of medical supplies (https://elpais.com/planeta-futuro/2025-04-07/los-recortes-de-trump-dejan-el-sistema-sanitario-de-liberia-al-borde-del-abismo-por-la-falta-de-suministros-medicos.html)

International Health Policy

  • Trump’s trade war and its impact on healthcare
    • The pharmaceutical industry “obeys” Trump and begins investing in the US to avoid tariffs. This can be seen in companies such as the Swiss company Novartis, which has announced investments of $23 billion in the US, as well as J&J, which has announced investments worth €50 billion. This could have an impact on Europe, as Europe’s largest export to the US is medicine (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250413/industria-farmaceutica-obedece-donald-trump-comienza-hacer-inversiones-eeuu-evitar-aranceles/1003743711055_0.html)
  • USA
    • A dark moment for American science. Right-wing populism contains a strong dose of skepticism about science, at least in certain fields. This could impact public health and the economy, as the American scientific drive was at the heart of its business development. In recent weeks, thousands of employees have been laid off from the health service, as well as from the FDA, CDC, and the National Institutes of Health. This offers opportunities for other countries, primarily European ones, to attract American scientists (https://www.ft.com/content/7ec9304f-1c67-4a41-90f6-4496512c236b)
    • The many ways Kennedy is undermining vaccines (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/13/health/kennedy-vaccines-confidence-access.html)
  • The United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • The British are getting used to seeking cheap healthcare abroad. 431,000 Britons sought medical care abroad in 2023, five times more than a decade ago. These trips were for hair transplants, dental implants, cosmetic procedures, and hip replacements (https://www.economist.com/britain/2025/04/10/the-british-are-learning-to-love-cheap-overseas-health-care)
    • Starmer promises a centralized service for scientists to access data, with a £600 million public investment. The service will be hosted at the Wellcome Genome Campus in Cambridge (https://www.ft.com/content/a92834de-9207-4919-94ed-6224896b9749)
  • Italy
    • The universalism of healthcare in Italy is being questioned. The National Health Service was established in Italy 50 years ago under the principles of universalism. However, a very granular study of the disease burden shows significant variations in this burden across Italian regions, as well as notable variations in services, which seems to question the principles of universalism (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(25)00064-7/fulltext)
  • WHO
    • The WHO warns of the stagnation in the fight against maternal mortality. While the mortality rate fell by 40% between 2000 and 2023, progress has recently slowed (https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2025/04/07/l-onu-alerte-sur-une-stagnation-dans-la-lutte-contre-la-mortalite-maternelle_6592194_3224.html)

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration Initiatives
    • New Drug Law
      • Text of the Draft Law submitted for public review (https://www.sanidad.gob.es/normativa/audiencia/docs/APL_MEDICAMENTOS_Y_PRODUCTOS_SANITARIOS.pdf)
      • The new bill aims to make dispensing more flexible and save €1.3 billion, which amounts to €23 billion, or 2% of GDP. The new law empowers nurses and physiotherapists to prescribe drugs in very limited exceptions. Prescription by active ingredient is also established (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-08/el-gobierno-aprueba-un-proyecto-de-ley-del-medicamento-que-flexibilizara-su-dispensacion-y-que-pretende-ahorrar-1300-millones.html)
      • Unanimous opposition from the pharmaceutical sector to the new bill. In an unusual move, both pharmacists (Official College of Pharmaceutical Colleges); The three pharmaceutical industry associations (Farmaindustria, AESEG, and Biosim) and the pharmaceutical distribution company FEDIFAR strongly oppose the regulation, particularly the selected prices for off-patent medications, which would change every six months (https://diariofarma.com/2025/04/10/el-sector-farmaceutico-pide-al-unisono-un-cambio-de-rumbo-para-la-ley-de-medicamentos)
      • The price reduction for generics pits the Ministry against the industry (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-09/la-reduccion-del-precio-de-los-medicamentos-genericos-enfrenta-al-ministerio-de-sanidad-con-la-industria-y-con-los-farmaceuticos.html)
    • Spain-China Trade Agreement
      • Agreement between Spain and China for the export of medical devices and medicines (https://diariofarma.com/2025/04/11/espana-y-china-incluyen-los-productos-sanitarios-en-su-acuerdo-de-exportacion)
    • Public Health Agency
      • The government is giving the State Public Health Agency a second round of approval. The Council of Ministers resubmits the bill (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/gobierno-da-segunda-vuelta-proyecto-ley-agencia-salud-publica.html
  • Autonomous community initiatives
    • Osakidetza’s offer to retain doctors: €56,629 salary and 28 vacation days (https://diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/oferta-osakidetza-retener-medicos-56629-euros-sueldo-28-dias-vacaciones.html)
  • Satisfaction with the NHS in Spain
    • Spaniards’ satisfaction with the NHS has dropped by 20% in 4 years, according to FUNCAS (https://diariofarma.com/2025/04/07/funcas-bajan-un-20-en-cuatro-anos-los-espanoles-que-se-declaran-satisfechos-con-el-sns)

Companies

  • International News
    • Former Novartis subsidiary threatens revenues from one of Bayer’s best-selling drugs (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13308484/04/25/la-exfilial-de-novartis-amenaza-los-ingresos-de-uno-de-los-medicamentos-mas-vendidos-de-bayer.html)
  • National
    • This is how Trump’s tariffs affect Spanish pharmaceutical companies. Although the drugs were initially excluded from the tariffs, Trump’s other statements indicate that they will be included. This would affect Grifols, Rovi, Almirall, and Faes Farma to varying degrees (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/2025/04/12/67f98f5be5fdeafe5f8b45b0.html)
    • The Tiritas manufacturer increases the turnover at its large factory in Spain to €130 million (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13316007/04/25/el-fabricante-de-tiritas-eleva-a-130-millones-la-facturacion-en-su-gran-fabrica-de-espana.html)
    • The Treasury demands €36 million in unpaid taxes from the Israeli pharmaceutical company Teva (https://www.eleconomista.es/actualidad/noticias/13304244/04/25/hacienda-exige-36-millones-en-impuestos-no-pagados-a-la-farmaceutica-israeli-teva.html)
    • SERGAS and Povisa sign the new healthcare contract in Vigo for 195 million euros. The hospital will earn 17% more each year under the new agreement. This will serve an estimated population of 116,000 people (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/ultimas-noticias/noticias/13315014/04/25/sergas-y-povisa-firman-el-nuevo-contrato-de-prestacion-sanitaria-en-vigo-por-195-millones-no-es-privatizar-estamos-sergastizando.html)

7 days in healthcare (March 31st-April 6th, 2025)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Mitochondrial transplants could cure diseases and prolong life.
  • Global health: The need to reduce mortality from postpartum hemorrhage.
  • International health policy: Trump’s executive order on tariffs. According to Section 3 (Implementation), b 4, medications (but not medical technologies) are excluded from the tariff.
  • National health policy. The Ministry and communities reach an agreement on the 2025-2027 Mental Health Plan, which includes $39 million in funding with eight strategic lines.
  • Companies: Keytruda, the drug that bills as much as Zara.

Biomedicine

  • Mitochondrial transplants could cure diseases and prolong life. Although organ transplants are well known, transplants of cellular organelles, such as mitochondria, are much less so. James McCully of Harvard Medical School has published the results of premature infants who underwent this type of transplant, as their mitochondria were damaged. Other preliminary results have also been published. This approach is being tested for many other diseases, as well as as a way to prolong life.
  • Vaccination against shingles may reduce the risk of dementia. A population-based study shows that the shingles vaccine reduces the chance of dementia by 20%.

Global Health

  • Reduction in mortality from postpartum hemorrhage. Globally, there are more than 300,000 deaths among women due to pregnancy and childbirth. Bleeding due to postpartum hemorrhage is the leading cause of death, with 70,000 deaths each year, predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. This is an event that can be prevented with early diagnosis.

International Health Policy

  • Medicines excluded from Trump’s tariffs. Trump’s trade war threatens to disrupt global distribution chains for medicines and healthcare products. We have already experienced the consequences of supply chain disruption during COVID-19, with limitations on obtaining protective equipment, vaccines, and medications. Many of the medications, drug ingredients, and medical devices used in the US are imported, mainly from China and India. Europe calls the tariff increase “chaos” and warns that it will “make medicines more expensive.”
  • More Americans cannot afford healthcare, according to Gallup. Eleven percent of the population cannot afford access to medicines and healthcare.
  • Only one in five UK citizens (21%) is satisfied with NHS services, according to a joint study by the King’s Fund and the Nuffield Trust.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Ministry and regional governments reach an agreement on the 2025-2027 Mental Health Plan, which entails funding of 39 million euros. Eight strategic lines: 1. Strengthening human resources in mental health; 2. Community mental health; 3. A human rights-oriented model; 4. Rational use of psychotropic drugs and improved prescribing; 5. Addressing the most vulnerable contexts and groups; 6. Perinatal, childhood, and adolescent mental health; 7. Strengthening mental health information systems; 8. Mental health and work.
  • The draft of Cantabria’s Digital Health Law will be ready this month. Guaranteed access to data is announced as the law’s central focus.
  • Catalonia creates a 30 million euro fund to attract scientists who emigrate due to Trump. The strategy already has a name: it will be called Catalonia Talent Bridge and seeks to “offer opportunities to researchers whose academic freedom and professional future may be threatened in the United States.”
  • Doctors are mobilizing against the government’s drafting of the Framework Statute. The points of contention: a specific statute for doctors, whether on-call work is paid as overtime, and issues related to public/private exclusivity.
  • Silicosis is resurfacing strongly, increasing by more than 1,400% between 2015 and 2019. This is an incurable respiratory disease caused by the inhalation of crystalline silica dust. Although historically considered a disease of the past associated with mining, cases have increased in recent decades, affecting new industrial sectors such as the handling of quartz agglomerates used in kitchen and bathroom countertops.
  • Comments on the AIREF report. The report goes from detecting certain problems to directly eliminating them, by not hiring new employees, based on the “uniformity” of the model and the precedents in certain countries.

Companies

  • International
    • Keytruda, the drug that bills as much as Zara. It is a monoclonal antibody from MSD, which is used against 15 types of cancer.
  • National
    • Brookfield resumes contact with Grifols to launch another takeover bid for 7 billion.

Biomedicine

  • Mitochondrial transplants could cure diseases and prolong life. Although organ transplants are well known, transplants of cellular organelles, such as mitochondria, are much less so. James McCully of Harvard Medical School has published the results of premature infants who underwent this type of transplant, as their mitochondria were damaged. Other preliminary results have also been published. This approach is being tested for many other diseases, as well as as a way to prolong life (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/03/31/mitochondria-transplants-could-cure-diseases-and-lengthen-lives)
  • The harm of smartphones and social media. The Netflix series “Adolescence” has been widely disseminated. Many of us viewed smartphones and social media as forces for good. We believed the benefits outweighed the potential drawbacks. However, this access can cause harm, making mental illness more common in children and adolescents. Adults can control access, but children and adolescents are more exposed, with negative consequences (https://www.bmj.com/content/389/bmj.r658).
  • Getting vaccinated against shingles may reduce the risk of dementia. A population study shows that the herpes vaccine reduces the risk of dementia by 20% (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-04-02/vacunarse-contra-el-herpes-zoster-podria-reducir-el-riesgo-de-sufrir-demencia.html). Access the original article in Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08800-x
  • A drug could revolutionize the treatment of cocaine addiction. It is a gene therapy developed by Novartis (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/farmaco-revolucionar-tratamiento-adiccion-cocaina-20250404102300-nt.html). Access the original article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scitranslmed.adi4505
  • The pacemaker of the future, as small as a grain of rice and activated by light (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/marcapasos-futuro-pequeno-grano-arroz-activado-luz-20250402170000-nt.html)

Global Health

  • Reducing mortality from postpartum hemorrhage. Globally, there are more than 300,000 women who die from pregnancy and childbirth. Bleeding due to postpartum hemorrhage is the leading cause of death, accounting for 70,000 deaths each year, predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. This event can be prevented with early diagnosis (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00671-3/fulltext).

International Health Policy

  • Trump’s trade war and its impact on healthcare
    • Trump’s executive order on tariffs. According to Section 3 (Implementation), b 4, medicines are excluded from the tariff (https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/04/regulating-imports-with-a-reciprocal-tariff-to-rectify-trade-practices-that-contribute-to-large-and-persistent-annual-united-states-goods-trade-deficits/)
    • Annex I of the executive order, which establishes tariffs for individual countries: European Union, 20%; Japan, 24%; China, 34%; etc. Russia, Cuba, and North Korea are not on the list (https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Annex-I.pdf)
    • Trump’s trade war threatens to disrupt global supply chains for medicines and healthcare products. We have already experienced the consequences of supply chain disruption during COVID-19, with limitations on obtaining protective gear, vaccines, and medications. Many of the medications, drug ingredients, and medical devices used in the US are imported, primarily from China and India. Globalization has made China and India powerhouses in the production of APIs (raw materials for medicines) (https://www.bmj.com/content/389/bmj.r648)
    • For the industry, on edge due to Trump’s tariffs, the key lies in drug manufacturing. Although medicines and vaccines are explicitly excluded from the tariffs, it is unknown how this will impact other components necessary for drug manufacturing. Sources at Farmaindustria say that 24% of the inputs for drug production in Europe come from the USA (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/la-industria-aranceles-trump-fabricacion-medicamentos/).
    • Europe describes the tariff increase as “chaos” and warns that it will “make medicines more expensive” (https://diariofarma.com/2025/04/03/europa-califica-de-caos-la-subida-arancelaria-y-advierte-que-encarecera-los-medicamentos).
    • FENIN requests that healthcare technologies be exempt from any tariffs. The announced tariffs could jeopardize patient access to healthcare technology. Medtech Europe and COCIR have also expressed their concern to the EU (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/fenin-pide-tecnologias-sanitarias-queden-exentas-arancel.html)
  • USA
    • CDC cuts threaten US healthcare. The cuts will weaken the agency, which has been a model for the entire world (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/02/health/cdc-layoffs-kennedy.html)
    • FDA cuts threaten to raise drug costs and erode food safety. Initially, the cuts were intended to be administrative, but they also affect scientific staff (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/03/health/fda-layoffs-food-and-drug-safety-rfk-jr.html)
    • More Americans cannot afford healthcare, according to Gallup. 11% of the population cannot afford access to medications and healthcare (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/02/health/health-care-costs-gallup.html). Access the Gallup poll: https://news.gallup.com/poll/658148/inability-pay-care-medicine-hits-new-high.aspx
  • UK and the National Health Service
    • King’s Fund comments on an NHS satisfaction survey: only 1 in 5 citizens (21%) say they are satisfied with the NHS: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/reports/public-satisfaction-nhs-social-care-in-2024-bsa, Nuffield Trust comments on the same survey: https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/research/public-satisfaction-with-the-NHS-and-social-care-in-2024-Results-from-the-British-Social-Attitudes-survey. Access to the original document: https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/sites/default/files/2025-04/Public%20satisfaction%20with%20the%20NHS%20and%20social%20care%20in%202024_WEB%20%284%29.pdf

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration Initiatives
    • The Ministry and the regional governments reach an agreement on the 2025-2027 Mental Health Plan, which entails funding of 39 million euros. Eight strategic lines: 1. Strengthening human resources in mental health; 2. Community mental health; 3. A human rights-oriented model; 4. Rational use of psychotropic drugs and improved prescribing; 5. Addressing the most vulnerable contexts and groups; 6. Perinatal, childhood, and adolescent mental health; 7. Strengthening mental health information systems; 8. Mental Health and Work (https://www.alimente.elconfidencial.com/bienestar/2025-04-04/aprueban-plan-salud-mental-sanidad-ccaa_4102136/)
    • The draft of the Medicines Law will go to the next Council of Ministers, then go to a public hearing, and is expected to reach Congress as a bill by the end of 2025 (https://diariofarma.com/2025/04/02/el-anteproyecto-de-ley-de-los-medicamentos-ira-al-proximo-consejo-de-ministros)
    • The government aims to turn Spain into a medicines hub through eight measures (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/hub-farmaceutico-gobierno-aemps-espana/)
  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • The draft of the Digital Health Law Cantabria will be ready this month. Guaranteed access to data is announced as the cornerstone of the law (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/cantabria/anteproyecto-ley-salud-digital-cantabria-estara-listo-este-mismo-mes-abril_156580_102.html)
    • Galicia, the first region to purchase vaccines through risk-sharing agreements (https://diariofarma.com/2025/03/31/galicia-primera-comunidad-que-comprara-vacunas-con-de-acuerdos-de-riesgo-compartido)
    • The Community of Madrid will soon put out to tender the construction of the Ciudad de la Salud (Health City), comprising the La Paz Hospital and the Faculty of Medicine of the Autonomous University of Madrid. (https://www.eldebate.com/espana/madrid/20250403/madrid-licitara-proximamente-primeras-obras-ciudad-salud_285155.html)
    • Catalonia creates a 30 million fund to attract scientists who emigrate because of Trump. The strategy already has a name: it will be called Catalonia Talent Bridge and seeks to “offer opportunities to research staff whose academic freedom and professional future in the United States may be threatened” (https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2025/03/31/67ea8400468aebc4488b4584.html)
    • Andalusians take to the streets for the sixth time over the deterioration of public healthcare under the Moreno government (https://elpais.com/espana/andalucia/2025-04-05/los-andaluces-salen-a-la-calle-por-sexta-vez-contra-el-deterioro-de-la-sanidad-pubica-por-el-gobierno-de-moreno.html)
  • Problems with the Framework Statute and, specifically, with the inclusion of doctors continue
    • Doctors mobilize against the drafting of the Framework Statute The government is planning. The issues of contention: a specific statute for doctors, the requirement that on-call work be paid as overtime, and issues related to public/private exclusivity (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-05/los-medicos-se-movilizan-contra-la-reforma-de-su-estatuto-que-planea-el-gobino-la-indignacion-es-enorme.html)
  • Silicosis
    • Silicosis is making a strong comeback, having increased by more than 1,400% between 2015 and 2019. This is an incurable respiratory disease caused by the inhalation of crystalline silica dust. Although historically considered a disease of the past associated with mining, cases have increased in recent decades, affecting new industrial sectors such as the handling of quartz agglomerates used in kitchen and bathroom countertops (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/04/03/67ee460ffdddff875f8b45a5.html). Ministry of Health report on the topic: https://www.sanidad.gob.es/fr/areas/saludLaboral/enfermedadesProf/docs/REMERGENCIA_SILICOSIS._Accesible.pdf
  • MUFACE
    • Comments on the AIREF report. The report goes from detecting certain problems to outright discontinuation, by not hiring new employees, based on the “uniformity” of the model and the precedents in certain countries (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-04/las-seis-incognitas-sobre-muface-que-se-han-desvelado-despues-de-renovarse-el-convenio.html)
    • Private hospitals are threatening to abandon MUFACE due to low insurance rates. ASPE urges the government to intervene (https://www.elperiodico.com/es/sanidad/20250401/muface-hospitales-privados-barajan-abandonar-bajas-tarifas-nuevo-concierto-115923543)
    • MUFACE awards the agreement to Adeslas and Asisa, which is expected to be signed by the end of April (https://theobjective.com/economia/2025-04-03/muface-adeslas-asisa-concierto-sanitario/)

Companies

  • International News
    • Biotech M&A expected to return (https://www.ft.com/content/a4cad400-ae56-434a-94bd-080152263d90)
    • BectonDickinson in talks to divest from health sciences (https://www.ft.com/content/a5a94445-9185-4c26-be6a-ae3303838d81)
    • Drug discovery company Isomorphic Labs, a spin-off of Google’s DeepMind, raises $600 million (https://www.ft.com/content/14d93672-dce7-482d-9b32-fa3553b37273)
    • Keytruda, the drug with the same revenue as Zara. It is a monoclonal antibody from Merck, which is used against 15 types of cancer (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-04-02/keytruda-el-medicamento-que-factura-tanto-como-zara-y-genera-debate-sobre-la-duracion-de-las-patentes.html)

7 days in healthcare (March 24th-30th, 2025)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: Colorectal cancer screening. The same mortality results as colonoscopy with the detection of blood in stool.
  • Global health: American vandalism in global health continues: a simple email from USAID halted efforts to track diseases and prevent outbreaks worldwide. The AIDS pandemic will resurface after the cuts.
  • International health policy: Trump is placing American scientists in the hands of Europeans.
  • National health policy. The long-awaited (and more than disappointing) AIREF report on the MUFACE model is released.
  • Business: Due to pressure from Trump, pharmaceutical companies are committing investments of more than $80 billion in the US.

Biomedicine

  • Colorectal cancer screening. This tumor is the second leading cause of cancer death globally. A study has been published in The Lancet comparing colorectal cancer deaths in people with the most common early diagnosis methods: colonoscopy or stool blood screening. There are no differences in mortality.
  • How harmful are e-cigarettes? Although restrictions on vaping are multiplying (Belgium, France, etc.), the risks of vaping may outweigh its benefits. Researchers believe that vaping is much less dangerous than smoking. 70 substances have been associated with cancer in tobacco. Vaping also contains some of these pathogens, but in much lower concentrations. A review of 39 studies shows no increased incidence of cancer in vapers who have never smoked.

Global Health

  • Trump’s cuts harm global efforts to track diseases and prevent outbreaks. A simple email from USAID halted hundreds of millions of dollars in efforts to fight several diseases globally. The full extent of the cuts is unknown, and legal challenges are underway, but much of the damage has already been done. • The United States will end vaccine funding for poor countries. The US administration intends to end financial support for GAVI.

International Health Policy

  • Trump is dumping American scientists in the hands of Europeans. American science greatly improved after the emigration of numerous scientists from Europe following Nazi rule. Einstein was the clearest example. European politicians see Trump’s policies and research restrictions as an opportunity to reverse the flow. European Union science ministers want immediate action. Granting refuge to American scientists is part of a new urgency in Europe. Europe spends 2% of its GDP on R&D compared to 3.6% in the US.
  • The Trump administration is abruptly cutting billions in public health services. The Department of Health has cut $12 billion from grants for mental illness, infectious diseases, and other health problems.
  • 10,000 federal healthcare workers will be laid off, as announced by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. The federal health care system employs approximately 82,000 people. Two agencies are the most affected: the FDA and the CDC.
  • What is the future of British hospitals? Boris Johnson’s announced program to build 40 new hospitals by 2030 is no longer going to be met. Priorities have changed, with spending now directed more toward the community than to hospitals. Between 2006 and 2022, the percentage of the NHS budget spent on hospitals increased from 47% to 58%, decreasing funding for primary and community care. The face of hospitals will change: they will increasingly operate outside their walls; there will be “command centers” to coordinate care; others will operate as campuses that include primary care and clinical research laboratories. Staff will rotate more among hospital networks and spend more time in hospital satellites. The government needs to decide what it wants for the hospitals of the future.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • AIREF report on administrative mutualism. The report is highly disappointing. The summary is that it acknowledges that the MUFACE model is cheaper than the public system, and that closing it would increase spending and lengthen waiting lists. Despite all this, it recommends that new civil servants join the public system directly. This is the opposite of an independent, analytical report, studying the model’s problems as well as its advantages, making some recommendations for improvement. It assesses the model in the context of the Spanish healthcare system and considers the importance of having private insurers involved in the public service, etc. A perfectly dispensable report.
  • Experts call for the creation of a National Cancer Registry in Spain. Its absence limits data collection and analysis.

Companies

  • International
    • Due to pressure from Trump, pharmaceutical companies are committing investments of more than 80 billion euros in the USA. The USA represents 61% of sales in the top ten global markets.
  • National
    • HM Hospitals, a leader in private healthcare. Nearly 120,000 surgeries and more than 4 million consultations consolidate HM Hospitals’ position.

Biomedicine

  • New antibiotic that kills drug-resistant bacteria discovered in a technician’s garden. And it’s not toxic to human cells. These molecules attack the ribosomes of bacteria. The need for new antibiotics is clear, as bacteria acquire resistance to antibiotics as they are used. In 2021, it is believed that 1.1 million deaths globally are attributable to bacterial resistance, and this figure could reach 1.9 million by 2050 (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00945-z)
  • Colorectal cancer screening. This tumor is the second leading cause of cancer death globally. A study has been published in The Lancet comparing colorectal cancer deaths in people with the most common early diagnosis methods: colonoscopy or stool blood screening. There are no differences in mortality. (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00619-1/fulltext)
  • A study confirms the value of the fecal occult blood test for colon cancer screening (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-28/un-estudio-constata-el-valor-del-test-de-sangre-oculta-en-heces-para-el-cribado-del-cancer-de-colon.html). Access the original article: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00288-0/abstract?rss=yes
  • How harmful are e-cigarettes? Although vaping restrictions are multiplying (Belgium, France, etc.), the risks of vaping may outweigh its benefits. Researchers believe vaping is far less dangerous than smoking. Seventy substances have been linked to cancer in tobacco. Vaping also contains some of these pathogens, but in much lower concentrations. A review of 39 studies shows no increased incidence of cancer in vapers who have never smoked (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/03/21/how-harmful-are-electronic-cigarettes). Access the original article: https://www.tobaccoinduceddiseases.org/Evidence-update-on-the-cancer-risk-of-vaping-e-cigarettes-A-systematic-review,192934,0,2.html
  • British experts urge prioritizing research into 24 families of pathogens that cause infectious diseases (https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/mar/25/uk-experts-urge-prioritising-research-into-24-types-of-deadly-pathogen-families)
  • Scientists unveil a small robot capable of detecting and treating intestinal cancer. Scientists have developed this small device capable of providing 3D images of the digestive tract and enabling early diagnosis of this type of cancer, the second leading cause of death among cancers. (https://www.ft.com/content/ce224ad0-003f-4d96-8df7-b93abbe90b5a). Access the original article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adq4198
  • Researchers develop AI tool capable of diagnosing celiac disease. Celiac disease can be difficult to diagnose, taking years. Until now, it has been diagnosed by duodenal biopsy. Scientists at the University of Cambridge have discovered an AI algorithm that is effective in diagnosing this disease. This has the potential to radically change the diagnosis of this disease (https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/mar/27/coeliac-disease-diagnosis-ai-tool)
  • New drug for lower back pain could be a game changer. This drug is based on antibiotics rather than painkillers. The drug, called PP353, is developed by Persical Pharmaceuticals (https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/28/new-drug-for-lower-back-pain-could-be-a-gamechanger)
  • The FDA approves artificial blood vessels, despite many warnings (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/24/health/fda-artificial-blood-vessel-trauma-humacyte.html)
  • A macro-study detects eight dietary patterns that contribute to a healthy old age (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-24/un-macroestudio-detecta-ocho-patrones-dieteticos-que-ayudan-a-llegar-a-una-vejez-saludable.html). Access the original article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-025-03570-5
  • 60 genes linked to congenital heart disease identified (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/03/24/67e151defdddffd9648b4599.html)

Global Health

  • Trump’s cuts damage global efforts to track diseases and prevent outbreaks. A simple email from USAID halted hundreds of millions of dollars in efforts to fight several global diseases. The full extent of the cuts is unknown, and legal challenges are underway, but much of the damage has already been done (https://www.science.org/content/article/trump-cuts-damage-global-efforts-track-diseases-prevent-outbreaks)
  • A faster rollout of the malaria vaccine can save many lives. Vaccines are a vital tool to prevent children from getting sick in many countries. Two vaccines are currently in use. The problem, according to GAVI, is that at this rate, it will take a decade to vaccinate all children under three who are at greatest risk of malaria (https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2025/03/24/a-faster-rollout-of-malaria-vaccines-would-save-many-lives)
  • The United States will end vaccine funding for poor countries. The US administration intends to end financial support for GAVI (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/26/health/usaid-cuts-gavi-bird-flu.html)
  • UNAIDS warns that the AIDS pandemic will resurge after Trump’s sudden cuts. The director of UNAIDS says Trump’s cuts will have a “devastating impact” (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/03/24/67e14859e4d4d86b4c8b4581.html)
  • The WHO plans to cut jobs after losing a fifth of its funding. The US contribution accounted for 18% of the budget (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-03-29/la-oms-se-propone-recortar-empleos-tras-perder-la-quinta-parte-de-su-financiacion.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump is dumping American scientists into the hands of Europeans. American science improved greatly after the emigration of numerous scientists from Europe following Nazi rule. Einstein was the clearest example. European politicians see Trump’s policies and research restrictions as an opportunity to reverse the flow. The European Union’s science ministers want immediate action. Providing refuge for American scientists is part of a new urgency in Europe. Europe spends 2% of its GDP on R&D compared to 3.6% in the US (https://www.economist.com/europe/2025/03/27/trump-is-driving-american-scientists-into-europes-arms)
    • 75% of scientists responding to the Nature survey are considering leaving. Of the 1,200 scientists who responded to Nature, 75% are considering leaving the US following Trump’s policies. Their desired destinations would be Europe and Canada (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00938-y)
    • The Trump administration is abruptly cutting billions in public health services. The Department of Health has cut $12 billion for grants on mental illness, infectious diseases, and other health issues (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/26/health/trump-state-health-grants-cuts.html)
    • 10,000 federal health workers will be laid off, as announced by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. The federal health administration employs approximately 82,000 people. Two agencies are the hardest hit: the FDA and the CDC (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/27/us/politics/health-department-job-layoffs-rfk-jr.html)
    • Senior scientists believe that ongoing lines of research, such as those on obesity, heart disease, and cancer, will be slowed by Trump’s policies (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/24/health/nih-doge-trump.html)
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • What is the future of British hospitals? Boris Johnson’s announced program of building 40 new hospitals by 2030 will no longer be met. Priorities have changed, and spending is now directed more toward the community than to hospitals. Between 2006 and 2022, the percentage of the NHS budget spent on hospitals increased from 47% to 58%, decreasing funding for primary and community care. The face of hospitals will change: they will increasingly operate outside their walls; there will be “command centers” to coordinate care; others will operate as campuses that include primary care and clinical research laboratories. Staff will rotate more among hospital networks and spend more time in hospital satellites. The government needs to decide what it wants for the hospitals of the future (https://www.economist.com/britain/2025/03/27/what-is-the-future-of-british-hospitals)
    • The Nuffield Trust’s response to the Spring statement. This statement estimated a 2% growth in the NHS budget next year. It is considered that in recent years the government has consistently underestimated the financial requirements to respond to patient needs and demands (https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/news-item/nuffield-trust-response-to-the-spring-statement)

National Health Policy

  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities.
    • An app will connect patients and pharmacists in Catalonia. Promoted by the Council of Colleges of Pharmacists of Catalonia. It will allow access to dispensing history (https://www.diariomedico.com/farmacia/comunitaria/app-conectara-pacientes-farmaceuticos-cataluna.html)
    • Basque medical certification will be decided by the Constitutional Court. The Basque Country will file an appeal before this Court (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/pais-vasco/euskadi-peleara-en-el-constitucional-el-traspaso-de-la-homologacion-medica-3325)
    • Home hospitalization is being promoted in the Canary Islands. A new professional category has been created, with this name (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/canarias/categoria-hospitalizacion-domicilio-realidad-en-canarias-consolida-modelo_156437_102.html)
    • Digital Health Plan in the Balearic Islands. The implementation of the plan will be phased. There are 41 initiatives that will be implemented in the short term, throughout this year and next; 26 medium-term projects (2027-2028) and five long-term projects, in 2029. (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/son-nueve-primeros-proyectos-plan-estrategico-salud-digital-baleares-2025-2029.html)
    • Asturias: Mental Health Plan (https://www.consalud.es/especiales/anuario-consalud/anuario-consalud-concepcion-saavedra-asturias-sanidad-salud-mental_156097_102.html)
    • Physician exclusivity: this will be a law in Asturias. It aims to clarify the “rules of the game” (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/asturias/asturias-regulara-por-ley-los-conflictos-en-la-compatibilidad-medica-4515)
  • MUFACE
    • AIREF report on administrative mutualism (https://www.airef.es/graficos/graficos_interactivos/01_Spending_Review/SR2226F1/2024_Mutualismo/Presentacion/spending-review-mutualismo-administrativo-ppt-web.html#/el-mutualismo-administrativo)
    • AIREF recommends transferring new mutualism members to public healthcare (https://www.elconfidencial.com/economia/2025-03-24/autoridad-fiscal-recomienda-sanidad-publica-mutualistas_4092918/)
    • The State 33% savings were achieved with MUFACE officials (https://www.vozpopuli.com/economia/airef-desmiente-gobierno-estado-ahorra-36-funcionarios-muface.html)
    • The transfer of the mutual insurance company would increase waiting lists by 30% (https://theobjective.com/economia/2025-03-25/traspaso-mutualidad-administrativo-sistema-salud-publico-listas-espera/)

Companies

  • International News
    • Pharmaceutical companies commit investments of more than 80 billion euros in the USA. The USA represents 61% of sales in the top ten global markets (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/noticias/13292207/03/25/las-farma-comprometen-inversiones-de-mas-de-80000-millones-en-eeuu.html)
    • The genetic testing laboratory 23andMe files for bankruptcy (https://elpais.com/tecnologia/2025-03-25/el-laboratorio-23andme-se-declara-en-quiebra-que-pasara-con-los-datos-geneticos-de-sus-15-millones-de-clientes.html)
    • The science of immortality: 4 biotech companies are in the fight: Unity Biotechnology (UBX), Longeveron (LVGN), AgeX Therapeutics (AGE), Verve Therapeutics (VERV) (https://www.eleconomista.es/mercados-cotizaciones/noticias/13282844/03/25/la-ciencia-de-la-inmortalidad-cuatro-biotecnologicas-que-desafian-el-envejecimiento.html)
    • The European regulator declines approval of Lilly’s new Alzheimer’s drug (https://www.ft.com/content/cd789ebb-a638-470e-95b2-c7b0feadbc43)
  • National
    • Sylentis, a subsidiary of Pharmamar, receives 21 million from the CDTI (Center for the Protection of Rare Diseases) for drugs for rare diseases (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2025-03-27/sylentis-filial-de-pharmamar-recibe-21-millones-del-cdti-para-farmacos-de-enfermedades-raras.html)
    • Cofares exceeds 21 million euros 4.26 billion in sales in 2024 and consolidates its leadership (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/nacional/cofares-supera-4260-millones-en-ventas-en-2024-consolida-su-liderazgo_156312_102.html)
    • Nearly 120,000 surgeries and more than 4 million consultations consolidate HM Hospitals as a leader in private healthcare (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/grupo-hm-hospitales-crece-cirugias-consultas-2024.html)

 

 

7 days in healthcare (March 17th-23rd, 2025)

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: How to improve humans, an activity that should not be left to eccentrics.
  • Global Health: A story of “geopolitical vandalism,” the freezing of USAID activities.
  • International Health Policy: American universities warn of the danger to innovation in the US as a result of cuts.
  • National Health Policy: The State Public Health Agency rejected by Congress.
  • Business: Microsoft continues its efforts to have AI simulate brain reasoning.

Biomedicine

  • How to improve humans. Finding ways to live longer should not be left to eccentrics. The idea that medicine should be involved in improving the body, not just curing diseases, is gaining ground. This requires regulatory changes to guide clinical trials in this direction.
  • Do viruses trigger Alzheimer’s? Until now, it was believed that Alzheimer’s was caused by amyloid plaques in the brain. But several studies are demonstrating a possible relationship between Alzheimer’s and the herpes virus. The viral theory offers promise for treatment.
  • Psychotropic drugs: 50 years of stagnation? While treatments for cancer and heart disease have advanced, psychiatry continues to use, with some variations, the same mechanisms of action discovered more than half a century ago with antipsychotics and antidepressants.

Global Healthecare

  • The closure of USAID: “political vandalism.” After USAID, what will happen in Africa? The closure of this agency means the end of 90% of the 6,300 projects and can be considered a form of “geopolitical vandalism,” since the decision was made overnight and without consultation with African governments, non-governmental organizations, or the millions of people who depend on USAID. This forces Africa to take the lead in public health actions.
  • Malaria mapping: progress and challenges. The recent WHO annual report on malaria estimates that there were 263 million cases and 597,000 deaths from malaria in 2023. Cases have increased by 11 million compared to 2022, but deaths have stabilized. Ninety-five percent of deaths occurred in the African region, and three-quarters of them were in children. The recent Global Burden of Malaria study analyzes the period from 2000 to 2022 and presents high-resolution maps on the evolution of malaria. Malaria remains a serious public health problem and is a preventable and avoidable morbidity and mortality issue.

International Health Policy

  • Universities warn of the danger to innovation in the US as a result of cuts.. This threatens one of the US’s clearest competitive advantages: with 4% of the population, it has 25% of the world’s GDP and 62% of the most prestigious universities according to recognized rankings.
  • Trump and Elon Musk’s DOGE reform of the Veterans Administration have thrown the mental health system into chaos. A disastrous restructuring threatens to degrade services for veterans of wars such as Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
  • Starmer unveils drastic cuts to benefits for the disabled, despite opposition from the Labour Party itself and economists. The measures could affect people who need help with personal hygiene, meal preparation, or who have forgotten how to use the toilet. The government doesn’t link this to the economic crisis, but rather says it’s a “moral obligation” to tweak these benefits.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • Congress rejects the State Agency for Public Health. Although the corresponding complaints and calls for responsibility have been heard in recent days, there are objective reasons that must be analyzed for the rejection of this law: the government’s lack of a stable parliamentary majority; the reluctance of the pro-independence parties, always opposed to a state structure of this nature; Minister Garcia’s regrettable and incendiary speech and the lack of trust in the government regarding respect for independent bodies. The minister’s actions with the former spokesperson during COVID, Fernando Simón, didn’t help either. Nothing irreparable, but the fact that five years after COVID and following the recommendations of the Opinion of the Commission for Social and Economic Reconstruction, we don’t have a prestigious and independent State Public Health Agency is a serious failure of the government.
  • Catalonia: 27 primary care teams will be “Comprehensive Reference Health Centers” and will have greater autonomy and management capacity. These centers will be launched as a pilot project and participation will be voluntary.
  • Catalonia plans its Secondary Data Access Office.

Companies

  • International
    • Microsoft continues its efforts to enable AI to simulate brain reasoning, partnering with a Swiss startup with experience in research.
  • National
    • Investment in nursing homes is increasing, reaching 317 million in 2024 and expected to exceed this figure in 2025.

Biomedicine

  • How to enhance humans. Finding ways to live longer should not be left to the eccentric. The idea that medicine should be involved in improving the body, not just curing diseases, is gaining ground. This requires regulatory changes to guide clinical trials in this direction. https://www.economist.com/leaders/2025/03/20/how-to-enhance-humans
  • Do viruses trigger Alzheimer’s? Until now, it was believed that Alzheimer’s was caused by amyloid plaques in the brain. But several studies are demonstrating a possible relationship between Alzheimer’s and the herpes virus. Viral theory offers promise for treatment https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/03/17/do-viruses-trigger-alzheimers
  • Vaccines save lives. Leaders must protect them. Measles had been declared extinct by the WHO in 82 countries. Now it is making a comeback and is on the rise worldwide. In 2023, 57 countries experienced outbreaks, coinciding with a decline in vaccination. These are why Robert J. Kennedy Jr.’s misleading messages are serious when he recommends cod liver oil or vitamin A as useful supplements to treat the disease, while hindering vaccine research. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00789-7
  • Type 2 diabetes increases the risk of liver and pancreatic cancer. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/22/type-2-diabetes-increases-risk-of-liver-and-pancreatic-cancers-study-shows
  • Dementia may not have always been the great threat it is today. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/22/health/dementia-rates-elderly.html
  • The polypill is back: could everyone over 50 be given a pill to prevent cardiovascular disease? Some recommend it for those over 50, saying it would save many lives and would be similar to vaccination, others are more skeptical https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-18/vuelve-la-polipildora-se-podria-dar-una-pastilla-a-todos-los-mayores-de-50-anos-para-prevenir-las-enfermedades-cardiovasculares.html, Access the BMJ article: https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r208
  • Psychotropic drugs: 50 years of stagnation? While treatments for cancer and heart disease have advanced, the same mechanisms of action discovered more than half a century ago with antipsychotics and antidepressants continue to be used in psychiatry, with some variations. https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-21/psicofarmacos-cincuenta-anos-de-estancamiento.html, Original article in The Lancet Psychiatry: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39952266/

Global Health

  • Malaria mapping: progress and challenges. The recent WHO annual report on malaria estimates that there were 263 million cases and 597,000 deaths from malaria in 2023. Cases have increased by 11 million compared to 2022, but deaths have stabilized. Ninety-five percent of deaths were in the African region, and three-quarters were in children. The recent Global Burden of Malaria study analyzes the period from 2000 to 2022 and presents high-resolution maps of the evolution of malaria. Malaria remains a serious public health problem and is a preventable and avoidable morbidity and mortality issue. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00418-0/abstract?rss=yes. Access the base article: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00038-8/fulltext?rss=yes
  • After USAID, what will happen in Africa? The closure of this agency means the end of 90% of the 6,300 projects and can be considered a form of “geopolitical vandalism,” since the decision was made overnight and without consultation with African governments, non-governmental organizations, or the millions of people who depend on USAID. This forces Africa to take the lead in public health actions https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r479
  • COP 30: Brazilian policies must change. The 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference will take place in the Brazilian Amazon in November 2025. A success of this policy would be to curb deforestation and reduce fossil fuel consumption. However, all of Brazil’s policies currently aim to increase consumption of these fuels https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adu9113
  • The WHO warns that “measles is back,” as the virus spreads in Europe, America, and Afghanistan https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r528

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump and Elon Musk’s DOGE are throwing the Veterans Administration’s mental health system into chaos. A disastrous restructuring threatens to degrade services for veterans of wars like Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/22/us/politics/veterans-affairs-mental-health-doge.html
    • Universities warn of the danger to innovation in the US as a result of the cuts. This threatens one of the USA’s clearest competitive advantages: with 4% of the population, it has 25% of the world’s GDP and 62% of the most prestigious universities, according to renowned rankings. https://www.ft.com/content/e5ae9e28-3823-4429-a144-af70c38f4bcb
    • How hospitals inflate the already gigantic American healthcare bill. Although drug spending and insurance companies are often blamed for the high cost of American healthcare, a third of total healthcare spending is on hospitals, which is three times as much as spending on drugs. Poorly designed incentives are at the root of this. Most hospitals charge on a fee-for-service basis, with opaque rates, and consolidation has made the situation worse. The presence of private equity firms as hospital owners is also seen as negative. There are signs that the Trump administration wants to address this problem: https://www.economist.com/business/2025/03/20/how-hospitals-inflate-americas-giant-health-care-bill
    • Five reasons why Republicans won’t cut Medicaid (too much): Medicaid is popular; it’s efficient; it improves health; it’s relatively cheap; and it helps all kinds of people https://www.healthaffairs.org/content/forefront/five-reasons-republicans-won-t-cut-medicaid-much
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • The closure of NHS England, which is met with great skepticism, despite acknowledging that the NHS needed reforms. Let’s see what the “10-year plan” holds, which will appear in May. Analysis by The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00550-1/abstract?rss=yes; analysis by the BMJ: https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r555;
    • The NHS finally agrees to share primary care clinical data for research. Clinical information will be placed on an OpenSAFELY platform, allowing researchers to analyze the data without seeing any patient-identifying information. https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r501
    • Research reveals UK dependence on doctors from “red list” countries, as well as drug shortages. https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/news-item/research-reveals-nhs-overreliance-on-doctors-from-red-list-countries-and-renewed-signs-of-widespread-medicines-shortages
    • Brexit is a major factor driving drug shortages in the UK, according to a report by the Nuffield Trust, with drugs for epilepsy and cystic fibrosis among them. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/22/brexit-key-factor-worst-uk-drug-shortages-in-four-years
    • Starmer unveils drastic cuts to disability benefits, despite opposition from the Labour Party itself and economists. The measures could affect people who need help with personal hygiene, meal preparation, or who forget how to use the toilet. The government doesn’t link this to the economic crisis, but says it’s a moral obligation to tweak these benefits https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/17/keir-starmer-to-unveil-drastic-disability-benefit-cuts-despite-opposition
    • Post-Brexit dependence on “red list” countries is unethical, according to the British health secretary. 9% of doctors working in the NHS are from “red list” countries (classified by the WHO as having a shortage of professionals, such as Nigeria, https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/21/post-brexit-reliance-on-nhs-staff-from-red-list-countries-is-unethical-streeting-says
  • France
    • Five years after Covid-19, teleworking has become a common practice; one in five private sector employees in France were using teleworking in 2024, https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2025/03/20/cinq-ans-apres-le-covid-19-campings-locations-de-maisons-et-toujours-plus-de-touristes-etrangers-le-nouveau-visage-du-tourisme_6583823_3234.html
  • Greece
    • Quality and Patient Safety Plan, 2025-2030, https://eurohealthobservatory.who.int/monitors/health-systems-monitor/updates/hspm/greece-2017/national-strategy-for-quality-of-care-and-patient-safety-2025-2030

National health policy

  • Central administration
    • State Agency for Public Health: García’s intervention and the government’s weak parliamentary support led to the rejection of this initiative, https://diariofarma.com/2025/03/20/aesap-garcia’s-intervention-led-the-pp-to-reject-the-dictamen-que-aprobo-en-comision
    • The government is considering ways to bring the AESP back to Congress, https://www.consalud.es/politica/volvera-llevar-sanidad-agencia-estatal-salud-publica-congreso_156187_102.html
    • The Commonwealth law is still pending; the delay is due to the non-submission of the 2024 Budget Law, https://www.consalud.es/politica/ley-ela-sigue-pendiente-incapacidad-gobierno-sacar-adelante-presupuestos_156174_102.html
  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • Catalonia: 27 Primary Care teams will be “Comprehensive Reference Health Centers,” with greater autonomy and management capacity. These centers will be launched as a pilot experience in voluntarily participating centers. https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/cataluna-27-equipos-ap-seran-centros-salud-integral-referencia.html
    • Catalonia: The government begins updating the Health Plan, https://diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/gobierno-catalan-inicia-actualizacion-plan-salud.html
    • Catalonia plans its Secondary Use Data Access Office, https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/cataluna-proyecta-oficina-acceso-datos-secundario.html
    • The SERMAS OPE (Service for the Promotion of Primary Care) will have a total of 6,757 places. https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/madrid/la-ope-2025-del-sermas-contara-con-6-757-plazas-en-total-2046
  • Private healthcare
    • Doctors are satisfied with their experience in private practice. 69% of doctors and 55% of nurses in private healthcare have rated their experience working in these centers with more than seven out of ten points. https://www.abc.es/salud/mayoria-medicos-valoran-positivamente-experiencia-trabajo-sanidad-20250320163351-nt.html. Access the original document from the IDIS Foundation: https://www.medicosypacientes.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Informe_EX_profesional_sanitario-c.pdf

Companies

  • International News
    • Abu Dhabi seeks to turn its DNA gold mine into a big business, https://www.ft.com/content/8eb374aa-1777-4940-a383-36de8dac7fd7
    • AstraZeneca to invest $2.5 billion in China, https://www.ft.com/content/3f1a9c29-2f69-4490-94d1-a990605a7b41
    • Microsoft continues its efforts to use AI to simulate brain reasoning, partnering with a Swiss startup with experience in neuroscience research https://www.ft.com/content/37e44758-04a6-450b-abe3-f51f1d7d972a
    • Temasek and Warburg Pincus intend to offer $5 billion for the healthcare company GHX, https://www.ft.com/content/2adc0736-98cc-4017-a870-83bcd9be63ab
    • These are the 10 best-sellers that will lose their American patent in 2025, https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/son-10-farmacos-superventas-pierden-patente-estadounidense-2025.html
    • Pfizer sells its stake in Haleon and ceases to be its main shareholder, https://www.consalud.es/salud35/internacional/pfizer-vende-su-participacion-en-haleon-por-2974-millones-deja-ser-su-mayor-accionista_156056_102.html

7 days in healthcare (March 10th-16th, 2025)

 

 

Summary

The week’s most impactful health news stories were:

  • Biomedicine: The most expensive drug ever approved, $20 million a year.
  • Global Health: After assessing the global burden of oral disease, half of the world’s population has oral problems.
  • International Health Policy: In a move similar to Elon Musk’s DOGE, the British government is closing NHS England, laying off up to 30,000 people.
  • National Health Policy: Five years into the pandemic, the public health system has more staff and more bottlenecks.
  • Companies: Private healthcare will have to invest $1 billion in hospitals to meet the upcoming demand.

Biomedicine

  • The most expensive drug ever approved: a gene therapy that cures butterfly skin and could cost $20 million per patient. It was recently approved by the EMA and the drug is called Vyjuvek.
  • A key, decades-long mystery about Parkinson’s disease has been unraveled with the discovery of the PINK1m protein, which adheres to the surface of damaged mitochondria.

Global Health

  • The global burden of oral disease. For the first time, a review of the global burden of oral disease has been published. The study shows that half of the world’s population is affected by untreated caries, severe periodontitis, edentulism (the absence of one or more teeth), and other oral disorders. Knowing the facts is good, but action is needed.

International Health Policy

  • According to The Economist, DOGE is also reaching the UK, with the closure of NHS England. NHS England, the agency that manages the NHS in England, was created in 2012 as an attempt to maintain a professional management approach independent of political changes in each legislative term. Now their functions are transferred directly to the health department, headed by Wes Starmer. The truth is that the problems are worse: 6.5 million people on waiting lists and productivity 18.5% lower than before COVID. The reasons given by Starmer are twofold: 1. Allocate more money to doctors and nurses and not so much to bureaucrats; and 2. Ensure oversight by elected politicians. This movement seems similar to DOGE in the USA, but the inspiration behind it is neither Javier Milei nor Elon Musk, but Alan Milburn, a former health secretary under Tony Blair. This operation could lead to the dismissal of up to 30,000 people. We’ll see if the results live up to the promises.
  • How DOGE (Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency) is driving public health officials in the USA crazy. The MAGA movement sees the CDC as “the most incompetent and arrogant agency in the federal government.”
  • Kennedy has already broken his promise on vaccines. The health secretary is undermining America’s vaccination infrastructure.
  • Congressmen and activists denounce that Trump’s tax cuts are being funded by Medicaid cuts. More than 70 million Americans are on that program (a health insurance program for the poor), which is threatened by $880 billion in cuts.
  • The childbirth scandal in France, with rising infant mortality. The high infant mortality rate (under 1 year of age) is blamed on the closure of small maternity wards.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Congressional Health Commission gives the green light to the creation of the State Agency for Public Health. This agency will coordinate surveillance, risk assessment, and rapid response to potential health crises. We’ll see what happens during the parliamentary process.
  • Fifth anniversary of the emergence of COVID-19. This is the state of the healthcare system five years after the pandemic: more staffed, but also more collapsed. There are 45,000 more doctors and nurses, but almost all indicators have worsened. Meanwhile, then-spokesperson Simón and Minister Illa appear on screens to explain how well the situation was managed in Spain. It must be that the delays in implementing measures; the chaotic communication; the two lockdowns declared unconstitutional; the serious governance problems; the absence of a committee of experts; the lack of involvement of professional organizations or patients; the late expert report that fails to compare management between regions or that of Spain with other countries; the high mortality rate per 100,000 inhabitants (Spain is among the three countries in the world with the highest mortality rate); the lack of attention to the recommendations of the Parliamentary Commission for Social and Economic Reconstruction; the problems and corruption in the purchase of materials, etc., are all things we have invented. Of course, aside from this downside, the entire COVID-19 process also had its positive side: the behavior of the general population, professionals, patients, law enforcement agencies, and many businesses.

Companies

  • International
    • Roche signs the largest deal in anti-obesity drugs, for a licensing agreement with Zeland Pharma,
  • National
    • Advent is exploring the sale of its Vitaldent and Dentix dental business; the fund appears to be seeking more than €700 million, given the positive results.
    • Private healthcare will need to invest €1 billion annually in new hospitals to meet demand, as according to Colliers, by 2023 there will be 14.6 million people covered by private insurance, and a bed ratio of 4.13 per 1,000 inhabitants is needed, which is the current ratio.

Biomedicine

  • Is butter bad for your health? Oil appears to be a better alternative, according to a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, which followed 220,000 doctors and nurses for 33 years. https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/03/07/is-butter-bad-for-you
  • Australian man survives 100 days with artificial heart. The patient lived for more than 100 days before receiving a donor heart. https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/mar/12/australian-man-survives-100-days-with-artificial-heart-in-world-first-success
  • Mutated DNA restored to normal with a single injection, a breakthrough in gene therapy, after a study in 9 patients. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/10/health/gene-editing-beam-mutation-dna.html
  • A key decades-long mystery about Parkinson’s disease has been solved with the discovery of the PINK1m protein, which adheres to the surface of damaged mitochondria. https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/resuelven-misterio-durado-decadas-sobre-parkinson-20250313121641-nt.html. Access the original Science article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adu6445
  • The most expensive drug ever approved: a gene therapy that cures butterfly skin and could cost $20 million per patient. It has recently been approved by the EMA and the drug is called Vyjuvek https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-03-12/el-medicamento-mas-caro-jamas-aprobado-una-terapia-genica-que-cura-la-piel-de-mariposa-y-puede-costar-20-millones-por-paciente.html
  • An annual injection can prevent HIV infection; it is lenacapavir, and the study is still in Phase 1. https://elpais.com/ciencia/2025-03-11/una-inyeccion-anual-puede-prevenir-la-infeccion-por-vih.html. Access the original article in The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00405-2/abstract
  • Money and education slow biological aging, according to a study of more than 800 people published in Nature Medicine. More than 60 age-related diseases are related to education and socioeconomic status. https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/dinero-educacion-frenan-envejecimiento-biologico-20250314114141-nt.html

Global Health

  • The global burden of oral disease. For the first time, an article on the global burden of oral disease has been published. The study shows that half of the world’s population is affected by untreated caries, severe periodontitis, edentulism (the absence of one or more teeth), and other oral disorders. Knowing the facts is good, but action is essential. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00460-X/abstract. Access the original article in The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)02811-3/fulltext
  • A malignant avian flu strain is spreading rapidly in Antarctica, https://www.science.org/content/article/deadly-avian-flu-strain-spreading-rapidly-antarctica
  • Israel blocks humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r448

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • The termination of NIH grants is causing complete chaos. Until Trump’s second term, NIH—the world’s largest biomedical research funding agency—did not typically cancel grants. Of the more than 60,000 grants the agency awards each year, rarely more than 20 were canceled, always with justified reasons. During Trump’s new term, more than 100 have already been canceled, and it seems the plan is to continue along these lines. More than 1,000 grants are eligible for cancellation. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2025/03/nih-grant-terminations/682039/
    • How DOGE (Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency) is driving public health officials in the US crazy. The MAGA movement sees the CDC as “the most incompetent and arrogant agency in the federal government.” https://www.economist.com/united-states/2025/03/10/how-doge-is-driving-americas-public-health-guardians-mad
    • Kennedy has already broken his promise on vaccines. The health secretary is undermining America’s vaccination infrastructure. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2025/03/rfk-jr-quiet-assault-vaccination/682040/
    • Federal agencies dedicated to mental illness and addiction have experienced steep cuts. Offices have already been closed, and staff may be reduced by 50%. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/12/health/federal-cuts-substance-abuse-mental-health.html
    • Congressmen and activists denounce that Trump’s tax cuts are being financed by Medicaid cuts. More than 70 million Americans are enrolled in that program (a health insurance program for the poor), which is threatened by $880 billion in cuts. https://elpais.com/us/2025-03-14/congresistas-y-activistas-denuncian-que-la-rebaja-de-impuestos-de-trump-a-los-ricos-se-financiara-con-los-recortes-de-medicaid.html
    • Kennedy links the measles outbreak to diet, citing bizarre theories, https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/10/health/measles-texas-kennedy-fox.html
  • China
    • The obesity crisis is big business. NovoNordisk’s current dominance in China is numbered: March 20, 2026, when the patent expires. The market could reach 900 million people by 2030 https://www.ft.com/content/8f05d97a-acfd-4514-84d4-07f03ffc9eeb
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • According to The Economist, DOGE is also coming to the UK, with the closure of NHS England. NHS England, the agency that manages the NHS in England, was created in 2012 as an attempt to maintain a professional management line outside of political changes in each legislative term. Now its functions are passed directly to the Ministry of Health, headed by Wes Streting. The truth is that the problems are greater: 6.5 million people on waiting lists and productivity 18.5% lower than before COVID. The reasons given by Starmer are twofold: 1. Allocate more money to doctors and nurses and not so much to bureaucrats; and 2. Ensure oversight by elected politicians. This movement seems similar to DOGE in the US, but the inspiration behind it is neither Javier Milei nor Elon Musk, but Alan Milburn, a former health secretary under Tony Blair. https://www.economist.com/britain/2025/03/12/doge-comes-to-englands-health-service. This document explains the functions of NHS England, which were primarily supervisory: https://www.england.nhs.uk/about/what-we-do/
    • Up to 30,000 jobs could be lost as a result of the closure of NHS England. The number of layoffs has risen from the expected 10,000 to between 20,000 and 30,000 https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/mar/14/30000-jobs-could-go-in-labours-radical-overhaul-of-nhs
    • The Guardian analysis: why NHS England is closing and what it means for patients. Neither the Prime Minister nor the Health Secretary had ever announced such a change https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/13/why-has-nhs-england-been-abolished-and-what-does-it-mean-for-patients
    • NHS England, the creation of Tory Andrew Landsley, https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/14/what-were-the-lansley-reforms-and-how-did-they-create-nhs-england
    • Analysis of the closure of NHS England by two prestigious think tanks. King’s Fund: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/insight-and-analysis/press-releases/response-government-plans-abolish-nhs-england, Nuffield Trust: https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/news-item/nhse-to-be-scrapped-nuffield-trust-responds
    • The British government announces changes to the “broken” welfare system. Benefits for some people with disabilities may be reduced https://www.ft.com/content/988d7b23-e53f-45c7-a001-1a0702521928
  • France
    • The childbirth scandal in France, with rising infant mortality. The high infant mortality rate (under 1 year of age) is attributed to the closure of small maternity wards. https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2025/03/13/4-1-le-scandale-des-accouchements-en-france-la-hausse-de-la-mortalite-infantile-une-exception-francaise_6579865_3232.html
    • The new “Nutri-score” has been validated, following disagreements within the government. https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2025/03/14/le-nouveau-nutri-score-valide-apres-des-dissensions-gouvernementales_6580810_3245.html
  • Canada
    • Health care in Canada, at a key moment. Trudeau leaves many plans in motion: child benefits (Canada Child Benefit), climate change initiatives, cannabis legalization, and the Canadian dental plan, among others. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00501-X/fulltext
  • Indonesia
    • Indonesia is considering offering checkups for everyone, which theoretically will detect diseases earlier. It is an attempt at promotion and prevention. We will see its effects. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00499-4/abstract
  • European Union
    • Brussels presents its plan to make the EU less dependent on foreign sources for critical medicines, based on aid to European industry and reviewing public procurement criteria. Currently, 90% of these drugs are produced outside of Europe https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-03-11/bruselas-presenta-su-plan-para-que-la-ue-dependa-menos-del-exterior-en-medicinas-criticas-como-los-antibioticos.html
    • The European industry warns of a wave of generic drug shortages due to the wastewater directive. Medicines for Europe, the generic medicines trade association, supports the companies that have filed a lawsuit with the Court of Justice of the European Union. https://www.elperiodico.com/es/sociedad/20250310/industria-europea-advierte-oleada-escasez-115136632
    • 2.3 million companies and 13.3 million jobs: the impact of the health and social sector in the EU, https://www.consalud.es/industria/23-millones-empresas-133-millones-empleos-impacto-sector-salud-social-en-ue_155772_102.html
    • The ECDC warns of the increase in measles in the EU and calls for a review of vaccinations, https://diariofarma.com/2025/03/11/el-cedc-alerta-por-el-aumento-del-sarampion-en-la-ue-y-llama-a-revisar-su-vacunacion

National Health Policy

  • Central Administration
    • The Council of Ministers gives the green light to parliamentary processing of the law on alcohol and minors, which restricts its sale and advertising. The law seeks to reduce consumption by limiting the spaces where drinking is allowed, as well as advertising and sponsorship. https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/03/11/67d01c5c21efa0f5078b457a.html
    • The Health Commission of Congress gives the green light to the creation of the State Public Health Agency. This Agency will coordinate surveillance, risk assessment, and rapid response to potential health crises https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/comision-sanidad-congreso-da-luz-verde-texto-centro-estatal-salud-publica.html
  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • Aragon prepares a strategy for the comprehensive treatment of rare diseases, https://diariofarma.com/2025/03/07/aragon-prepara-una-estrategia-para-el-tratamiento-integral-de-las-enfermedades-raras
    • Strategic pillars of the new health promotion model in Castilla-La Mancha, https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/profesion/son-pilares-estrategicos-nuevo-modelo-promocion-salud-castilla-mancha.html
    • The UPM (Polytechnic University of Madrid) creates its new Faculty of Health Sciences with a focus on the Medicine program, https://www.consalud.es/formacion/upm-nueva-facultad-ciencias-salud-con-foco-puesto-en-carrera-medicina_155699_102.html
  • Fifth anniversary of the emergence of COVID-19
    • This is how the healthcare system is five years after the pandemic: more staff, but also more collapsed. There are 45,000 more doctors and nurses, but almost all indicators have

Companies

  • International News
    • Novo Nordisk shares fall after results from latest anti-obesity drug trials, https://www.ft.com/content/7f7e4aa3-d356-4c3a-88d9-002997855525
    • Roche signs the largest deal in anti-obesity drugs, for a licensing agreement with Zeland Pharma, https://www.ft.com/content/80c5c67e-c55d-4fb1-bfb3-da96644edc82
    • Pfizer and Arvinas’ breast cancer drug disappoints the market, https://www.elconfidencial.com/mercados/2025-03-11/farmaco-de-pfizer-contra-el-cancer-de-mama_4083528/
    • Gilead Sciences presents advances in HIV at CROI 2025 and strengthens Its commitment to the cure, https://www.consalud.es/medicamentos/gilead-presenta-avances-vih-croi-2025-refuerza-apuesta-cura_155896_102.html
  • National
    • Advent is exploring the sale of its Vitaldent and Dentix dental business. It appears the fund is seeking more than €700 million, given the positive results, https://www.elconfidencial.com/empresas/2025-03-14/advent-jp-moran-vender-negocio-dental-vitaldent-dentix_4085418/
    • Private healthcare will have to invest €1 billion annually in new hospitals to meet demand, as according to Colliers, by 2023 there will be 14.6 million people covered by private insurance, and a bed ratio of 4.13 per 1,000 inhabitants is needed, which is the current ratio. https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250312/sanidad-privada-debera-invertir-millones-ano-nuevos-hospitales-atender-demanda/930407089_0.html, original Colliers report: https://www.colliers.com/en-es/research/informe-healthcare-spain-2025

7 days in healthcare (March 3rd-9th, 2025)

 

Summary

The most impactful news in health this week were:

  • Biomedicine: A new form of inheritance unrelated to DNA has been discovered.
  • Global health: USAID memos show the tremendous human costs of Trump’s cuts.
  • International health policy: Merz will have to face an unfinished health agenda in Germany.
  • National health policy. The Congressional Health Commission will debate the Law of the State Public Health Agency.
  • Companies: Clearlake wants to buy ModernizingMedicine, a health software company.

Biomedicine

  • A new form of inheritance unrelated to DNA has been discovered, a mechanism of inheritance is discovered that does not depend on any nucleic acid, but on amyloid proteins.
  • New anti-obesity drugs arrive, which already surpass Ozempic. There are already nearly 100 new candidates in testing, which aim to grab a slice of the market that is expected to reach $100 billion by 2030.

Global Health

  • USAID memos demonstrate the human costs of foreign aid cuts. According to this NYT article, there will be millions of malaria infections and 200,000 cases of polio. According to experts, the difference between Trump’s first term and this one is that in the first he had no team, while in this one he has a young team that wants to change the system from top to bottom, and do it in the cruelest way possible. The withdrawal of international health aid to poor countries overnight is unspeakable.
  • Predictions of the obesity pandemic on the horizon of 2050: The obesity pandemic began before World War II and has not stopped growing since then. So far, efforts to lower the prevalence have been ineffective. Although the pandemic is blamed on sedentary lifestyle and diet, there are doubts about its causes.
  • 25 million people will be living with Parkinson’s by 2050. Projections of Parkinson’s prevalence and its driving factors in 195 countries by 2050: ageing the main cause of this growth.

International health policy

  • Merz’s health agenda in Germany. The likely new chancellor inherits a series of reforms that were started but not completed, including hospital reform, which sought to reduce the number of hospitals. The new coalition will also have to deal with the financial situation of the system.
  • Measles in the USA. As measles continues to spread in Texas, it jumps to New Mexico. There are reports of 200 cases in one district of Texas and 21 in New Mexico.
  • Problems with maternal health in the UK. Maternity services in the UK have been the source of repeated national scandals, with reports of serious negligence and preventable deaths, despite which the situation has not improved. It is argued that this problem should be addressed in the 10-year plan that is being prepared.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • State Public Health Agency. The Health Commission will debate the law for the creation of this Agency next Thursday. This is the previous step before it is voted on in the Plenary Session of Congress. The chances that with the current parliamentary majority a law with the criteria of the SESPAS will be approved are close to zero. If it is approved, it will be a bit watered down.
  • Discussion of the Framework Statute. Some 16 medical organisations are grouping together to demand that the Health Department have its own Statute.

Companies

  • International
    • Clearlake wants to buy a majority of ModernizingMedicine, a software company, for 5.3 billion dollars. o
    • Hikma is preparing to launch generic versions of its obesity drugs. Both Wegovy and Ozempic will be off patent in a year. Time is running out for drugs, even the most innovative ones.
  • National
    • CIMA in Navarra, an R&D ally for big pharma, through the association with Pfizer, Roche or AstraZeneca, has generated six “spinoffs” to advance new treatments.

Biomedicine

  • The future of digital health. Financial Times supplement: virtual hospitals, the digital future for healthcare professionals; AI for health insurers and other topics (https://www.ft.com/reports/future-digital-healthcare)
  • Fourteen people regain their sight after an experimental cell therapy. A new stem cell therapy shows its safety (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/catorce-personas-recuperan-vista-tras-terapia-celular-20250304112516-nt.html)
  • A new form of inheritance unrelated to DNA has been discovered, a mechanism of inheritance is discovered that does not depend on any nucleic acid, but on amyloid proteins (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-05/descubierta-una-nueva-forma-de-herencia-alejada-del-adn.html). Access to the original article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41556-024-01494-9/metrics
  • New anti-obesity drugs are coming, which already surpass Ozempic. There are already almost 100 new candidates in testing, which aim to take a slice of the market that is expected to reach 100,000 million dollars in 2030 (https://elpais.com/salud-y-bienestar/2025-03-07/llegan-los-nuevos-farmacos-antiobesidad-que-ya-superan-al-ozempic.html)

Global Health

  • Predictions of the obesity pandemic on the horizon 2050: The obesity pandemic began before World War II and has not stopped growing since then. So far, efforts to reduce prevalence have been ineffective. Although the pandemic is blamed on sedentary lifestyle and diet, there are doubts about its causes (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00260-0/abstract). Access to the article in The Lancet on adults: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00355-1/fulltext Access to the article on children and young people: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00397-6/fulltext
  • Projections of Parkinson’s prevalence and its drivers in 195 countries by 2050: 25 million people will be living with Parkinson’s by 2050, with ageing the main cause of this growth https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj-2024-080952
  • USAID memos demonstrate human costs of foreign aid cuts. According to this NYT article, there will be millions of malaria infections and 200,000 cases of polio (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/02/health/usaid-cuts-deaths-infections.html)
  • Trump’s measures are already being felt in Africa, with clinics being closed and there being a lack of HIV treatment. In countries like Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi, Kenya and Uganda, more than 60% of the AIDS response was financed through US funds. The way these funds were cut has been deliberately brutal (https://www.elespanol.com/mundo/africa/20250309/medidas-trump-notan-africa-cierran-clinicas-falta-tratamiento-vih/929907001_0.html)
  • To what extent do US foreign aid cuts affect disease outbreaks? This loss of control of outbreaks in many parts of the world may also affect the USA (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/07/health/usaid-funding-disease-outbreaks.html)

International health policy

  • USA
    • As measles continues to spread in Texas, it jumps to New Mexico. There is talk of 200 cases in one district of Texas and 21 in New Mexico(https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/07/health/measles-texas-new-mexico.html)
    • $50,000 in tax deductions for donating a kidney, Trumpism reaches transplants. There has been a bill in Congress in this regard since August, which could be pushed by the Trumpist majority (https://www.alimente.elconfidencial.com/bienestar/2025-03-06/como-el-trumpismo-a-llegado-a-los-trasplantes_4079200/)
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • Maternal health in the NHS. Maternity services in the UK have been the subject of repeated national scandals, with reports of serious negligence and preventable deaths, yet the situation has not improved. It is argued that this problem should be addressed in the 10-year plan being prepared (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00446-5/fulltext)
    • Researchers will soon have access to data from primary care GPs. The information will be disseminated via the OpenSAFELY system to selected researchers (https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r375)
  • Germany
    • Merz’s health agenda. The likely new chancellor inherits a series of reforms that have been started but not completed, including hospital reform, which sought to reduce the number of hospitals. The new coalition will also have to deal with the financial situation of the system (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00443-X/abstract)

National health policy

  • Central administration
    • The Health Commission will debate the law for the creation of the Public Health Agency next Thursday. This is the previous step before it is voted on in the Plenary Session of Congress (https://diariofarma.com/2025/03/06/la-comision-de-sanidad-debate-el-proximo-jueves-la-ley-de-creacion-de-la-agencia-de-salud-publica)
    • The Ministry of Health links the consumption of 13 medicines with the risk of developing gambling addiction. Most of the drugs are for treating Parkinson’s disease (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-03-07/sanidad-relaciona-el-consumo-de-13-medicamentos-con-el-riesgo-de-desarrollar-ludopatia.html)
    • More transparency for the Interministerial Commission on Drug Prices: a report will be published for each drug financed. The aim is to enable citizens to better understand the system for incorporating drugs into public prescription (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/transparencia-cipm-sanidad-informe-farmaco-financiado/)
  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • Madrid demonises cannabis in its anti-drug plan, but does not contemplate measures against anxiolytics and antidepressants (https://elpais.com/espana/madrid/2025-03-05/madrid-demoniza-el-cannabis-en-su-plan-antidroga-pero-no-contempla-medidas-contra-ansioliticos-y-antidepresivos.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • Some 16 medical organisations join together to demand that the Ministry of Health issue its own Statute (https://www.lne.es/sociedad/2025/03/05/16-organizaciones-medicas-agrupan-reclamar-sanidad-estatuto-propio-114970649.html)
  • MUFACE
    • Adeslas and ASISA are the only ones that are applying for the MUFACE civil servants insurance tender (https://www.eleconomista.es/banca-finanzas/noticias/13252566/03/25/adeslas-y-asisa-se-presentan-a-la-licitacion-del-seguro-de-los-funcionarios-de-muface.html)
    • Private doctors threaten to leave MUFACE if Asisa and Adeslas do not raise their rates by 150%. According to private doctors, under the current Muface system, general practitioners are paid between €7 and €9 per consultation, when it should be between €25 and €30 (https://www.vozpopuli.com/economia/los-medicos-amenazan-con-dejar-muface-si-asisa-y-adeslas-no-elevan-un-150-las-tarifas.html)

Companies

  • International news
    • Bayer faces third year of falling profits with reform efforts. CEO sees hopes of recovery in 2026 (https://www.ft.com/content/38cddea7-47bc-4451-9cc7-51dca5108c35)
    • Clearlake wants to buy a majority of ModernizingMedicine, a software company, for $5.3 billion (https://www.ft.com/content/f79eccfb-b799-4b47-accd-8eb44371f57d)
    • Hikma prepares to launch generic versions of obesity drugs. Both Wegovy and Ozempic will be off patent within a year (https://www.ft.com/content/3f03b203-72a8-4921-9ecc-0c9ea9ec0f62)
    • Private equity group Sycamore aims to take over Walgreens with a deal worth up to $24 billion, in order to take it private (https://www.ft.com/content/722dfbf1-82a1-435d-9f6f-8586c4f0f038)
    • Patent dispute over RNA vaccine for Covid: US backs Pfizer, Europe backs Moderna. The US Patent Appeals Board rules in favor of Pfizer-BioNTech, while a Dusseldorf court confirms that Pfizer-BioNTech infringed a patent (https://theobjective.com/economia/2025-03-09/patentes-vacuna-arn-covid-pfizer-moderna/)
    • Moderna and Pfizer’s covid vaccines remain bestsellers despite falling sales after the pandemic (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250309/vacunas-covid-pfizer-moderna-siguen-superventas-pesar-caer-ventas-pandemia/929407182_0.html)
    • Merck reports strong financial results in 2024 and expects continued growth in 2025 (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/internacional/merck-reporta-solidos-resultados-financieros-en-2024-preve-crecimiento-continuo-en-2025_155585_102.html)
  • National
    • CIMA of Navarra, an ally in R&D for big pharma, through the association with Pfizer, Roche or AstraZeneca and has generated six “spinoffs” to advance in new treatments (https://www.expansion.com/directivos/2025/03/08/67cc998f468aeb5b1d8b4570.html)
    • The CNMV reveals that the top management of Grifols acted with continued deceit for 3 years. The commission accuses of systematic violation of financial reporting rules (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/empresas/cnmv-desvela-cupula-grifols-actuo-dolo-continuado-durante-tres-anos.html)
    • DomusVi straightens out its finances and will open four nursing homes in 2025 (https://theobjective.com/economia/2025-03-04/domusvi-residencias-financias-abrira-geriatricos-2025/)

7 days in healthcare (February 24th- March 2nd, 2025)

 

Summary

The most impactful news in health this week were:

  • Biomedicine: Editorial by The Economist: The enormous possibilities of CRISPR technology in agriculture and medicine.
  • Global health: Editorial by Nature: The need to learn the lessons of Covid-19, before it is too late.
  • International health policy: Threats to Medicaid. To make their numbers work, many Republicans want to restrict Medicaid, which could affect 20 million Americans.
  • National health policy. Interoperable clinical history of private health care from IDIS. It is already active in 12 companies, including insurers and hospital groups.
  • Companies: Only 50% of the most important drugs launched in 2024 were by large companies.

Biomedicine

  • The enormous possibilities of CRISPR technology in agriculture and medicine. Of the many patients who need an organ, 90% are left without one; 240 million people have a rare disease, most of them without treatment; Every year, inappropriate diets cause more than 10 million premature deaths. For all these processes, CRISPR can be useful, it is like an editor that can rewrite DNA letter by letter or gene by gene, to remove harmful mutations or add protective ones.
  • The threats of Trump’s policies to the scientific and health research community. The case produced by the Trump Administration in the world of American science, which is as much as saying global, leads this Science editorial to call for the scientific world to unite against certain policies.

Global Health

  • The growing threat of H5N1 to human health. Infections in animals with the H5N1 virus have affected all continents since 1997. The NEJM analyzes 46 cases in humans, generally with self-limiting infection. The CDC still defines the risk to humans as low. However, surveillance must continue.
  • The need to learn the lessons of covid-19, before it is too late. Five years into Covid-19, irresponsible policies are hampering an effective global response to infectious outbreaks. What would happen if another pandemic were to emerge? The answer is: we don’t know. In some respects there is reason for optimism, such as the faster development of mRNA vaccines or the better surveillance system in countries. But in other respects, countries are as ill-prepared as they were in 2020.

International health policy

  • Threats to Medicaid. To make their numbers work, many Republicans want to restrict Medicaid, which could affect 20 million Americans. Medicaid is public health insurance for the “poor” in the USA.
  • The Trump Administration ends global health research: the Demographic and Health Surveys were the only metrics in many countries on mortality, nutrition and education. This program has been ended by order of the American government.
  • Pharmaceutical companies in check: Trump imposes tariffs and pressures to reduce the cost of drugs. Tariffs affect the price of imported products such as many APIs for producing medicines. There is also pressure to lower the price of medicines.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Basque Health Pact is moving forward with 24 strategic lines and more than 400 professionals involved.
  • Doctors call a strike against the draft Health Framework Statute. Called by the CESM, it will take place on May 23. Objectives: limit the workload and improve salary conditions.
  • Interoperable clinical history of the IDIS. It is already active in 12 companies, including insurance companies and hospital groups (these are Occident, Quirónsalud, HM Hospitales, HLA, Mapfre, Sanitas, Adeslas, Hospiten, DKV, Cigna, Clínica Universitaria de Navarra and Chipcard. All of them have 100% miHC operational. Others continue working to join the project: Ribera Salud, Caser Seguros, Nueva Mutua Sanitaria, Asisa, Vithas and the Hospital Order of San Juan de Dios.

Companies

  • International
    • Only 50% of the most important drugs launched in 2024 were by large companies, according to Evaluate Pharma. This was unthinkable a few years ago in the era of blockbusters. It seems that the need to attack niche diseases and precision medicine has opened up possibilities for medium and small pharmaceutical companies.
    • Lilly will invest 25.7 billion in four new factories in the USA. The creation of 3,000 jobs. This is in addition to the announcements by Apple, Open AI and SoftBank, undoubtedly to win the sympathy of the Trump Administration.
  • National
    • Almirall earns 10.1 million and exceeds forecasts. The company reaps the rewards of its commitment to dermatology

Biomedicine

  • The Economist Editorial: The enormous potential of CRISPR technology in agriculture and medicine. Of the many patients who need an organ, 90% are left without one; 240 million people have a rare disease, most of them without treatment; inappropriate diets cause more than 10 million premature deaths every year. For all these processes, CRISPR can be useful, it is like an editor that can rewrite DNA letter by letter or gene by gene, to remove harmful mutations or add protective ones (https://www.economist.com/leaders/2025/02/26/crispr-technologies-hold-enormous-promise-for-farming-and-medicine)
  • Science Editorial: The threats of Trump’s policies to the scientific and health research community. The case produced by the Trump Administration in the world of American science, which is as much as to say global, leads this Science editorial to ask for the scientific world to unite against certain policies (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adw9972)
  • Blood tests for aging organs that detect diseases (https://www.ft.com/content/95109083-fcf5-450c-96af-45471775adf1)
  • The FDA expands access to Clozapine, a key treatment for schizophrenia (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/25/health/clozapine- schizophrenia-fda.html)
  • The big question of why women live longer than men (https://www.ft.com/content/91cbe143-1961-4168-96f6-9892604778c1)

Global Health

  • The growing threat of H5N1 to human health. Animal infections with the H5N1 virus have affected all continents since 1997. The NEJM reviews 46 human cases, generally with self-limited infection. The CDC still defines the risk to humans as low. However, surveillance must continue (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2416323)
  • The scale of critical illness in Africa and the need for universal access (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)02843-5/abstract). Access to the original article in The Lancet: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)02846-0/fulltext
  • Nature Editorial: The need to learn the lessons of Covid-19, before it is too late. Five years after the start of Covid-19, irresponsible policies are hampering an effective global response to infectious outbreaks. What would happen if another pandemic were to emerge? The answer is: we do not know. In some respects there are reasons for optimism, such as the faster development of mRNA vaccines or the better surveillance systems in countries. But in other ways, countries are as ill-prepared as they were in 2020 (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00498-1)
  • WHO warns globally of resurgence of cholera, a treatable but potentially fatal bacterial disease (https://www.eleconomista.es/salud-bienestar/enfermedades/noticias/13244905/02/25/la-oms-advierte-a-nivel-mundial-de-la-reaparicion-de-una-de-las-enfermedades-mas-temidas-del-pasado.html)
  • Mysterious illness in Congo kills more than 50 people just hours after they fall ill. The origin may be the ingestion of a bat (https://www.elmundo.es/ciencia-y-salud/salud/2025/02/25/67bdf90de85ece0b6c8b45bc.html)

International health policy

  • USA
    • Threats to Medicaid. To make their numbers work, many Republicans want to restrict Medicaid, which could affect 20 million Americans (https://www.economist.com/united-states/2025/02/27/to-make-their-numbers-work-republicans-must-slash-health-spending)
    • The rise of the anti-vaccine movement. Although Kennedy promised at the Senate hearing that he would not do anything against vaccines, he seems to have forgotten that promise as soon as he took office, and wants to review the childhood vaccination schedule (https://www.ft.com/content/d4199db2-01c1-4260-ac60-0f547a6a2fbe)
    • The Trump Administration ends global health research: the Demographic and Health Surveys were the only metrics in many countries on mortality, nutrition and education. This program has been terminated by order of the American government (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/26/health/usaid-global-health-surveys.html)
    • Unvaccinated child dies of measles in Texas (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/26/us/texas-measles-outbreak-death.html)
    •  Pharmaceutical companies in check: Trump imposes tariffs and pressures to reduce the cost of drugs. The tariffs affect the price of imported products such as many APIs for producing drugs. There is also pressure to lower the price of drugs. (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/internacional/pharmaceuticas-en-jaque-trump-impone-aranceles-presiona-reducir-coste-farmacos_154349_102.html)
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
      • In the reform project, primary care physicians will offer online appointments. This will allow for a telephone consultation with the patient on the same day (https://www.ft.com/content/f1aa7987-c9d8-4f86-8731-32d40bef72fa
  • European Union
    • The EMA starts 2025 with a good pace of approvals (https://www.consalud.es/industria/aprobaciones-evaluaciones-cambios-regulatorios-ema-arranca-2025-con-buen-ritmo_155322_102.html)

National health policy

  • Central administration

o The law of the State Agency of Public Health resumes its processing (https://diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/proyecto-ley-agencia-salud-publica-reanuda-tramitacion-parlamentaria-6-meses-despues.html

  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • The University of León wants to close the curriculum of the degree in Medicine in less than a month (https://www.consalud.es/formacion/universidad-leon-quiere-cerrar-plan-estudios-grado-en-medicina-en-menos-mes_155147_102.html)
    • The Basque Health Pact is moving forward with 24 strategic lines and more than 400 professionals involved (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/pais-vasco/pacto-vasco-salud-avanza-con-24-lineas-estrategicas-mas-400-profesionales-implicados_155270_102.html)
    • Extremadura leads the European project against dementia JADE (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/extremadura/extremadura-su-liderazgo-en-proyecto-europeo-contra-demencia-jade-health_155274_102.html)
    • The European Health Pact is starting in Bilbao persistent covid unit (https://www.abc.es/salud/arranca-bilbao-unidad-covid-persistente-medicos-gipuzkoa-20250227150306-vi.html)
    • Launch of the Phase I Clinical Trials Unit in Malaga (https://diariofarma.com/2025/02/26/andalucia-refuerza-apuesta-por-la-innovacion-con-la-unidad-de-ensayos-clinicos-fase-i-en-malaga)
    • The Galician vaccine against tuberculosis makes its way (https://www.elconfidencial.com/espana/galicia/2025-03-01/tuberculosis-vacuna-gallega-abre-paso-somos-optimistas_4075947/)
  • Framework Statute
    • Doctors call a strike against the draft Statute Health Framework. Called by CESM, it will be on May 23. Objectives: limit the workload and improve salary conditions (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-02-25/los-medicos-convocan-una-huelga-contra-el-borrador-del-estatuto-marco-de-sanidad.html)
  • Health barometer
    • The perception of a worsening of the waiting list is increasing, 38% believe that waiting times have worsened compared to the previous year (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/barometro-sanitario-aumenta-percepcion-empeoramiento-listas-espera.html). Access to the 2024 Health Barometer report: https://www.sanidad.gob.es/estadEstudios/estadisticas/BarometroSanitario/Barom_Sanit_2024/BS_2024_Totales/Informe_BS_2024.pdf
  • Interoperable clinical history of private healthcare from IDIS
    • It is already active in 12 companies, including insurers and hospital groups (These are Occident, Quirónsalud, HM Hospitales, HLA, Mapfre, Sanitas, Adeslas, Hospiten, DKV, Cigna, Clínica Universitaria de Navarra and Chipcard. All of them have 100% miHC operational. Others continue working to join the project: Ribera Salud, Caser Seguros, Nueva Mutua Sanitaria, Asisa, Vithas and the Hospital Order of San Juan de Dios. (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250219/historia-clinica-interoperable-sanidad-privada-activa-companias/925157763_0.html)
  • Spanish hospitals
    • 12 Spanish hospitals, among the 250 best in the world, according to Newsweek (https://theobjective.com/sanidad/2025-02-26/doce-hospitales-espanoles-mejores-del-mundo/)
  • Measles
    • Measles is on the rise in Spain, with eight open outbreaks and at least 107 cases since January (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-02-25/el-sarampion-se-dispara-en-espana-con-ocho-brotes-abiertos-y-al-menos-107-casos-desde-enero.html)

Companies

  • International news
    • Only 50% of the most important drugs launched in 2024 were by large companies, according to Evaluate Pharma (https://elglobalfarma.com/industria/grandes-lanzamientos-medicamentos-2024/)
    • Lilly will invest 25.7 billion in four new factories in the USA. They announce the creation of 3,000 jobs. This is in addition to announcements by Apple, Open AI and SoftBank, no doubt to win the sympathy of the Trump Administration (https://www.expansion.com/empresas/industria/2025/02/26/67bf4be5468aeb0d728b45ab.html)
    • Smith & Nephew boss rejects shareholders’ request for a company split (https://www.ft.com/content/c2dd4317-821f-4b41-96af-cd6f7918a59b)
    • Microsoft Health Futures: the future of medicine powered by AI (https://www.consalud.es/salud35/internacional/microsoft-health-futures-futuro-medicina-inteligencia-artificial_154392_102.html)
  • National
    • Almirall earns 10.1 million and exceeds forecasts. The company reaps the rewards of its commitment to dermatology (https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2025/02/24/67bc1b9be5fdea5c298b45a2.html)
    • Grifols announces a strategic plan to reach 10 billion euros in revenue by 2029 (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2025-02-27/grifols-anuncia-un-plan-estrategico-para-alcanzar-los-10000-millones-en-ingresos-en-2029.html)
    • Grifols buys 14 plasma centers in the USA (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2025-03-01/grifols-compra-14-centros-de-plasma-en-ee-uu-a-immunotek-por-135-millones.html)

7 days in healthcare (February 17th-23th, 2025)

 

 

Summary

The most impactful news in health this week were:

  • Biomedicine: RedETS puts a stop to enthusiasm for proton therapy
  • Global health: The environment surpasses genetics in importance in predicting longevity
  • International health policy: Agreement between the NHS and the independent sector to address the waiting list and give patients more choice.
  • National health policy. Adeslas returns to MUFACE, saving the model.
  • Companies: The drugs that will become stars in 2023: obesity, cancer, dermatitis.

Biomedicine

  • Stop to enthusiasm for proton therapy. A report by RedETS, prepared by the Catalan Agency for Quality and Health Assessment (Aquas), concludes that the certainty of the evidence on the efficacy of proton therapy in cancer is low or very low, which prevents recommending its widespread use compared to conventional radiotherapy.
  • Gene therapy in congenital blindness and deafness. Advances in this field published in The Lancet.

Global Health

  • Environment and lifestyle are more important than genetics. Environment outweighs genetics in predicting longevity. The study highlights lifestyles as more closely related to premature death and disease than genetics.
  • Life expectancy in Europeans is no longer growing as it used to. The increase in obesity and overweight and the consumption of alcohol and tobacco are among the factors that explain the trend.

International health policy

  • The development of medicines in China is surprising. Its companies are at the forefront of cheaper and faster medicines. The Chinese government identified biotechnology as a priority twenty years ago.
  • The British government signs an agreement with the independent health sector to address waiting lists. Agreement between the NHS and the independent sector to address the waiting list and give patients more choice. A similar agreement would be good for Spain, at a national level or in some autonomous community. National Health Policy (Spain)
  • Adeslas will submit its bid for the MUFACE tender, thereby saving the model, thanks to the negotiating capacity of Adeslas and ASISA and the government’s desire to make the continuity of the model possible. The role of CSIF in the solution has been important.
  • Catalonia wants to maintain preferential health agreement with consortia and the non-profit sector. This seems to be deduced from the unfortunate statements of the Minister when she says that in this way they will avoid “vulture funds”. She would have to explain to us what she means by “vulture funds”. The exclusion of the profit-making sector from health agreement in Catalonia is not new and is something of great tradition, which now seems to be reinforced.

Companies

  • International
    • Star drugs in 2030: obesity, cancer, dermatitis
  • National
    • ASISA, record billing for premiums in 2024. 4.3% more than the previous year.

Biomedicine

  • Gene therapies in eyes and ears. Advances in gene therapy for congenital blindness and deafness (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)00339-3/fulltext)
  • An AI is capable of diagnosing diseases of the immune system. According to a study published in Science, a tool is presented capable of accurately diagnosing immune disorders, viral infections and responses to vaccines (https://www.abc.es/salud/enfermedades/ia-capaz-diagnosticar-enfermedades-sistema-inmune-20250220133706-nt.html)
  • Mariano Barbacid: Chemotherapy is a thing of the past, it has not advanced in years. Personalized medicine is the future (https://www.alimente.elconfidencial.com/bienestar/2025-02-19/podcast-farma-fin-cancer-quimioterapia_4066615/)
  • What does DeepSeek mean for healthcare? (https://www.healthcare.digital/single-post/deepseek-what-does-deepseek-r1-mean-for-healthtech)
  • The RedETS puts the brakes on enthusiasm for proton therapy. A report by the RedETS, prepared by the Agency for Quality and Health Assessment of Catalonia (Aquas), concludes that the certainty of the evidence on the efficacy of proton therapy in cancer is low or very low, which prevents its widespread use from being recommended compared to conventional radiotherapy, after analyzing 77 studies. Lack of double-blind studies, Most of the works are observational studies (https://diariofarma.com/2025/02/17/la-redets-pone-freno-al-entusiasmo-por-la-protonterapia-la-evidencia-es-debil). Access to the original article: https://aquas.gencat.cat/web/.content/minisite/aquas/publicacions/2024/protonterapia-tratamiento-cancer-redets-aquas2024.pdf

Global Health

  • The environment surpasses genetics in importance in predicting longevity. The study highlights lifestyles as more related to premature death and disease than genetic load (https://www.ft.com/content/5b5ed942-ff10-4fb9-adf7-f8f1e7d9a478). Access to the original article in Nature Medicine: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-024-03483-9
  • Life expectancy in Europeans is no longer increasing as it used to. The increase in obesity and overweight and the consumption of alcohol and tobacco are among the factors that explain the trend (https://elpais.com/ciencia/2025-02-18/la-esperanza-de-vida-de-los-europeos-ya-no-crece-como-antes.html). Access to the original article in The Lancet Public Health: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(25)00009-X/fulltext
  • Who will fill the gap caused by the US’ withdrawal from international aid? In theory, China and Western countries, but this aid is also decreasing. Philanthropic organizations say they cannot fill that gap (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/22/health/usaid-who-trump-china.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • How the Trump Administration wants to remake American science. Cuts to all public research-related institutions are intense and will impact the entire world (https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/02/19/how-the-trump-administration-wants-to-reshape-american-science)
    • Layoffs at the FDA decimated teams reviewing AI and food safety (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/21/health/fda-trump-layoffs-device-and-food-safety.html)
  • China
    • Not just AI, Chinese drugs are taking the world by storm. Their firms are at the forefront of cheaper and faster drugs. The Chinese government identified biotechnology as a priority twenty years ago (https://www.economist.com/business/2025/02/16/its-not-just-ai-chinas-medicines-are-surprising-the-world-too)
  • UK and the National Health Service
    • Deal between the NHS and the independent sector to tackle waiting lists and give patients more choice (https://www.gov.uk/government/news/deal-between-nhs-and-independent-sector-to-cut-nhs-waiting-lists)
    • NHS document on waiting lists and elective surgery (https://www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/reforming-elective-care-for-patients.pdf)
  • Denmark
    • Reform of community pharmacies in primary care in Denmark. The agreement is for 2025-2026, (https://eurohealthobservatory.who.int/monitors/health-systems-monitor/updates/hspm/denmark-2024/new-agreement-on-strengthening-the-role-of-pharmacies-in-primary-healthcare)

National health policy

  • Central administration
    • The Public Health Agency is awaiting approval with its headquarters still up in the air (https://www.consalud.es/politica/agencia-estatal-salud-publica-aguarda-su-aprobacion-mantiene-incertidumbre-sobre-su-sede_155056_102.html)
    • The PSOE rescues the possibility of partial retirement up to 72 years of age in public health (https://www.consalud.es/politica/psoe-rescata-posibilidad-jubilacion-parcial-hasta-72-ano-en-sanidad-publica_155034_102.html)
  • Initiatives and news from the autonomous communities
    • The bioregion of Catalonia consolidates its strength in innovation and advanced therapies. According to the report, the Catalan health and innovation ecosystem reaches 44.8 billion euros in turnover and generates 17,500 new jobs. The report highlights its international appeal and the rise of advanced therapies. (https://diariofarma.com/2025/02/17/bioregion-2024-cataluna-consolida-su-fortaleza-en-innovacion-y-terapias-avanzadas). Catalan Bioregion Report 2024 (https://report.biocat.cat)
    • Catalonia adapts the concerted health system to avoid vulture funds (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/cataluna/cataluna-idea-una-sanidad-concertada-mas-agil-y-alejada-de-fondos-buitre–6882)
    • The Catalan government plans a health management law (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/gobierno-catalan-proyecta-ley-gestion-sanitaria.html)
    • The Canary Islands begin work to set up the Las Palmas Research Unit (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/canarias/canarias-inicia-trabajos-poner-marcha-unidad-investigacion-clinica-palmas_154924_102.html)
    • Madrid will collaborate with the NHS in digital transformation (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/madrid-colaborara-nhs-transformacion-digital.html)
  • MUFACE
    • Adeslas returns to MUFACE (https://elpais.com/economia/2025-02-20/adeslas-vuelve-a-muface-y-pone-asi-punto-final-al-culebron-de-la-mutualidad.html)
  • Framework Statute
    • Reasons why doctors demand their own Statute (https://www.consalud.es/profesionales/medicina/por-medicos-defienden-estatuto-marco-propio-estas-son-sus-razones_154894_102.html)
  • Drug prospectus
    • Doctors, pharmacists and patients demand that the paper drug prospectus be maintained (https://elpais.com/sociedad/2025-02-19/medicos-farmaceuticos-consumidores-pacientes-y-mayores-exigen-que-se-mantenga-el-prospecto-en-papel-de-los-medicamentos.html)

Companies

  • International news
    • GSK tries to convince the market that it can meet its pipeline plan (https://www.ft.com/content/67b15531-f7d3-4e60-b94d-80e9816a090b)
    • Star drugs Ozempic and Wegovy were responsible for 63.4% of NovoNordisk’s sales in 2024 (https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250218/medicamentos-estrella-ozempic-wegovy-responsables-ventas-novo-nordisk/923657931_0.html)
    • The drugs that will become stars in 2030, from obesity to cancer(https://www.elespanol.com/invertia/observatorios/sanidad/20250223/medicamentos-convertiran-superventas-obesidad-cancer/925907479_0.html)

7 days in healthcare (February 10th-16th, 2025)

 

Summary

The most impactful news in health this week were:

  • Biomedicine: Personalized cancer screening is key. Especially in five cancers: breast, lung, colorectal, cervical and prostate.
  • Global health: The exit of the USA from the WHO forces reforms and reprioritization in that organization.
  • International health policy: Trump wants an alternative to the WHO, something foreseen in the executive order he signed.
  • National health policy. The plan against suicide is approved.
  • Companies: Rise in the Nasdaq of companies that fight against aging.

Biomedicine

  • Cancer screening. Although population screening has been key to the decrease in mortality, the problem of overdiagnosis and overtreatment persists. The important thing is personalized cancer screening, especially in relation to these five cancers: breast, lung, colorectal, cervical and prostate.
  • A “road map” of how cancers spread offers hope for new treatments. Researchers are now focusing on the growth of cancers in surrounding tissues to help track the most malignant forms of cancer. It is believed that this knowledge will help prevent the spread of some cancers.

Global Health

  • The WHO is downsizing. The US exit represents an 18% reduction in the budget for 2024-25. A reduction in size, improved governance and a reprioritization of the initiatives are on the agenda.
  • With the withdrawal of aid, Trump threatens the lives of millions. Harsh article in the New York Times. This withdrawal may affect: HIV medications for more than 20 million people; nutritional supplements for hungry children; aid for refugees, orphaned children and women hit by violence.

International health policy

  • Trump wants an alternative for the WHO. Some things are better done together, as demonstrated by the structures for controlling civil aviation or the coordinated postal system. The complexity of bilateral efforts cannot replace multilateralism. The need for a structure for international cooperation in health is obvious. This is what the WHO was created for. This body is not the only global health organization. There is also UNAIDS, Gavi, the World Bank Group alliance, as well as philanthropic foundations such as the Gates Foundation. The executive order contemplates that efforts should be made to create a credible and transparent body to carry out activities previously developed by the WHO. According to this article in the BMJ, the creation of a parallel structure will harm global responses to common challenges.
  • The Royal Society of London meets to remove Elon Musk’s membership. More than 1,300 scientists address the world’s oldest scientific society against Elon Musk.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • The Plan against suicide is approved, with 18 million euros and a Prevention Observatory.
  • The Interterritorial Council rejects the Mental Health Plan. Only Catalonia, Asturias and Castilla-La Mancha give a yes to the document, rejected by the PP communities. Some psychiatric scientific societies claim that they have learned of the plan through the press.
  • Doctors oppose the Ministry’s proposals on the Framework Statute and want their own regulations, to avoid the negotiation of their conditions being diluted in a common Framework Statute. The attempt to reform the Framework Statute was a blunder by this ministerial team, which has created a fire in an issue that, although poorly resolved and in need of reform, was calm. The ministerial team has shown that it does not have the intellectual or political baggage to tackle a reform of this calibre. The demand by doctors for their own statute is entirely logical, given the experience that any approach to professionalism is diluted by a union representation that is more attentive to other things.
  • Muface introduces harsh fines for insurers in the new specifications. The sanctions are toughened, introducing: sanctions for delays in the provision of service, quality audits, quarterly review of the quality of service with satisfaction surveys. There is no doubt that this is an important step towards transparency. We wonder what would happen if the public system introduced these penalties for delays in services.

Companies

  • International
    • Companies that challenge ageing: United Biotechnology; Longeveron; Seres Therapeutics; BioVie Inc, all of them on the Nasdaq, among the main companies. There is no doubt that a large part of the future lies there.
  • National
    • Mapfre and Sanitas launch a subsidiary to develop hospitals. This new company Desarrollos Hospitalarios is controlled by 49.7% by Mapfre, with the rest of the capital being Sanitas. They will build a hospital in the Balearic Islands, which joins the one announced in Barcelona. This seems to be a defensive move by insurers against the concentration processes in the hospital world, which could make their negotiations with suppliers more difficult.

Biomedicine

  • Cancer screening. Although population screening has been key to the decrease in mortality, the problem of overdiagnosis and overtreatment persists. The important thing is personalized cancer screening, especially in relation to these five cancers: breast, lung, colorectal, cervical and prostate) (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(25)00016-7/fulltext)
  • A “road map” of how cancers spread offers hope for new treatments. Researchers are now focusing on the growth of cancers in surrounding tissues to help track the most malignant forms of cancer. It is believed that this knowledge will help prevent the spread of some cancers (https://www.ft.com/content/47816a9f-c974-4b37-9d28-4bf777a2d765). Access to the original article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-56299-7)
  • The Swedish biotech BioArtic behind the companies researching Alzheimer’s is looking for a way to break the blood-brain barrier, so that drugs can reach the brain. This company relies on the mechanism of transporting iron to the brain (https://www.ft.com/content/4b28c118-58ea-48c5-82e6-941bc9f2c079)
  • Can anti-obesity drugs be given to children? There is a battle between the defenders of these therapies in children and those who oppose them due to the consequences on the growth of their bodies (https://www.ft.com/content/8370db31-e9d8-4aa8-ae00-8c1a716b4b6c)
  • The new success of the “miracle” drug Ozempic: it reduces alcohol consumption by up to 40% in people with addiction. A trial in 48 people has shown the success of Ozempic in treating excessive drinking (https://www.elespanol.com/ciencia/salud/20250214/nuevo-exito-farmaco-milagro-ozempic-reduce-consumo-alcohol-personas-adiccion/923908094_0.html)

Global Health

  • The introduction of the malaria vaccine in Africa: progress and challenges. In 2024, Africa reached a milestone in its fight against malaria, a disease that causes 95% of deaths in the USA. In 2024, the incidence was 58.6 cases per 1,000 inhabitants, far from the target of 21.3 cases per 1,000 inhabitants that had been set for 2023. There are 14 countries involved in this fight. Financial sustainability and differences between countries are the major challenges (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)02841-1/abstract?rss=yes#au30)
  • African leaders on malaria call for continued aid amid uncertainty. The freeze in American aid is causing financial constraints in the fight against malaria (https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r271)
  • The reduction in the size of the WHO. The exit of the USA represents an 18% decrease in the budget for 2024-25. Downsizing, improved governance and reprioritizing the agenda are on the agenda (https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2825%2900289-2)
  • Trump’s exit from the WHO leaves it without defenses against smallpox, one of the deadliest pathogens (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/12/health/smallpox-who-cdc-bioweapons.html)
  • Withdrawal of aid, Trump threatens the lives of millions. Harsh article in the New York Times. This withdrawal may affect: HIV medications for more than 20 million people; nutritional supplements for hungry children; Aid to refugees, orphaned children and women affected by violence (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/08/health/trump-usaid-health-aid.html)

International Health Policy

  • USA
    • Trump wants an alternative to the WHO. Certain things are better done together, as demonstrated by the structures of civil aviation control or the coordinated postal system. The complexity of bilateral efforts cannot replace multilateralism. The need for an international health cooperation structure is obvious. This is what the WHO was created for. This body is not the only global health organization. There is also UNAIDS, Gavi, the World Bank Group alliance, as well as philanthropic foundations such as the Gates Foundation. The executive order contemplates that efforts should be made to create a credible and transparent body to carry out activities previously developed by the WHO. According to this BMJ article, the creation of a parallel structure will undermine global responses to common challenges (https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r188)
    • Vaccine skeptic Robert Kennedy, Jr. is now US Secretary of Health, with a proven track record of vaccine skepticism (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00439-y)
    • Who is running health care in the new American government? This article analyzes the personality and careers of the new Secretary of Health; the new director of the NHI; the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid; the new director of the CDC; the new commissioner of the FDA and the new “surgeon general.” (https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj.r267)
    • How Trump’s cuts affect hospitals and universities in different American states (https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/02/13/upshot/nih-trump-funding-cuts.html)
    • Trump withdraws funding for schools that make vaccines mandatory (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/14/health/trump-schools-covid-vaccine-mandates.html)
  • United Kingdom and the National Health Service
    • NHS Trust deficits double. Rising costs for temporary staff and outsourcing are at the root of these deficits (https://www.ft.com/content/45e39986-4f19-4247-a4ef-da673306fdd2)
    • The Royal Society of London meets to revoke Elon Musk’s membership. More than 1,300 scientists address the world’s oldest scientific society against Elon Musk (https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00486-5)
  • France
    • The French Parliament approves the ban on disposable electronic cigarettes. The Senate has approved this ban by a single vote in France (https://www.lemonde.fr/politique/article/2025/02/13/cigarettes-electroniques-jetables-le-parlement-adopte-definitivement-l-interdiction-des-puffs_6545304_823448.html)
  • Canada
    • Canada appoints a person in charge of fighting fentanyl, a promise made to Trump (https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2025/02/12/le-canada-nomme-un-responsable-de-la-lutte-contre-le-fentanyl-une-promesse-faite-a-donald-trump_6542915_3210.html)

National health policy

  • Central administration
    • he Plan against suicide is approved, with 18 million euros and a Prevention Observatory (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/secciones/ministerio-sanidad/el-plan-antisuicidio-tendra-partida-de-18-millones-y-3-vias-de-vigilancia-5554)
    • The Interterritorial Council rejects the Mental Health Plan. Only Catalonia, Asturias and Castilla-La Mancha give a yes to the document, rejected by the PP communities. Some psychiatric scientific societies claim that they have learned about the plan through the press (https://www.diariomedico.com/medicina/politica/consejo-interterritorial-tumba-plan-salud-mental-aprueba-prevencion-suicidio.html)
    • Doctors oppose the Ministry’s proposals on the Framework Statute and want their own regulation, to avoid the negotiation of their conditions being diluted in a common Framework Statute (https://www.consalud.es/profesionales/medicos-todo-pais-dicen-no-propuesta-estatuto-marco-queremos-norma-propia_154550_102.html)
    • The Royal Decree on Health Technology Assessment, about to be sent to the Council of State (https://elglobalfarma.com/politica/rd-evaluacion-tecnologias-sanitarias-consejo-estado/)
  • Initiatives and news from the communities autonomous communities
    • Asturias opens meetings for the social pact for mental health, a prelude to the future law (https://diariofarma.com/2025/02/10/asturias-abre-las-reuniones-por-el-pacto-social-por-la-salud-mental-antesala-de-la-futura-ley)
    • The Balearic Islands already have their research and clinical trials unit, the UBICEC, at the Son Espases hospital (https://diariofarma.com/2025/02/10/baleares-cuenta-ya-con-su-unidad-de-investigacion-clinica-y-ensayos-clinicos-ubicec)
    • The government of Aragon will speed up appointments in Primary Care with AI (https://www.consalud.es/autonomias/aragon/gobierno-aragon-ha-dado-conocer-agilizara-citas-en-primaria-traves-ia_154805_102.html)
    • Asturian health researchers will be in group A (https://www.redaccionmedica.com/autonomias/asturias/el-salto-de-los-investigadores-sanitarios-al-a1-da-un-aceleron-en-asturias-5987)
  • MUFACE
    • Sanitas, Mapfre and AXA analyze the Muface tender after years outside the agreement (https://elpais.com/economia/2025-02-14/sanitas-mapfre-y-axa-analizan-el-pliego-de-muface-despues-de-anos-fuera-del-concierto.html)
    • Muface introduces harsh fines to insurers in the new specifications. Sanctions are toughened, introducing: sanctions for delays in the provision of the service, quality audit, quarterly review of the quality of the service with satisfaction surveys (https://www.vozpopuli.com/economia/letra-pequena-nuevos-pliegos-muface-multas-sd.html)
  • Pharmaceutical sector
    • Pharmaceutical companies commit to Sánchez to multiply their investment if it is encouraged. They plan to close this year with 9,000 million of investment in three years (https://cincodias.elpais.com/companias/2025-02-12/las-farmaceuticas-se-comprometen-con-sanchez-a-multiplicar-su-inversion-si-es-incentivada.html)
  • Sick leave
    • Sick leave soars by 113% in just a decade and already lasts 43 days. Causes: aging of workers, lack of control, health collapse and increased employment (https://theobjective.com/economia/2025-02-09/coste-incapacidad-temporal-bajas-laborales-dispara-decada/)

Companies

  • International news
    • Companies that challenge aging: United Biotechnology; Longeveron; Seres Therapeutics; BioVie Inc, all of them on the Nasdaq, among the main companies (https://www.eleconomista.es/mercados-cotizaciones/noticias/13213813/02/25/biotecnologia-y-longevidad-las-companias-que-desafian-el-envejecimiento.html)
    • The growing weight of Private Equity in healthcare: a phenomenon not only American. Between 2018 and 2022, more than 446 billion dollars have been invested globally in healthcare by private equity firms. The concern remains that they are focusing more on short-term profit than on long-term profit and patient care, and investments have been mostly in sectors with limited regulation and public funding (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2412002)
    • Bain buys 340-year-old drug company to boost development in Japan (https://www.ft.com/content/6fd756af-c63f-4587-ba67-189009102e5f)
    • Johnson & Johnson puts stroke-related business up for sale (https://www.ft.com/content/b2a52b96-121e-469e-b4a3-5b6c3ab2994b)
    • Novartis agrees to pay $3 billion to buy cardiovascular biotech from Blackstone (https://www.ft.com/content/6d2458c4-9c0b-4548-a387-c229dba73e26)