Posts

7 days in healthcare (May 29th-June 4th, 2023)

 

Summary

From the point of view of Biomedicine, it is worth noting the death of the virologist Harald sur Hausen, whose name will not mean anything to many, but who 50 years ago discovered the relationship between papillomavirus and cervical cancer, initiating studies of the relationship between viruses and cancer. Reading the DNA of a large and highly varied number of primates allows us to better understand what a human person is and the origin of some diseases. An international consortium discovers that the nucleus of cells is metabolically active.

As regards Global Health, The Economist focuses on the decline in global fertility, due to a decrease in births, not an increase in deaths, a fact with great consequences in our societies. The WHO puts a target by means of cheap vaccines to the global vaccination against cervical cancer, which still produces a large number of deaths. The UN warns about the great sources of hunger in the world: Haiti, Mali, Burkina Faso and Sudan.

Regarding International Health Policy, Canada is preparing a regulation that will make it mandatory to carry warnings of negative health effects on each cigarette. The EU finalizes a regulation to remunerate plasma donations. The WHO celebrates the 76th World Assembly in Switzerland, in which several topics were discussed, among others, the next UN High-Level meeting on universal health coverage, to be held on September 23.

If we talk about National Health Policy (Spain), the call for early elections for July 23 paralyzes the processing of more than 60 laws in relation to health, including some as important as the Equity Law, the Framework Statute, the Law of the National Agency of Public Health or the Law of Guarantees and Rational Use of Medicines. In the Valencian Community, Mazón (the winning candidate of the PP in that Community and foreseeable new president) announces the freezing of the reversal process of the concessions of Manises, Denia and Elche, which had already started or were planned by the Ximo Puig government. He also doesn’t rule out launching new concessions. The Princess of Asturias Award for International Cooperation, awarded to the non-profit initiative Medicines for Neglected Diseases, which focuses not on rare diseases, but on highly prevalent diseases, especially in underdeveloped countries, such as Chagas disease, dengue fever, kala-azar or river blindness and which are considered to affect around 1,000-1,500 million people in those countries, without any research, industry or commercial effort commensurate with their importance.

In the field of Companies, internationally, China breaks the veto on Western vaccines and will allow Moderna to settle in that country. For its part, AstraZeneca defies geopolitical challenges and intends to grow in China. At the national level, Zurich joins forces with Google and DKV to launch digital health insurance. Quirónsalud intends to grow in telemedicine and closes a contract to serve university students.

Biomedicine

Global Health

International Health Policy

  • France
    • Tobacco use is stable in France, one in four adults smokes daily (https://www.lemonde.fr/sante/article/2023/05/31/avec-un-adulte-sur-quatre-qui-smoke-quotidiennement-le-tabagisme-reste-stable-en-france_6175491_1651302.html#:~:text=Tabac-,Tabac%20%3A%20avec%20un%20adulte%20sur%20quatre%20qui%20fume%20quotidiennement%2C% twenty)
  • Canada
    • Canada is going to require that a warning about the danger be printed on each cigarette, since it has been seen that young people start smoking when they receive the offer not of a pack, but of a cigarette (https://www.lemonde. fr/international/article/2023/05/31/le-canada-va-demiger-qu-un-avertissement-soit-imprime-sur-chaque-cigarette_6175630_3210.html)

National health policy

Companies

 

 

7 days in healthcare (May 22nd-28th, 2023)

 

Summary

From the point of view of Biomedicine, to point out the cerebral signs in the orbito-frontal cortex detected in chronic pain, which opens the possibility of implanting devices to alleviate pain. An AI-based digital bridge enables paraplegics to walk, raising hope that neurotechnology can help overcome numerous disabilities. The contribution of AI in the interpretation of radiological images is the subject of an extensive review in the New England Journal Medicine. Science magazine publishes advances in regenerative medicine, which helps to recover tissues damaged in many diseases.

With regard to Global Health, The Economist shows with its model that global deaths are 5% above the pre-pandemic era, speculating about whether the stress on health systems due to the covid could have left many people without treatment, which would have increased mortality. Child labor, so present even in developed countries, is the subject of an analysis by The Lancet. The WHO, for its part, warns that the next pandemic may be even deadlier than covid.

As for International Health Policy, the most striking thing is both the editorial and the article that The Economist dedicates to the National Health Service. He goes on to say that although the NHS may need more money, money alone would not solve its problems, calling for “a radical change of focus”, but not like those that some are calling for to move closer to social insurance-type models such as in Germany and France, which he considers unnecessary. He believes that the change consists of orienting the system more towards health, as its name indicates, and less towards disease. Less focus on hospitals and more on community health; from treatment to prevention; and valuing the results more than the activity inputs.

If we talk about National Health Policy (Spain), to highlight the change of political sign, with the departure of the PSOE and the arrival of the PP, in the governments of the Valencian Community, Cantabria, the Balearic Islands, Extremadura and Aragon. This is going to have health consequences. Although it is early to tell, it will surely give continuity to the concession model in the Valencian Community. The latest weekly report from the WHO on covid shows that Spain is currently the country in Europe with the highest mortality per 100,000 inhabitants from this disease. The Community of Madrid has a serious problem attracting professionals, leaving many positions for primary care doctors and paediatricians vacant. Debate on training in the SNS, for important professional associations, such as FACME, the SNS by itself will not be able to maintain teaching professionals without collaboration with the industry. The Government of Navarra is investigating several doctors for breach of exclusivity, apparently only in force in Navarra, Galicia and Asturias. It is surprising that the form of application of a national law depends on the political sign of the autonomous governments.

At the Business level, internationally, Pfizer reaches an agreement with the EU to reduce the supply of covid vaccines. At the national level, it should be noted that HIPRA, after two months of approval of its vaccine, only sells it in Spain.

Biomedicine

Global Health

International Health Policy

National health policy

  • AIDS
    • According to the report of the Carlos III Health Institute, 92.5% of people living with HIV in Spain would know their infection diagnosis; 96.6 are receiving antiretroviral treatment and 90.4 have suppressed viral load. The decrease in the undiagnosed fraction is the data that presents the greatest evolution in this report (https://www.isciii.es/Paginas/Inicio.aspx)

Companies