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News Articles: Global Health

A hospital worker shows the damage inside Fontaine Hospital in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, three days after an armed attack forced its closure last fall.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Whatever happened to ... the doctors who stand by their patients in gang-ridden Haiti?

How do you get a cancer patient to a center that provides treatment when the roads are not safe? That's one of the challenges facing health-care providers in gang-eidden. Haiti. How are they doing?

September 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
Preeti Pal of India celebrates winning a bronze medal in the Women's 100m - T35 Final during the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games on August 30. She won a second bronze in the 200m final two days later -- and became an instant hero in her homeland.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

'Never lose courage': A Paralympian who could barely walk as a kid takes 2 track medals

Neighbors told Preeti Pal's parents she'd never marry because she was born with cerebral palsy. She just won two bronzes and is now a hero in India. Oh, and she has no interest in marriage.

September 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Sonia Narang
The Afghan Youth Orchestra with its founder, Ahmad Sarmast.

Tagged as: 

  • Music

Whatever happened to ... the young Afghan musicians who fled after the Taliban took over?

Nearly 300 young musicians, their teachers and staff from their music school fled Afghanistan in fear for their lives as the Taliban took power. NPR caught up with them during their U.S. tour,

September 03, 2024
|
By:
  • Anastasia Tsioulcas
Bolivian skateboarders at Smithsonian Folklife Festival 2024

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Whatever happened to ... the Bolivian women who skateboard in Indigenous garb?

Skateboarding women of Bolivia wear Indigenous garb to pay homage to the strength of their mothers and grandmothers. Their motto: When you fall, you have the power to get back up.

September 02, 2024
|
By:
  • Christina Noriega
 Mina al-Najar, who is almost 3, received a liver transplant in April and needs surgery for complications. Her parents believed she was on an evacuation list but that turned out not to be the case. Her parents, reached by phone this week, say her only hope is medical evacuation<br>

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Children in Gaza who need medical care are not being allowed to evacuate, say aid groups

Aid groups that help families get a sick or injured child to another country for care say obtaining approval from Israel for the child and an adult companion to leave has become intensely difficult.

September 01, 2024
|
By:
  • Jane Arraf
Raashida, 15, says she was injured in her family's home in Rakhine State, Myanmar, on August 7 in a drone attack by the Arakan Army. Her mother and one sibling also sustained injuries. According to Amnesty International, "Rohingya civilians are now caught in the middle of intensifying conflict in Rakhine State between the Arakan Army and the Myanmar military." Raashida's family has fled Myanmar for Bangladesh, where nearly 1 million Rohingya refugees live in camps, having left their homes due to anti-Musli…

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Whatever happened to ... the Rohingya refugee who won a U.N. award for his photos?

We catch up with Sahat Zia Hero, a winner last year of the Nansen Refugee Award for "outstanding work" helping displaced people. He is still making pictures: "This is a tough life."

September 01, 2024
|
By:
  • Maria Isabel Barros Guinle
Erica Lacerda de Souza, son Henrique and husband Bruce Lee de Souza, relax in their new home in Guaianazes, São Paulo. The family lost their home when the pandemic took away their livelihoods. They moved in about two months ago after being homeless, then getting a tiny transitional residence/

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Whatever happened to ... the family who lost it all? Spoiler alert: It's a happy ending

With no work, home, car or food due to the pandemic, the couple in Sao Paolo, Brazil, struggled to survive. Then they got a tiny house. How are they doing today?

August 30, 2024
|
By:
  • Jill Langlois
Medical professionals and students take part in a protest rally against the rape and murder of a doctor in Kolkata on Aug. 21. India's Supreme Court on Aug. 20 ordered a national task force to examine how to bolster security for healthcare workers after the "horrific" rape and murder of a doctor sparked medical strikes and furious protests.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

The rape and murder of a female doctor in India sets off an outcry over women's safety

The young woman was raped and murdered while on break from a 36-hour hospital shift. Women who work in health care — and other fields — are calling for changes to protect them from sexual violence.

August 26, 2024
|
By:
  • Ruchi Kumar
Face masks can dampen the spread of contagious diseases.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Coronavirus FAQ: I'm a NOVID and don't want to catch COVID. Can you guide me?

Maybe you're COVID indifferent. Or a COVID amnesiac. Or a NOVID who wants to keep your no COVID streak going. With cases rising this summer, it's time for a refresher course on how to avoid the virus.

August 24, 2024
|
By:
  • Fran Kritz
Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan competes during the men's javelin throw at the Olympics in Paris. He won gold, set an Olympic record — and reaped lots of prizes, including a buffalo from his father-in-law. It's all about the milk!

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

He won Olympic gold for Pakistan. He got $1 million. And ... a buffalo!?!

Arshad Nadeem hurled his javelin over 300 feet — an Olympic record that earned him Pakistan's first individual gold medal. His rewards include cash, a car — and a buffalo. Therein lies a story.

August 23, 2024
|
By:
  • Benazir Samad
Hawa Miso, 70, collects leaves to use as vegetables on the hillside near the Rabang camp for internally displaced persons in Rabang, in Sudan's Nuba Mountains. Approximately 10 million Sudanese have been displaced by the civil war that broke out in 2023. A team of experts backed by the United Nations believes the country is experiencing famine. But the government does not agree.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Yes there is famine in Sudan. So why isn't 'famine' being declared?

A team of independent famine experts, working under the U.N. umbrella, believe Sudan is experiencing famine. But issuing a declaration — which could bring in more aid — turns out to be complicated.

August 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Fatma Tanis
Heman Bekele is <em>Time's</em> "2024 Kid of the Year," honored for his work on a cancer-fighting soap. Last year he won a $25,000 prize from 3M for his research. Above, he's pictured with 3M mentor, Deborah Isabelle, who's said of Bekele, "he's going to continue to inspire other young people to realize that science can make a positive difference."<br>

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Our interview with "TIME's 2024 Kid of the Year," inventor of a cancer-fighting soap

Last year NPR interviewed Heman Bekele about his invention of a soap to fight skin cancer. He was motivated by his childhood in Ethiopia: He saw people working in the sun and thought of health risks.

August 16, 2024
|
By:
  • Max Barnhart
A teenage girl wearing a face mask, head scarf and long black robe, listens to a math teacher at a tutoring center in Kabul. The center was established by a women's rights activist to circumvent a Taliban ban on girls attending secondary school. The activist said she has informal permission by Taliban authorities to run the center as long as teenage girls abide by a strict dress code.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Many Afghan men believe in women's rights. But they're afraid to speak out

Men rarely speak out to protest the Taliban's stripping away of the rights of girls and women. A new study finds that many believe those lost rights should be restored.

August 16, 2024
|
By:
  • Ruchi Kumar
"The Fine Cut" is a re-created barbershop poster that depicts two kinds of cuts — hairstyles of African-American men and ritual scarification of African faces.

Tagged as: 

  • Opinion

'American African' identity is explored by U.S. artist with Ghanaian/Nigerian roots

The artist Africanus Okokon was born in the United States. His dad is Nigerian and his mom is Ghanaian. In his new exhibit, Okokon uses recycled and reclaimed objects to explore his American identity and his African roots.

August 16, 2024
|
By:
  • Kahwit Tela
A health worker fumigates the basement of a building in Havana as Cuban health authorities launch small-scale efforts to fight the spread of the oropouche virus, which is transmitted by midge and mosquito bites.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Oropouche virus 101: A guide to a little-known virus that's raising concern this year

The virus has been confined to certain areas of the Amazon but is moving into new turf as climate change enables the insects that spread it to spread out. Here's what we know.

August 15, 2024
|
By:
  • Fatma Tanis and
  • Maria Isabel Barros Guinle
  • Load More

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