Global Health News: Regional Diets, Medication Access, and Strikes
This summary highlights key health-related news. It includes a Chinese study advocating for region-specific diets to combat obesity, a U.S. study revealing inconsistent access to diabetes medications for minority veterans, failed clinical trials impacting AbbVie's market share, and ongoing global pandemic treaty negotiations. It also touches on Croatia's health worker strikes and other health sector updates.
The latest health news features a Chinese study advocating for region-specific diets as a countermeasure against increasing obesity and lifestyle diseases in the country. This is amid China's introduction of standard guidelines for obesity diagnosis and treatment, emphasizing healthier eating to curb rising overweight rates.
A recent study raises concerns about unequal access to semaglutide medications among U.S. military veterans. Data shows racial disparities, with minority veterans less likely to receive the diabetes and weight loss drug, highlighting a systemic issue in the Veterans Affairs Medical System.
Across the globe, crucial negotiations for a global pandemic treaty continue, with the World Health Organization expecting finalization by the next World Health Assembly. In parallel, health workers in Croatia demand better pay via strikes, affecting hospital services across the country.
(With inputs from agencies.)