Health
Chikungunya Outbreak Spreads Rapidly in Southern China, Thousands Infected
China is grappling with a significant outbreak of chikungunya, a mosquito-borne viral disease, with over 7,000 cases reported in the southern province of Guangdong so far this year. The city of Foshan has emerged as the epicentre, prompting an urgent response from health authorities to curb the virus’s spread.
According to China’s state broadcaster CCTV, patients in Foshan have been hospitalised and are sleeping under mosquito nets as authorities step up containment efforts. More than 2,800 new cases were reported in just the last week, fuelling concern over the rapid transmission of a virus rarely seen in China.
Local health officials say the outbreak was triggered by an “imported case” in July, though they have not disclosed its origin. Since then, at least 12 other cities in Guangdong have confirmed infections. On Sunday, Hong Kong reported its first chikungunya case — a 12-year-old boy who had recently travelled to Foshan and later developed fever, rash, and joint pain.
Authorities insist that all reported cases in China so far have been mild, with most patients recovering without complications. However, the pace of the outbreak has heightened public health alertness.
Understanding Chikungunya
Chikungunya was first identified in Tanzania in 1952 and has since spread to over 110 countries, with outbreaks most common in Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. The virus is transmitted through the bite of infected Aedes mosquitoes.
Symptoms typically develop within a week of exposure and include high fever, rash, muscle aches, joint pain, and nausea. While fatalities are rare, joint pain can linger for months in some cases. There is no specific treatment or widely available vaccine.
Containment Measures Underway
In response to the escalating outbreak, authorities in Guangdong have pledged “decisive and forceful measures” to contain the virus. The provincial government has launched large-scale mosquito control initiatives, including clearing stagnant water from public and residential areas — known breeding grounds for mosquitoes.
Residents have been urged to eliminate standing water from items such as flower pots, bottles, and household containers. Those failing to comply face fines of up to 10,000 yuan (€1,208). In Foshan, officials have released mosquito-eating fish into lakes and deployed drones to detect hidden water sources on rooftops and other inaccessible areas.
The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention has also issued advisories on both chikungunya and dengue fever, recommending the use of mosquito nets, screen doors, and repellents.
Mosquito-Borne Illnesses in Europe
While chikungunya remains rare in Europe, France and Italy have reported a combined 51 cases this year. Meanwhile, Italy is battling its own mosquito-borne crisis — West Nile virus. The Lazio region reported the death of a 93-year-old woman last week, bringing the country’s death toll to 10 in 2025.
The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) has confirmed West Nile infections in five countries: Italy, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, and France. In Italy, the lethality rate for the neuro-invasive form of the virus has climbed to 20%, up from 14% last year.
As the global climate warms and mosquito habitats expand, public health experts warn that outbreaks of mosquito-borne illnesses may become increasingly frequent — even in regions previously considered low-risk.
Health
Study Finds AI Systems Can Repeat Fake Medical Claims When Framed Credibly
“Large language models accept fake medical claims if presented as realistic in medical notes and social media discussions, a study has found.”
As more people turn to the internet to research symptoms, compare treatments and share personal health experiences, artificial intelligence tools are increasingly being used to answer medical questions. A new study warns that many of these systems remain vulnerable to medical misinformation, particularly when false claims are presented in authoritative or realistic language.
The findings, published in The Lancet Digital Health, show that leading artificial intelligence systems can mistakenly repeat incorrect medical information when it appears in formats that resemble professional healthcare documents or trusted online discussions. Researchers analysed how large language models respond when faced with false medical statements written in a credible tone.
The study examined responses from 20 widely used language models, including systems developed by OpenAI, Meta, Google, Microsoft, Alibaba and Mistral AI, as well as several models specifically fine-tuned for medical use. In total, researchers assessed more than one million prompts designed to test whether AI would accept or reject fabricated health information.
Fake statements were inserted into real hospital discharge notes, drawn from common health myths shared on Reddit, or embedded in simulated clinical scenarios written to resemble authentic healthcare guidance. Across all models tested, incorrect information was accepted around 32 percent of the time. Performance varied significantly, with smaller or less advanced models accepting false claims in more than 60 percent of cases, while more advanced systems, including ChatGPT-4o, did so in roughly 10 percent of responses.
The researchers also found that medical fine-tuned models performed worse than general-purpose systems, raising concerns about tools designed specifically for healthcare use.
“Our findings show that current AI systems can treat confident medical language as true by default, even when it’s clearly wrong,” said Eyal Klang of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, one of the study’s senior authors. He added that how a claim is written often matters more to the model than whether it is accurate.
Some of the accepted misinformation could pose real risks to patients. Several models endorsed claims such as Tylenol causing autism during pregnancy, rectal garlic boosting immunity, mammograms causing cancer, and tomatoes thinning blood as effectively as prescription medication. In another case, a discharge note incorrectly advised patients with oesophageal bleeding to drink cold milk, which some models repeated without flagging safety concerns.
The study also tested how AI systems responded to flawed arguments known as fallacies. While many fallacies prompted scepticism, models were more likely to accept false claims framed as expert opinions or warnings of catastrophic outcomes.
Researchers say future work should focus on measuring how often AI systems pass on falsehoods before they are used in clinical settings. Mahmud Omar, the study’s first author, said the dataset could help developers and hospitals stress-test AI tools and track improvements over time.
The authors said stronger safeguards will be essential as AI becomes more deeply embedded in healthcare decision-making.
Health
Moderate Caffeine Intake Linked to Lower Dementia Risk, Study Finds
Health
Growing Research Links Tattoos to Possible Cancer Risks, Experts Say
Tattoos are more popular than ever, but a growing body of research suggests a connection between permanent ink and certain types of cancer. How concerned should the public be?
From tribal sleeves to lower-back butterflies, humans have been inking their skin for thousands of years. For most, the main concern has been the fear of future regrets. However, recent studies suggest that tattoos could carry more serious long-term health risks.
The popularity of tattoos has risen sharply in recent years. Research published in the European Journal of Public Health estimates that between 13 and 21 percent of people in Western Europe now have at least one tattoo. Despite this prevalence, relatively little is known about the potential long-term effects of permanent ink.
Previous studies have shown that tattoo pigments can accumulate in the lymph nodes, sometimes causing inflammation and, in rare cases, lymphoma—a type of blood cancer. A 2025 study by the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) expanded on this, reporting that individuals with tattoos may face higher risks of skin cancer and lymphoma. Using a cohort of randomly selected twins, the researchers found that tattooed participants had nearly four times the risk of skin cancer compared with their non-tattooed siblings.
The study also suggested that tattoo size could affect risk, with designs larger than the palm associated with higher hazard rates.
“We have evidence that there is an association [between the amount of ink and risk] for lymphoma and for skin cancer,” said Signe Bedsted Clemmensen, co-author of the study and assistant professor of biostatistics at SDU. “For lymphoma, the hazard rate is 2.7 times higher, so this is quite a lot. And for skin cancers, before it was 1.6 and now it’s 2.4. This indicates that the more ink you have, the higher the risk, the higher the hazard rate.”
Clemmensen emphasized that these findings remain preliminary, with many variables—including ink types, tattoo placement, and genetic and environmental factors—still under investigation. “The bottom line is, more research is needed,” she said. “But also, the next step I think is studying the biological mechanisms [of getting tattooed] and trying to understand what happens there.”
Experts also note other risks unrelated to cancer. Tattoo inks consist of pigments combined with a carrier fluid to deposit color into the dermis. Some inks, often imported, can contain trace amounts of heavy metals such as nickel, chromium, cobalt, and lead, which can trigger allergic reactions or immune sensitivity. In 2022, the European Union restricted more than 4,000 hazardous substances in tattoo inks under its REACH regulations.
While tattoos are generally considered safe when applied hygienically, the long-term health consequences remain uncertain. “It’s up to each of us how we choose to live our lives, right? But as a researcher, it’s also my job to inform people of these risks,” Clemmensen said. “Or, when it comes to tattooing, right now it’s more about informing people about how little we know.”
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