Health
Over 1.4 Million African Women at Risk as U.S. Plans to Destroy $10 Million in Contraceptives
More than 1.4 million women and girls across Africa may lose access to critical contraceptives, following U.S. government plans to incinerate $10 million worth of reproductive health supplies currently stored in a Belgian warehouse, according to the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF).
The stockpile, owned by the United States and originally intended for low-income countries, is facing destruction in France after the recent shutdown of key operations under the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The move has sparked sharp criticism from global health advocates, NGOs, and European lawmakers.
Around 77% of the supplies — including implants and injectables with expiry dates stretching to 2029 — were earmarked for African nations such as Tanzania, Kenya, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Mali, and Zambia. IPPF says efforts to purchase the contraceptives from the U.S. government were rejected, even as countries report growing shortages in reproductive health supplies.
“In Tanzania, USAID’s funding cuts have already led to a significant shortage in contraceptive implants,” said Dr. Bakari, Project Coordinator at UMATI, IPPF’s member association in Tanzania. He noted that the country was scheduled to receive over a million injectable contraceptives and 365,000 implants — representing more than 40% of the entire shipment and nearly a third of Tanzania’s annual family planning needs.
Kenya is facing similar challenges. “The funding freeze has caused stock-outs, leaving facilities with less than five months of supply,” said Nelly Munyasia, executive director of the Reproductive Health Network in Kenya. She warned that USAID’s withdrawal has created a 46% funding gap in Kenya’s national family planning programme.
The loss of the contraceptives could have dire consequences. According to the Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition (RHSC), failure to distribute the stockpile could lead to 362,000 unintended pregnancies, 161,000 unplanned births, and 110,000 unsafe abortions across 32 countries.
The coalition also warned that sudden shortages of preferred contraceptive methods could lead women to switch to less suitable alternatives, creating ripple effects in supply chains. “When family planning stocks are compromised, the entire supply chain is at risk,” RHSC stated.
The destruction plan has also drawn political backlash in Europe. French Green Party politicians have urged President Emmanuel Macron to intervene, calling the plan an extension of “Donald Trump’s anti-choice agenda.”
Despite these calls, France’s health ministry said there is no legal basis to prevent the destruction or to repurpose the contraceptives for European use. “Since contraceptives are not drugs of major therapeutic interest, and we are not facing a supply shortage, we have no means to requisition the stocks,” it stated.
U.S. State Department officials said the matter remains under review, but with incineration preparations underway, time is running out to redirect the life-saving supplies to the communities that need them most.
Health
Novo Nordisk Teams Up With OpenAI to Accelerate Drug Discovery Using AI
Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk has announced a new partnership with OpenAI aimed at integrating artificial intelligence across its drug development and business operations.
The collaboration, revealed on Tuesday, is expected to help the company identify new treatments more quickly and improve how medicines are developed, produced and delivered to patients. Novo Nordisk said the use of advanced AI tools will allow it to analyse vast and complex datasets, uncover patterns that were previously difficult to detect, and shorten the timeline from research to patient access.
Chief executive Mike Doustdar said the agreement marks an important step in positioning the company for the future of healthcare. He noted that millions of people living with chronic conditions such as obesity and diabetes still require better treatment options, adding that new therapies remain to be discovered.
Novo Nordisk is widely known for its leading treatments in these areas, including Ozempic and Wegovy, which have seen strong global demand in recent years. The company said integrating AI into daily workflows will allow its teams to test ideas more rapidly and bring innovations to market at a faster pace.
The partnership will not be limited to research and development. Both companies plan to apply AI tools to manufacturing processes, supply chains and commercial operations, with pilot programmes already set to begin. Full integration is expected by the end of the year.
Sam Altman said artificial intelligence is transforming industries and has the potential to significantly improve outcomes in life sciences. He added that the collaboration would support faster scientific discovery and more efficient global operations, helping to shape the future of patient care.
The move comes as pharmaceutical companies increasingly turn to AI to gain an edge in drug discovery. Novo Nordisk has already invested in innovation through initiatives such as the Danish Centre for AI Innovation, developed in partnership with Nvidia and Denmark’s export and investment fund.
Competition in the sector is intensifying. US-based Eli Lilly, a key rival in the weight-loss drug market, recently announced its own AI-focused collaboration with Insilico Medicine to develop new treatments. The agreement, valued at up to $2.75 billion, highlights the growing role of AI in reshaping pharmaceutical research.
Industry analysts say such partnerships reflect a broader shift toward data-driven innovation in healthcare, where the ability to process and interpret large volumes of information is becoming increasingly important.
For Novo Nordisk, the partnership with OpenAI signals a commitment to staying at the forefront of this transformation, as companies race to harness technology in the search for new and more effective treatments.
Health
Study Finds AI Models Fall Short in Early Medical Diagnosis
A new study has found that artificial intelligence language models still struggle with one of the most critical aspects of medical care, raising concerns about their use without human oversight.
Researchers from Mass General Brigham reported that AI systems failed to produce an appropriate early diagnosis more than 80 per cent of the time. The findings, published in JAMA Network Open, highlight ongoing limitations in how these systems reason through complex clinical scenarios.
The study examined 21 large language models, including systems developed by OpenAI, Google and xAI. Among those tested were versions of GPT, Gemini, Claude, Grok and DeepSeek.
Researchers used a structured evaluation tool known as PrIME-LLM to assess how well the models handled different stages of clinical reasoning. These stages included forming an initial diagnosis, ordering tests, reaching a final diagnosis and planning treatment. The models were tested using 29 standardised clinical scenarios, with information introduced gradually to mirror real-life patient cases.
While the systems showed relatively strong performance when identifying a final diagnosis, their ability to generate a differential diagnosis — a key step in distinguishing between conditions with similar symptoms — remained limited. This early-stage reasoning is widely regarded as essential in medical decision-making.
Marc Succi, a co-author of the study, said current models are not ready for independent clinical use. He noted that differential diagnosis represents a core part of medical practice that AI has yet to replicate effectively.
Another researcher, Arya Rao, said the findings show that AI performs best when given complete information but struggles when cases are still developing. She explained that the models are less reliable in situations where doctors must make judgments based on limited or uncertain data.
Despite these shortcomings, the study identified a group of higher-performing systems, including advanced versions of GPT, Gemini, Claude and Grok. These models achieved final diagnosis success rates ranging from around 60 per cent to over 90 per cent when provided with detailed clinical data such as lab results and imaging.
Experts not involved in the research also stressed the importance of caution. Susana Manso García said the findings reinforce that AI should not replace professional medical judgement. She advised that patients continue to seek guidance from qualified healthcare providers when dealing with health concerns.
The study concludes that while AI has made progress, it still requires close human supervision in clinical settings. Researchers say the technology shows promise as a support tool, but its current limitations mean it cannot yet be trusted to make independent medical decisions.
Health
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