June 6, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

In late 2024, scientists published a warning against building a piece of biotechnology that some had spent decades developing: mirror bacteria. They worry that those hypothetical synthetic organisms built from mirror-image forms of proteins, amino acids, DNA, and other biomolecules, could be resistant to human and animal immunity, as well as the predators that keep wild bacteria in check.   

 

Ahead of the Paris Conference on Risks from Mirror Life, Brown University’s Wilmot James and University of Manchester’s Patrick Yizhi Cai outline how research on individual mirror-image molecules could help treat diseases such as cancer, but stakeholders need to chart a path forward to regulate studies on full mirror organisms.  

 

Following the massive success of Netflix’s Adolescence, Amber Peterman, Alessandra Guedes, and Christine Kolbe-Stuart of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) explore how the show, which has sparked a global dialogue on toxic masculinity and violence, is inspiring social change through edutainment. 

 

To commemorate World Bicycle Day on June 3, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s Madeline Moberg, Theo Vos, Liane Ong, and Hailey Lenox highlight the benefits of cycling on human and planetary health but warn that more than 60,000 cyclists die annually in traffic crashes worldwide. To guarantee road safety and ensure people everywhere can reap the benefits of active transportation, the authors suggest that cities emulate the 15-minute city model. 

 

Next, researchers Nelson Aghogho Evaborhene and Afifah Rahman-Shepherd underscore the role regional institutions, such as the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, can play in filling the leadership gaps left by the United States and European Union member states to build resilient health systems and handle emergencies.  

 

In Canada, supervised consumption sites have fallen under political attack due to concerns about their potential to attract violent crime. Harvard undergraduate Suhanee Mitragotri and Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine MD/PhD candidate David T. Zhu highlight the findings of a new study that illustrates those sites’ safety and supports their use as a drug overdose prevention tool.  

 

Until next week!—Nsikan Akpan, Managing Editor, and Caroline Kantis, Associate Editor 

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

A laboratory worker looks for strains of E.coli bacteria in vegetable cells placed in a petri dish, in La Mojonera, Spain, on June 2, 2011

Mirror Life: Addressing a Potential Biothreat

by Wilmot James and Patrick Yizhi Cai  

In June, the first international conference on mirror life will take place at the Institut Pasteur in Paris

      

Read this story

GENDER

A man watches a movie on his phone, in Delhi, India, on November 16, 2016.

Netflix’s Adolescence: Social Change Through Edutainment 

by Amber Peterman, Alessandra Guedes, and Christine Kolbe-Stuart  

The evidence behind the power of educational entertainment to prevent violence against women and children 

 

Read this story

GOVERNANCE

A health worker sprays disinfectants a train as a measure against the COVID-19, in Hanoi, Vietnam, on March 19, 2020.

As Foreign Aid Lags, Regional Health Agencies Come to the Fore 

by Nelson Aghogho Evaborhene and Afifah Rahman-Shepherd

Regional organizations are well positioned to harmonize disease surveillance systems and serve as hubs for knowledge 

      

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

Column chart showing fatal road accidents for cyclists by age cohort
 

Recommended Feature

 

URBANIZATION

An InSite staff member directs drug users outside the supervised injection site on Hastings Street, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, on March 25, 2020. 

Homicide Rates Near Supervised Consumption Sites

by Suhanee Mitragotri and David T. Zhu 

New findings debunk stereotypes around violent crime and Toronto’s supervised consumption sites 

 

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

The Disappearing Funds for Chronic Diseases (New York Times)

 

Africa’s Message on Agriculture—Self-Reliance Isn’t Optional (Devex)

 

For Haitian Migrants in the Dominican Republic, “Reproduction Is Like a Death Sentence” (The Conversation)

 

The Women of No Sex for Fish Are Survivors—But Their Survival is Precarious (NPR’s Goats and Soda)

 

She Survived Genital Cutting, Then Shared Her Reconstruction on TikTok (New York Times)

 

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