BY ESSEY AFEWERKI On February 25th, 2026, Yale University’s School of Public Health was fortunate enough to host Dr. Sara Dubowsky Adar (ScD, MHS), professor of Epidemiology at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health. Dr. Adar’s presentation, “Air Pollution Research to Inform Public Health Policy and Action,” outlined several of her key research … Continue reading The Threat of Air Pollution and What We Can do About it
Author: yaleglobalhealthreview
Using Science for Good: Dr. Albert Ko and his Career in Global Health
BY PAIGE MAHONEY According to Dr. Albert Ko, MD, an infectious disease specialist and epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH), “we cannot lose an opportunity to use science to correct injustice.” This principle has guided him since the beginning of his career, and it was a central throughline in his lecture on … Continue reading Using Science for Good: Dr. Albert Ko and his Career in Global Health
Bird Migration, Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, and a Potential Next Pandemic
BY PAIGE MAHONEY On September 25th, 2025, over 1.2 billion birds took to the skies, setting a record for the largest single-night migration total ever recorded.1 Bird migration is arguably one of nature’s most impressive phenomena, a feat of endurance that requires constant communication with other members of a flock and precise navigation skills. These … Continue reading Bird Migration, Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, and a Potential Next Pandemic
The Mental Health Crisis Among Refugees
BY ISABELLE WOLCHEK In June 2025, over 117 million people were forcibly displaced globally, including 42.5 million refugees and 67.8 million internally displaced people.1 Families and individuals are uprooted for various reasons, such as conflict, ethnic oppression, political beliefs, and group affiliation.2 As a result, refugees face elevated rates of psychological disorders, such as post-traumatic stress … Continue reading The Mental Health Crisis Among Refugees
Beyond Extraction: How Bilateral Collaboration Can Salvage Global Health Equity
BY ANNABEL WOODWORTH While migration in healthcare is normally discussed in terms of patient access, the movement patterns of healthcare providers are critical in building viable global health systems and delivering equitable care. Since the emergence of the term ‘Brain Drain’ in the early 1960s, the migration of highly skilled professionals, particularly in healthcare, has … Continue reading Beyond Extraction: How Bilateral Collaboration Can Salvage Global Health Equity
Migrating for a Miracle: The Geographic Divide in Rare Cancer Treatments
BY MATEO RAMÍREZ-VALENTINI Medical Migration in Rare Pediatric Cancers In 2021, an eight-year-old girl named Delfi Bollo traveled from Córdoba, Argentina to Houston, Texas, seeking a treatment that her country could not offer her. Her family raised more than $350,000 through crowdfunding and an Instagram account—@todos.por.delfi.cba, “all for Delfi”—built entirely by her parents. It still … Continue reading Migrating for a Miracle: The Geographic Divide in Rare Cancer Treatments
Emigration on Eating: A review of climbing obesity trends amongst Mexican Immigrants
BY MYLA TOLIVER In recent decades, there has been a dramatic increase in the prevalence of obesity in the U.S.: men’s rates rose from 11.7% in 1991 to 39.2% in 2021, and women’s from 12.2% to 41.3%1 2. This health crisis is expected to worsen, with a projected 50% of Americans expected to be obese … Continue reading Emigration on Eating: A review of climbing obesity trends amongst Mexican Immigrants
The Global Price of Progress: The Geography of Robotic Surgery
BY EVAN BOWMAN As surgical robots take over more of the operating room, surgeons feel their hands slipping further from the patient, and the trade-offs—costly machines, unequal access, and shifting skills—cut closer to the bone. A patient lies asleep in the center of an operating room. Blue drapes cover their body, leaving only an opening … Continue reading The Global Price of Progress: The Geography of Robotic Surgery
The United Nations’ History of Violating the Human Rights they Claim to Defend
BY KIERSTIN GEHRES When Dr. Rosana Edward entered a hospital in Haiti in 2010, she was met with a harrowing sight: patients lay across the floor, reaching out to her and grasping at her feet as they begged, “Help me. Please, help me.”1 This tragedy unfolded after the United Nations (UN) introduced a deadly, highly … Continue reading The United Nations’ History of Violating the Human Rights they Claim to Defend
How Immigration Status Shapes Access to Healthcare Across Borders
BY SOPHIE NGUYEN Despite contributing significantly to public health systems, undocumented immigrants across the U.S. and Europe are systematically excluded from essential healthcare, revealing that immigration status is a core structural barrier to health equity. [Sourced from Canva Pro] Healthcare is recognized globally as a fundamental human right, yet access to it remains unevenly distributed. … Continue reading How Immigration Status Shapes Access to Healthcare Across Borders
