Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
World Reports: Pandemic To Push Struggling Iraqis Into Poverty; New Zealand Welcomes Investors
When shops and homes shutter at curfew, some Iraqis in this Baghdad district say it reminds them of past traumas that destroyed lives and livelihoods: sectarian death squads, foreign invasion, and the ruin wrought by international sanctions. (Davison, 5/6)
New Zealand鈥檚 success in curbing the coronavirus has given it a 鈥渟afe haven鈥 advantage, allowing the country to be open for investment, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Wednesday. (5/6)
Two Russian doctors have died and one remains in the intensive care unit in serious condition after falling out of windows in hospitals under mysterious circumstances. The tragic incidents last week made national headlines, with media reports saying all three have come under pressure from their superiors over working conditions amid the coronavirus pandemic. (Litvinova, 5/6)
As the coronavirus pandemic gathered strength last month, community leaders in a Palestinian neighborhood on the outskirts of Jerusalem tried to impose lockdown and quarantine measures to protect residents. The problem: there were no police to enforce the measures. (Daraghmeh and Kraus, 5/6)
COVID-19 activity in parts of Africa has grown exponentially over the past 2 weeks, raising worries that the region could become the next pandemic epicenter in the weeks and months ahead, according to an update from the World Health Organization (WHO). The world's case total climbed to 3,646,206, and at least 255,096 have died from their infections, according to the Johns Hopkins online dashboard. (Schnirring, 5/5)
Alis Nicolette Rodriguez is bracing themself, nervously looking over their shopping list and preparing in case someone tries to bar their way at the grocery store. It has happened before. (Cobb, 5/5)
South Korea's spy agency told lawmakers Wednesday it does not believe North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had heart surgery last month, and determined that his three-week absence from public view was probably linked to fears over the coronavirus pandemic. Officials of the National Intelligence Service told a parliamentary committee that the reports of heart surgery, first carried by South Korean website Daily NK and then amplified by Western media into talk that Kim was gravely ill or even dead, were 鈥済roundless,鈥 according to a lawmaker on the intelligence committee. (Denyer and Kim, 5/6)
Britain鈥檚 health secretary said Wednesday that national lockdown rules were 鈥渇or everyone,鈥 after one of the government鈥檚 key scientific advisers quit for receiving secret visits from his girlfriend amid the coronavirus pandemic. (Lawless, 5/6)