Neanderthals May Have Used Birch Tar for Its Anti-bacterial Properties

Experiments confirm anti-biotic properties of birch bark extract

The bark of birch trees has been used to produce tar for more than 150 000 years. The centre photo shows birch bark tar condensed onto a rock that borders a hearth. When scraped off the rocks, the viscous tar can be used as both an adhesive and antibiotic.

Neanderthals probably used birch tar for multiple functions, including treating their wounds, according to a study published March 18, 2026 in the open-access journal PLOS One by a team of researchers led by Tjaark Siemssen of the University of Cologne, Germany, and the University of Oxford, UK.

Birch tar is commonly found at Neanderthal archaeological sites, and in some cases this tar is known to have been used as an adhesive to assemble tools. Recently, some researchers have raised the question of whether Neanderthals had multiple uses for this substance. For instance, Indigenous communities in northern Europe and Canada use birch tar to treat wounds, and there is growing evidence that Neanderthals also employed a variety of medical practices.

To investigate the medicinal potential of birch tar, Siemssen and colleagues extracted tar from modern birch tree bark, specifically targeting species known from Neanderthal sites. They used multiple extraction methods, including distillation of tar in a clay pit and condensation of tar against a stone surface, both of which would have been methods available to Neanderthals. When exposed to different strains of bacteria, all of the tar samples were found to be effective at hindering the growth of Staphylococcus bacteria known to cause wound infections.

These experiments not only support the efficacy of Indigenous medicinal practices, but also reinforce the possibility that Neanderthals used birch tar to treat wounds. The authors note that there are other potential uses of birch tar, such as insect repellent, as well as other plants to which Neanderthals had access. Further exploration of the multiple potential uses of these natural ingredients will enable a more thorough understanding of Neanderthal culture.

The authors add: “We found that the birch tar produced by Neanderthals and early humans had antibacterial properties. This has important implications for how Neanderthals may have mitigated disease burden during the last Ice Ages, and adds to a growing set of evidence on healthcare in these early human communities.”

“By bringing together research on indigenous pharmacology and experimental archaeology, we begin to understand the medicinal practices of our distant human ancestors and their closest cousins. Additionally, this study of ‘palaeopharmacology’ can contribute to the rediscovery of antibiotic remedies whilst we face an ever more pressing antimicrobial resistance crisis.”

“The messiness of birch tar production deserves a special mention. Every step of the production is a sensory experience in itself, and getting the tar off our hands after spending hours at the fire has been a challenge every time.”

Provided by PLOS

Press preview: https://plos.io/3P6QrS5

In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Onehttps://plos.io/4le9beh

Contact: Tjaark Siemssen, tjaark.siemssen@arch.ox.ac.uk

Image caption: The bark of birch trees has been used to produce tar for more than 150,000 years. The centre photo shows birch bark tar condensed onto a rock that borders a hearth. When scraped off the rocks, the viscous tar can be used as both an adhesive and antibiotic.

Image credit: Tjaark Siemssen, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

High-resolution image link: https://plos.io/4cteLHD

Citation: Siemssen T, Oludare A, Schemmel M, Puschmann J, Bierenstiel M (2026) Antibacterial properties of experimentally produced birch tar and its medicinal affordances in the Pleistocene. PLoS One 21(3): e0343618. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0343618

Author countries: U.K., Canada, Belgium, Germany

Funding: Tjaark Siemssen is funded by the Boise Trust of the University of Oxford and the German Academic Scholarship Foundation (Studienstiftung). Aderonke Oludare was funded by Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Project Grant 420598 awarded to Matthias Bierenstiel. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Metformin May Echo the Benefits of Exercise in Prostate Cancer Care

Photo by Jonathan Borba on Unsplash

A new study has found that metformin may mimic one of exercise’s core biological effects in men with prostate cancer, raising levels of a molecule tied to energy balance and weight control even when patients are inactive. The findings suggest that metformin could help counter the metabolic strain of hormone therapy, when fatigue and other side effects often limit physical activity.

Led by physician-scientists at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, part of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, the study appears in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine.

Exercise is one of the most reliable ways to support health during cancer treatment. It helps regulate weight, blood sugar, and cardiovascular health – factors that shape how patients feel during therapy and how well they recover afterward.

For many people with cancer, however, regular exercise isn’t always feasible. Fatigue, hormone therapy, pain, or advanced disease can limit physical activity precisely when metabolic health becomes most important.

That reality has led researchers to ask a practical question: If exercise confers its benefits through specific biological signals, could some of those signals be activated in other ways?

According to the research, the answer may be yes. Sylvester investigators report that metformin raises levels of a naturally occurring molecule involved in how the body manages energy and weight in prostate cancer patients.

The finding does not suggest that a pill can replace physical activity. Instead, it offers insight into the internal pathways that underlie exercise’s metabolic benefits – and how those pathways might still be engaged when movement is limited.

“This study reflects what’s possible when laboratory science, metabolic biology, and clinical investigation are intentionally brought together for transdisciplinary studies,” said Sylvester researcher and first author, Marijo Bilusic, MD, PhD, genitourinary medical oncologist and professor of medicine and medical oncology at the Miller School. “The result isn’t a new cancer biomarker, but a clearer understanding of how a widely used drug may support metabolic health during prostate cancer treatment – an outcome that matters to patients and clinicians alike.”

The molecule at the heart of the study

At the center of the collaborative, team-science study is a molecule called N-lactoyl-phenylalanine (Lac-Phe). While its name is technical, its role is relatively simple.

Lac‑Phe is produced when the body is under metabolic demand. It forms when lactate, which accumulates during exertion, combines with phenylalanine, a basic building block of protein. Scientists first took notice of Lac‑Phe because its levels spike after intense exercise, coinciding with shifts in energy use and appetite regulation.

In preclinical and early human studies, higher Lac‑Phe levels have been associated with reduced appetite and improved weight control – two effects commonly linked to regular physical activity.

Lac-Phe does not rise only with exercise. Scientists observed elevated Lac-Phe levels in people taking metformin, even in the absence of physical activity. That overlap raised an important question for cancer care: Could a pathway typically associated with exercise be activated pharmacologically in patients whose treatments limit movement?

Why prostate cancer patients are a focus

To explore that question, the Sylvester team focused on prostate cancer, where hormone-based therapies are known to disrupt metabolism, contributing to weight gain, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular risk.

Notably, Lac-Phe levels in patients treated with metformin approximated those previously reported after strenuous exercise. This occurred even though patients were not exercising at the time of blood collection, and the effect persisted after hormone therapy began.

“From a clinical standpoint, seeing a metabolic signal that mirrors what we associate with intense exercise was striking,” said Bilusic. “For patients whose treatments or symptoms limit physical activity, that kind of effect could be especially meaningful.”

Higher Lac-Phe levels were not associated with anti-tumour response to metformin. The metabolite did not correlate with changes in prostate-specific antigen (PSA), a standard marker used to monitor prostate cancer.

What Lac-Phe might mean for patients

That distinction is central to the study’s interpretation. While more expanded studies are needed to determine the utility of Lac-Phe as a marker of anticancer efficacy, it appears to reflect how the body manages energy, weight and metabolic strain during treatment. These results were confirmed to ensure the findings were not limited to one clinical setting. In fact, increases were also observed in patients receiving other metabolic therapies, suggesting Lac-Phe may reflect a broader metabolic response rather than a drug‑specific effect.

“Cancer therapy often affects the body in ways that go beyond the tumour,” said Sylvester researcher Priyamvada Rai, PhD, co-leader, Tumor Biology Program and professor of radiation oncology at the Miller School. “Supporting metabolic health can influence how patients tolerate treatment and how they feel over time, even if it doesn’t directly change tumour growth. This study was an opportunity to investigate molecular pathways that can be therapeutically activated for better outcomes to treatments that induce metabolic stress.”

Metformin raises a stress hormone called GDF‑15, but this study found that Lac‑Phe was more closely tied to weight changes. Because the two didn’t rise together, metformin likely affects weight through multiple pathways, with Lac‑Phe playing a bigger role.

Taken together, the findings offer a clearer picture of how a widely used diabetes medication may influence metabolic health during prostate cancer care.

“What’s encouraging about this work is that it reminds us cancer care isn’t only about targeting tumours – it’s also about supporting the whole patient,” said Rai. “By better understanding how treatments affect metabolism, we can begin to identify ways to help patients maintain strength, resilience, and quality of life throughout their care.”

Source: University of Miami

What the Law Actually Says About Migrants’ Right to Access Healthcare in SA

Despite South Africa’s laws and policies, access to healthcare remains an issue, particularly for non-citizens. Photo by Hush Naidoo on Unsplash

By Teri Brown and Thembi Mahlathi

The media has reported several incidents where people were turned away at public healthcare facilities because they did not possess South African identity documents. As related cases slowly grind through the courts, Teri Brown and Thembi Mahlathi of SECTION27 connect the dots between what the law says and what people are experiencing.

Over the years, many migrants and undocumented people have reached out to SECTION27, where we both work, for assistance. These were often pregnant women, lactating mothers and children under six years, who were denied access to healthcare facilities.

Initially, it was easy to simply write a letter to hospital and clinic personnel where our clients were being denied access. But as time went on, the situation got significantly worse and more migrants were being denied access to public healthcare facilities. Writing letters and asking for meetings clearly wasn’t enough anymore.

We went to court and in April 2023 got an order in which the South Gauteng High Court held that important sections of the National Health Act applies to all pregnant women, lactating women and children under the age of six years, irrespective of their documentation status. This affirmed that in South Africa, they have the right to access free healthcare services at all public health establishments, including hospitals and clinics.

Public sector hospitals and clinics are required to assess the status of migrants and then apply a lawful means test to determine the healthcare services that can be offered to them. However, this does not appear to be done routinely. Instead, particular focus is often placed on South African identity documents, while other forms of documentation held by migrants are disregarded.

There have been incidents where entry to facilities such as Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital in Coronationville and South Rand Hospital in Rosettenville and several clinics across Gauteng have been denied to people, including South African nationals who have the necessary documentation.

Furthermore, we are aware that to avoid being refused healthcare and to demonstrate the urgency of their need for treatment for themselves or their kids, migrants have sometimes been forced to disclose their HIV status – information which they would otherwise have kept private.

In mid-2025, we started receiving a surge of calls from clients complaining about not being able to enter public sector clinics that they were previously assisted at. They informed us that a group of people stationed outside these clinics requested their identity documents, and when they produced their documents confirming either their refugee status or asylum seeker status, they were unlawfully prevented from entering the clinics. These group of people explicitly told them that they should go to a private clinic for treatment or go back to their home country.

Thus, two years after the April 2023 court order, the denial of access to healthcare had worsened, as it was not only women and children who could not access clinics, but anyone who could not provide South African identity documentation. The situation was also exacerbated by the fact that it wasn’t just healthcare staff denying access anymore, but vigilante groups stationed outside healthcare facilities.

Despite the crisis being widely reported, the state failed to address it effectively. We had no choice but to go back to court, and again the court found in our favour.

In December 2025, the South Gauteng High Court ordered the state to take immediate and decisive action to end the obstruction of access to public healthcare facilities in Gauteng. The case was brought by the civil society organisations the Treatment Action Campaign, Doctors Without Borders, and Kopanang Africa Against Xenophobia (the applicants), all represented by SECTION27.

In this landmark judgment, Judge Stuart Wilson concluded that the state entities tasked with upholding the constitutional mandate to safeguard everyone’s right to access healthcare had failed to prevent the obstruction of access to public health facilities. Consequently, this failure was in violation of the constitutional rights of patients seeking care at the Yeoville and Rosettenville clinics.

Despite this court order, our monitoring found ongoing vigilante activity at the two clinics. The applicants then launched an urgent contempt application, heard in March 2026, arguing that the state had failed to fully comply with Judge Wilson’s court order.

Following this, a court ordered settlement agreement was reached with the Gauteng Department of Health and other respondents. Among other things, it required the authorities to take reasonable steps to ensure safe and unhindered access to the Yeoville and Rosettenville clinics, and to report on the implementation by 18 May 2026. It also makes provision to continue legal proceedings if necessary to enforce full compliance with Judge Wilson’s order.

The laws governing healthcare for migrants in South Africa

Taking a step back from this case, and its specific set of facts, it is worth remembering that South African law really does provide extensive protection to migrants who need to access healthcare services.

The right to access healthcare services is guaranteed by section 27 of our Constitution, which states that everyone has the right to have access to healthcare services, and that no one may be refused emergency medical treatment. The term “everyone” is not restricted to South Africans only. It includes everyone within the borders of South Africa, regardless of their nationality.

This right extends to all children living in South Africa under section 28(1)(c) of the Constitution. This guarantees all children access to basic healthcare services dependent on the availability of resources, to which they can never be completely denied.

After the Constitution, the most important piece of healthcare legislation relevant to migrants is the National Health Act (NHA). The NHA assists in giving effect to the constitutional right to basic healthcare services by outlining who can receive services at public clinics free of charge. It obligates the provision of free healthcare services to women who are pregnant or breastfeeding, or children under six. Moreover, the NHA requires that free primary healthcare be provided to those without medical aid. It also makes it clear that those working in healthcare cannot refuse any person emergency medical treatment.

Along similar lines, South Africa’s Refugees Act states that a refugee is entitled to full legal protection, which includes the rights set out in the Bill of Rights, except those reserved for citizens. The Act formally acknowledges that refugees are entitled to the same basic healthcare services and primary education that South African citizens receive. While the Act does not expressly cover undocumented migrants, it is grounded on the principle of non-discrimination, which supports equal access to essential services.

South Africa is also party to several international and regional human rights instruments that prohibit discrimination and guarantee equal access to healthcare for all. These include the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.

Why all this matters

The denial of healthcare services has significant impacts on many aspects of people’s lives. Migrants often become so desperate to receive care that they feel compelled to disclose their HIV status, which infringes on their rights, particularly the constitutional rights to privacy and dignity. It also creates feelings of stigma and discrimination, further marginalising people who are often already vulnerable.

There are also direct health consequences. Denying treatment to a migrant not only negatively impacts that person’s health it can also result in the continued transmission of infectious diseases to both other migrants and South Africans. For example, HIV and TB typically become non-infectious a while after someone starts treatment. Deciding not to treat someone ends up harming everyone. As untreated conditions worsen, it may require emergency medical attention that could have been avoided through early treatment. All of this places extra pressure on an already fragile health system – extra pressure that could be avoided by providing more migrants with healthcare services as soon as they need it.

The failure to provide healthcare services also affects migrants’ livelihoods and well-being. For those who run their own businesses, being unable to access treatment may prevent them from working altogether and could lead to them and other people, possibly South Africans, losing their jobs. Ultimately, this has a ripple effect on the country’s economy, job security, and perpetuates cycles of poverty and vulnerability.

At its heart then, this issue is about who we choose to be as a society. Turning people away at their most vulnerable moments erodes not only their dignity, but also their humanity and ours. In a country built on the values of equality and dignity, we cannot allow this attack on our basic humanity and decency to succeed. We are, and must be, better than that.

*Brown is a legal researcher and Mahlathi is a paralegal with SECTION27In the court case discussed in this article, SECTION27 represented the Treatment Action Campaign, Médecins Sans Frontiers, and Kopanang Africa Against Xenophobia.

Note: Spotlight is published by SECTION27, but is editorially independent – an independence that the editors guard jealously. Spotlight aims to deepen public understanding of important health issues by publishing a variety of views on its opinion pages. The views expressed in this article are not necessarily shared by the Spotlight editors.

Republished from Spotlight under a Creative Commons licence.

Read the original article.

A New Treatment Protocol Targets the Deadliest Cases of C. difficile Infection

Clostridioides difficile. Credit: CDC

A new study from the University of Minnesota Medical School demonstrated that faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) can rapidly reverse systemic inflammation and improve survival in patients with fulminant Clostridioides difficile (C. difficile) infection – a life-threatening condition characterised by a sepsis-like state. The findings were published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

C. difficile infection is the most common cause of healthcare-acquired diarrhoeal illnesses. Most of the mortality, estimated at 15 000 people annually in the United States alone, is associated with the severe and fulminant forms of the disease. C. difficile is listed as one of the most urgent infectious disease threats by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The infection occurs in people with disrupted microbial communities in the gut, most commonly by antibiotic medications. 

In this study, investigators implemented a standardised FMT protocol developed at the University of Minnesota specifically for critically ill patients who were deteriorating despite intensive antibiotic therapies and were often too unstable for surgery. Among 18 patients treated, FMT was associated with rapid declines in inflammatory markers and achieved a 78% 30-day survival. 

“There is an important caveat to our findings – the window for the FMT intervention is very narrow because these patients are generally extremely sick,” said Alexander Khoruts, MD, professor at the University of Minnesota Medical School, director of the UMN Microbiota Therapeutics Program and a gastroenterologist with M Health Fairview. “Therefore, the FMT formulation needs to be easily accessible. We are in a unique position at the University because we have a facility in our institution where our FMT products are manufactured in accordance with pharmaceutical standards, and treatment units are always on hand in our cryobank.”

The University of Minnesota Microbiota Therapeutics program is the leading program in the world in developing microbiome-targeted therapies with live microbial communities. As a result of the team’s work, M Health Fairview recently implemented a dedicated system that alerts providers to hospitalized patients at risk of developing severe C. difficile infection so that they can get access to the optimal treatments earlier. 

Importantly, the findings also suggest an entirely novel mechanism by which FMT can modulate systemic inflammation in severe C. difficile infection. This is a topic of ongoing research. The team is also currently working to make this FMT treatment option more widely available to patients across the United States.

By Alex Smith

Source: University of Minnesota Medical School

How One ‘Forever Chemical’ Can Disrupt Foetal Facial Development

Researchers discovered perfluorodecanoic acid is the most toxic during foetal craniofacial development

Credit: Chemical Research in Toxicology (2026). doi:10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5c00468

Researchers have long associated per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), commonly known as “forever chemicals,” to certain severe birth defects but exactly how these pollutants harm a developing foetus has remained mostly a mystery. New research now provides the first clear molecular explanation, showing how one PFAS, called perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA), can trigger craniofacial abnormalities before birth.

The research was published in ACS Chemical Research in Toxicology.

“Most people are exposed to small amounts of PFAS in everyday life but higher exposure can occur through contaminated water, living near manufacturing sites or certain jobs like firefighting and ski waxing, which is why it’s so important to understand the chemicals better,” said the paper’s senior author Jed Lampe, PhD, associate professor at University of Colorado Anschutz Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. “We wanted to understand which PFAS compounds are truly harmful during foetus development, especially for people with higher exposure, and how they cause damage.”

There are approximately 15 000 PFAS used in consumer and industrial products but scientists are increasingly finding that only some pose serious health risks. In this study, Lampe worked with the paper’s first author Michaela Hvizdak and co-author Sylvie Kandel to test 13 commonly found PFAS and discovered PFDA as the most toxic during foetal craniofacial development.

They demonstrated a possible link between PFDA and the extensive facial changes observed in humans and laboratory animals, with some estimates indicating a 10% increased risk at extremely low exposure levels. 

“This finding moves us beyond association by providing a clear explanation for how PFDA can interfere with foetal development. It’s a critical step toward understanding a vast and complex class of environmental chemicals,” said Lampe.

The cause of underdeveloped eyes and an abnormal jaw

They found that PFAS disrupts retinoic acid, a molecule essential for shaping the face and head during early pregnancy. Retinoic acid regulates hundreds of genes and its levels must be controlled. Because a foetus cannot produce or safely eliminate excess retinoic acid, it relies entirely on the mother to maintain the homeostatic balance of the hormone.

The researchers discovered PFDA blocks CYP26A1, a key enzyme responsible for breaking down excess retinoic acid. When this enzyme is inhibited, retinoic acid levels can rise too high, disrupting normal facial development. PFDA also suppresses the genes that produce this enzyme through a separate biological pathway, delivering a “double hit” to the system that regulates early development.

“As a result, severe craniofacial abnormalities can develop, including underdeveloped eyes and abnormal jaw formation, which were the most common effects of PFDA exposure during foetal development,” said Lampe.

The researchers hope by providing a molecular explanation for this abnormality that the research and scientific community can work to develop targeted laboratory assays and computer‑based screening tools to quickly rank PFAS by risk. They say this could help regulators and manufacturers distinguish more dangerous compounds from safer alternatives and guide the design of less toxic chemicals in the future.

They also hope the research can open the door to practical interventions for people with higher exposure, such as firefighters and ski wax technicians. This could include looking into how to reduce exposure levels and whether strategies can be developed to lower PFDA during pregnancy to protect foetal development.

By Julia Milzer

Source: CU Anschutz Medical Campus

Urban and Rural Residents Engage in Different Kinds of Physical Activity

In new study, rural and urban residents differed in the types of physical activity they do the most

Photo by Azat Satlykov on Unsplash

In a study of US adults, walking was, by far, the most popular leisure-time physical activity, while rural residents also enjoyed gardening, hunting and fishing, and urban residents more commonly reported running, weightlifting and dance. Urban residents were more likely than rural residents to meet physical activity guidelines. Christiaan Abildso of West Virginia University, US, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on April 1, 2026.

The US Department of Health and Human Services publishes guidelines on recommended amounts of aerobic and muscle-strengthening physical activity for adults. While the overall proportion of U.S. adults meeting these guidelines has increased in recent decades, certain populations are less likely to meet them, including adults living in rural areas. Understanding differences in preferred recreational physical activities could help inform efforts to reduce such disparities.

However, few studies have examined urban versus rural preferences for leisure-time physical activities, and how they relate to meeting guidelines. To address that gap, Abildso and colleagues analysed telephone survey data collected from a national sample of 396 261 U.S. adults in 2019.

Out of 75 survey options for leisure-time physical activities, walking was the most popular among both urban and rural adults, with 44.1% reporting walking as the activity they spent the most time doing. This finding echoes a similar study of U.S. data collected in 2011, which also found walking to be the top activity. However, further analysis of the 2019 data showed that even among walkers, only 25% met combined guidelines for aerobic and muscle-strengthening physical activity, and about 22% did not meet either guideline.

The popularity of other activities varied. For instance, rural residents reported higher rates of gardening, hunting, fishing, and farm work, while urban residents had higher participation in running, weightlifting, bicycling, and dance. However, in general, rural adults were more likely to be inactive and less likely to meet guidelines for aerobic or muscle-strengthening physical activity.

These findings could help inform efforts to boost physical activity by tailoring solutions to be more culturally and demographically appropriate. The researchers also call for a similar analysis of more recently collected data, as habits may have shifted during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Christiaan Abildso adds: “We expected to see that walking would continue to be the most common physical activity. However, it was surprising to see that nearly 1 in 4 adults who walk as their main activity did not meet either of the physical activity guidelines. That is, they reported less than the recommended 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity aerobic activity and less than the recommended 2 days per week of muscle strengthening activity, such as yoga or exercises with resistance bands.”

“What we might be seeing in these rural-urban differences in preferences may just reflect what people have access to or what is culturally supported. In our work, we see a need to continue to support our partners in small towns and rural places by creating physical, social, and cultural conditions that support physical activity. This could mean creating a wide shoulder on a country road for running and cycling, helping a senior centre with their chair exercise programming, creating or improving park spaces, expanding the national network of rail-trails, renovating abandoned and dilapidated structures (Brownfields) into viable activity centres, keeping school facilities open to the public, and many other strategies. Everyone needs to ask, ‘how does what we’re doing affect physical activity,’ in order to help get people more active, more often, in more places.”

Provided by PLOS

Sugary Drink Taxes May Not Be Effective in Fast-food Settings

Analysis of nearly 7 billion Taco Bell transactions finds sugary drink taxes not linked to lower beverage calorie purchases

Photo by Breakingpic on Pexels

Taxes on sugary drinks had no effect on beverage calorie purchases from fast-food chain restaurants in the U.S., according to a new study by Brian Elbel and Pasquale Rummo from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and colleagues publishing April 2nd in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine.

Sugary drink taxes have been adopted in several U.S. jurisdictions as a public health strategy to curb sugar consumption and improve dietary behaviors. Research on the impact of these taxes on grocery stores purchases attribute sugary drink taxes to an estimated 15% decrease in sales. However, whether this translates to an impact in restaurant sales has not been well studied.

Researchers analyzed six years of sales data (2015–2020) from more than 7,300 Taco Bell locations nationwide, focusing on drive‑through purchases. The study compared beverage calories per transaction at 60 restaurants across five jurisdictions with sugary drink taxes—Albany, California; Cook County, Illinois; Oakland, California; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Seattle, Washington—with a matched group of similar restaurants in areas without such taxes.

Overall, the analysis found no significant association between sugary drink taxes and beverage calories per transaction, suggesting that sugary drink taxes of this size or alone may not substantially reduce beverage calorie consumption in fast food restaurant settings.

The authors note that consumer behaviour in restaurants—such as choosing combo meals or prioritising convenience—may limit the effectiveness of these policies.

Elbel adds, “Using millions of transactions from six years of sales data, we found that sugary beverage taxes did not influence beverage calories when implemented in five cities in the U.S.”

Rummo notes, “These results suggest that sugary drink taxes may not be effective in reducing beverage calorie consumption in fast food restaurants, as compared to supermarkets. This could be because the sizes of sugary drink taxes in the U.S. are too small for consumers or that they just aren’t responsive to price changes in these settings, among other reasons.”

Provided by PLOS

The Gut’s Connection to Healing Traumatic Brain Injuries

Houston Methodist researchers find antibiotics aid recovery from traumatic brain injury

Coup and contrecoup brain injury. Credit: Scientific Animations CC4.0

In a new study published in Nature Communications BiologyHouston Methodist researchers led by Sonia Villapol, PhD, found that short-term antibiotic treatment significantly reduced neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration following traumatic brain injury (TBI) by altering the gut microbiome in animal models. 

“We found that antibiotic treatment following TBI can reduce harmful gut bacteria, decrease lesion size and limit cell death,” said Villapol, an associate professor in the Department of Neurosurgery at Houston Methodist. “Our results support a gut–brain mechanism in which microbiome changes influence peripheral immunity and, in turn, neuroinflammation after TBI.”

Administering antibiotics cleans the gut of harmful bacteria, allowing beneficial bacteria to flourish. The study found that two helpful bacteria, Parasutterella excrementihominis and Lactobacillus johnsonii, are key to driving cell repair. According to Villapol, they could also be major regulators for peripheral inflammation in the body.

Notably, 70% of immune system regulation is generated by the gut microbiome. During gut imbalance, the bidirectional nature of the brain-gut axis can wreak havoc throughout the entire body. 

“Our brains are constantly sending signals to the rest of our bodies. Following a traumatic brain event, those signals can get scrambled and disrupt other organs, including our digestive system,” Villapol said. “If the gut stays out of balance, the brain may have a harder time healing.”

There are an estimated 4 million traumatic brain injuries a year in the U.S. Recent studies indicate that TBI-induced gut microbiome imbalance may even contribute to the development of neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and dementia. 

Villapol’s lab is focused on investigating and developing new neuroprotective treatments to fight inflammation linked with neurodegenerative disease. “If we can break neuroinflammation in the acute or chronic stage, we can reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer’s or dementia,” said Villapol. 

The next phase of the research will focus on bioengineering Parasutterella excrementihominis and Lactobacillus johnsonii to further develop precision therapies to reduce neuroinflammation.

Source: Houston Methodist

World is Falling Behind on UN’s Child Mortality Sustainable Development Goal

Despite a 63% drop in under-five deaths since 1990, more than a quarter of countries won’t reach the UN’s 2030 child mortality target on time, with sub-Saharan Africa lagging the most

Years in which the U5MR reduction target is expected to be achieved. U5MR: under-5 mortality rate. 
Image credit: Cao et al., 2026, PLOS One, CC-BY 4.0

A new study tracking global progress on child mortality finds that the world will miss a key United Nations (UN) health target by at least five years at current rates, with the burden falling heavily on Sub-Saharan Africa. The findings are published on April 1, 2026, in the open-access journal PLOS One by Min Liu of Peking University, Beijing, China, and colleagues.

The UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 3.2 calls for all countries to reduce the mortality rate for children under five to fewer than 25 deaths per 1000 live births by 2030. As that deadline approaches, there has been no comprehensive assessment of where countries stand.

In the new study, researchers used data from the UN to analyse annual under-five death counts and mortality rates from 1990 to 2023 across 200 countries and territories. They calculated the rate of change in mortality over time and used those trends to project when those countries still above the target threshold would be expected to reach it.

The researchers found that globally, under-five deaths fell by 63% over the study period – from nearly 13 million in 1990 to 4.78 million in 2023 – and the mortality rate dropped by an average of 3.18% per year. However, the global rate still stands at 36.72 deaths per 1000 live births, well above the SDG target, and is not projected to reach the target until 2035. 133 countries have already met the target and nine more are on track to do so by 2030. However, 58 countries will miss the deadline, including 25 that are not projected to reach the target until after 2050, and Dominica, where under-five deaths have risen. More than four-fifths of all under-five deaths worldwide are concentrated in just two regions: Sub-Saharan Africa, where the mortality rate remains at 68.82 deaths per 1000 live births and is not projected to meet the SDG target until 2055, and Central and Southern Asia.

The study is limited by the assumption that trends over the last two decades will continue unchanged. Data quality was also poor in some conflict-affected regions and low-income countries, the very places where child mortality is highest. 

The authors conclude that to meet UN targets, policymakers must focus on scaling up proven interventions – including skilled birth attendance, postnatal care, vaccination, improved nutrition, and treatment for common childhood illnesses – in every community, and especially in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Provided by PLOS

Will the NHI Cover the Full Cost of Saving a Life?

The public health sector serves roughly 84% of South Africans, yet per-person spending in private healthcare is around five times higher. The National Health Insurance (NHI) is designed to change that equation. As President Ramaphosa stated, the right to healthcare “cannot depend on where you were born, how much you earn or where you live.”

For patients with blood cancer and blood disorders, that promise could not be more urgent. On World Health Day 2026, Palesa Mokomele, Head of Community Engagement and Communication at DKMS Africa, says this is an opportunity to ask whether the NHI is being designed to reach them. “Blood cancer and blood disorder patients depend on highly specialised treatment pathways – exactly the kind the NHI has an opportunity to strengthen. They cannot be an afterthought in the benefit package conversation.”

The NHI Act was signed into law in May 2024 but has not yet commenced, with key constitutional challenges set to be heard in May 2026. Despite legal uncertainty, the government has been clear that foundational work will continue.

The Reality on the Ground

Stem cell transplantation is one of the most effective treatments for blood cancers and blood disorders, and among the most resource-intensive, requiring specialist physicians, trained nurses, dedicated infrastructure, and in 70% of cases, a matched unrelated donor (MUD).

The capacity to deliver these treatments is already under severe strain. Just 25% of South Africa’s oncologists serve more than 75% of the population. Long treatment delays, limited resources, high patient volumes, and advanced disease at presentation make for a deeply challenging environment.

“What we see is a system doing its best under enormous pressure,” says Mokomele. “The NHI has a real opportunity to address those structural gaps, but it requires deliberate investment where the need is greatest.”

What Universal Coverage Must Include

The NHI benefit packages for the treatment of blood cancer and disorders have yet to be finalised. With South Africa projected to see a 78% increase in cancer incidence by 2030, whether those packages cover the full cost of finding, matching, and transplanting an unrelated donor will be a test of whether universal health coverage means what it says.

“We are not here to debate the merits of the NHI,” shares Mokomele. “We are here to make sure that when it is implemented, it works for every patient. The full treatment pathway must be funded, and the clinical infrastructure to deliver it must be in place.”

President Ramaphosa has called for genuine partnerships between the public and private health sectors, academic institutions, NGOs, and communities. “That vision of cross-sector collaboration reflects exactly how we believe this challenge must be met,” notes Mokomele.

A Blueprint for Access

DKMS Africa’s Access to Transplant programme offers a practical example of barrier-free access in the public sector. Working across six provinces, it aims to invest in infrastructure upgrades at public hospitals, training for specialist nurses and mobilises its global network to collaborate with physicians, and patient support services addressing practical barriers, such as transport and housing, that often cause patients to abandon treatment.

“When you remove barriers systematically, outcomes improve,” points out Mokomele. “Each barrier removed is a patient who makes it to transplant. That is the model the NHI needs to learn from and scale.”

The organisation is also preparing for a more centralised system, ensuring its programmes can integrate into national frameworks while maintaining global standards – through early diagnosis education, donor registry diversification, stronger referral pathways, and local research capacity.

Your Health System, Your Voice

The decisions being made about the NHI benefit package today will shape healthcare for decades. Young South Africans will inherit both the growing burden of disease and the system designed to address it.

“World Health Day is a reminder that universal means everyone,” concludes Mokomele. “We are asking young South Africans to support us in uniting towards a healthcare system that works for everyone.”