Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

The impact of ending U.S. international media assistance [Carnegie Endowment for International Peace] ↳

A new Carnegie Endowment report finds that the termination of U.S. foreign assistance to independent media has gutted newsrooms, emboldened autocratic government crackdowns, and opened the door for Russian and Chinese influence to fill the vacuum.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Globe and Mail Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Globe and Mail

Without USAID, Ethiopia’s mothers bear the costs [The Globe and Mail] ↳

The Trump administration's shuttering of USAID — which had injected roughly $200 million annually into Ethiopia's health care system — has left pregnant women paying out of pocket for ultrasounds, prenatal vitamins, and delivery room supplies that were once free, threatening to reverse decades of progress on maternal mortality, The Globe and Mail reports.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Washington Post Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Washington Post

Trump administration's secrecy on health deals alarms experts, governments [The Washington Post] ↳

The Washington Post reports that the Trump administration has quietly negotiated 28 bilateral health agreements with mostly African nations as part of its "America First" global health strategy, but its refusal to disclose the full terms publicly has alarmed transparency advocates and partner governments who fear disease-fighting funds are being leveraged to extract unrelated political and economic concessions.

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Congress gave money for global HIV work. The Trump administration isn't spending it [NPR] ↳

Despite Congress appropriating nearly $6 billion for global HIV/AIDS work in 2026, NPR reports that the Trump administration's State Department is deliberately withholding funds from the CDC — threatening to shut down PEPFAR programs that serve more than 12 million people living with HIV across Africa and beyond, with one CDC official calling it "a controlled demolition."

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Reuters Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Reuters

Exclusive: US upends global supply program for malaria and HIV amid warnings of gaps [Reuters] ↳

The Trump administration is dismantling the decade-old Global Health Supply Chain Program — which delivered more than $5 billion in HIV and malaria supplies to 90 countries — and replacing it with a hastily planned new system, Reuters reports. The rushed transition has already triggered shortages of malaria drugs for children and gaps in HIV prevention.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Al Jazeera Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Al Jazeera

Minerals for aid: Are new US health deals ‘exploiting’ African countries? [Al Jazeera] ↳

The Trump administration has been offering African countries bilateral health deals that critics say are exploitative — conditioning funding on access to sensitive health data, biological samples, and critical minerals. Al Jazeera reports that Zimbabwe walked away from negotiations and Zambia pushed back against "problematic" clauses, while countries like Kenya and Nigeria have signed undisclosed agreements.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Globe and Mail Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Globe and Mail

Rohingya feel the pain after U.S. aid cuts [The Globe and Mail] ↳

U.S. aid cuts have pushed the 2026 humanitarian appeal for Bangladesh's Rohingya camps to just 18% funded, leaving over a million refugees facing school closures, deteriorating health care, and growing fears that worsening conditions will drive a new wave of dangerous departures, The Globe and Mail reports.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Guardian Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home The Guardian

Maternal mortality rises in US aid-dependent countries under Republican presidents, study shows [The Guardian] ↳

A new study finds that Republican presidencies are associated with a 10.5% increase in maternal deaths in countries with above-average reliance on U.S. family planning aid. According to The Guardian, over 90% of all USAID awards for reproductive health programs have been terminated since the start of 2025, deepening concerns that decades of progress are being rapidly undone.

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