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

Yemen war sees scramble for scant resources between displaced and locals [Al Jazeera] ↳

Al Jazeera reports after nearly 12 years of conflict and severe funding cuts, humanitarian support at Yemen's IDP camps has been reduced to a trickle, leaving displaced families and host communities alike struggling to survive on fewer than two meals a day — a crisis deepened by U.S. aid reductions.

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

How the Ebola outbreak is testing U.How the Ebola outbreak is testing U.S. pandemic preparedness [Washington Post] ↳

The Washington Post reports that the dismantling of USAID has left the U.S. without the disaster-response teams, partner networks, and logistics capacity that made coordinated outbreak containment possible. According to the Washington Post, former officials warn that the infrastructure needed to stop outbreaks at their source, before they reach American shores, no longer exists.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Financial Times Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Financial Times

Donald Trump reboots foreign aid with cash-for-data strategy [Financial Times] ↳

Having dismantled USAID, the Trump administration is replacing roughly $44 billion in foreign assistance with bilateral "America First" health deals that offer recipient countries five years of reduced funding in exchange for up to 25 years of patient data and, in some cases, preferential access to critical minerals,, the Financial Times reports.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Migration Policy Institute Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Migration Policy Institute

How immigration crackdowns and aid cuts are reshaping migration across Central America [Migration Policy Institute] ↳

Intensified U.S. immigration enforcement and the contraction of humanitarian aid are transforming the region from a corridor of northward transit into one of prolonged displacement and weakened government capacity to respond, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

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Ebola outbreak in DRC draws attention to Trump administration's dismantling of USAID [NPR] ↳

The WHO has declared an international public health emergency over an Ebola outbreak in the DRC that has killed more than 80 people and sickened over 300, with NPR reporting that the dismantling of USAID and a nearly 80% drop in U.S. humanitarian funding in the country may have delayed detection of the rare strain.

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Catastrophe is emerging in the world's most vulnerable places [NYT] ↳

The humanitarian relief system, decimated by the dismantling of USAID, now faces a compounding crisis as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz doubles the price of food and fuel, leaving the World Food Programme able to reach only a fraction of the nearly 2 million people a month it was serving in early 2025, according to The New York Times.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Forbes Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Forbes

Why the current Ebola outbreak in Congo matters to the entire world [Forbes] ↳

A deadly Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo strain — for which no approved vaccines or treatments exist — has killed at least 87 people in Congo's Ituri Province and spread to Uganda. The Trump administration's cut to USAID activities has weakened the surveillance systems, laboratory networks, and frontline health worker training that detected and contained outbreaks before they spread globally, Forbes reports.

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A surge in violence followed Trump's cuts to USAID programs in Africa, a study finds [AP] ↳

The AP reports on a peer-reviewed study published in Science that found that the abrupt dismantling of USAID led to roughly 10% increases in conflict events and combat deaths across Africa's most aid-dependent regions, findings the authors say demonstrate that large-scale, sudden aid cuts can destabilize fragile settings.

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Trump administration pledges $1.8 billion more for UN humanitarian aid [AP] ↳

The Trump administration announced an additional $1.8 billion for U.N. humanitarian aid, bringing its total pledge to $3.8 billion across 21 countries. But the amount remains a fraction of the up to $17 billion the U.S. has contributed annually in recent years, as broader foreign aid cuts have forced U.N. agencies to cut programs, spending, and jobs, the AP reports.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home South China Morning Post Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home South China Morning Post

A year after USAID cuts, Philippine development groups struggle as anger lingers [South China Morning Post] ↳

A year after Washington froze and cut foreign aid, development workers in the Philippines say the damage continues, including with a coordinated misinformation campaign that recast USAID's publicly available funding records as evidence of U.S. interference, according to the South China Morning Post.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Council on Foreign Relations Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Council on Foreign Relations

The Iran war's forgotten front: global food insecurity and the limits of U.S. aid [Council on Foreign Relations] ↳

The Council on Foreign Relations reports that the U.S. has spent roughly 510 times more on its war with Iran than on humanitarian aid since the conflict began, even as the WFP projects 45 million more people could face acute food insecurity.

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Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Science Impact Feed, Impact Feed Home Science

Trump administration cuts CDC's key role in global program to stop HIV [Science] ↳

The State Department has issued guidance effectively ending CDC's direct role in implementing PEPFAR in most countries as of September 30, shifting responsibility to recipient governments — a move that experts warn will dismantle the infrastructure behind the program and strip the U.S. of the capacity to detect and respond to emerging disease threats.

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U.S. and Zambia feud: Trump health aid deal stalls over critical minerals [NYT] ↳

The New York Times reports that the Trump administration's negotiations with Zambia have stalled after the U.S. tied a multibillion-dollar health aid package with access to the country's critical minerals. The standoff spotlights the administration's shift from development assistance to transactional agreements that condition lifesaving health funding on commercial concessions.

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