logo
2,000 jobs cut, India projects jeopardised: Johns Hopkins reels from US funding halt

2,000 jobs cut, India projects jeopardised: Johns Hopkins reels from US funding halt

First Post7 hours ago

US President Donald Trump's cuts in the funding to the tune of $800 million to Johns Hopkins University have led to 2,200 people being laid off and several healthcare programmes in many countries, including in India, compromised. read more
US President Donald Trump has not gone after Johns Hopkins University the way he has gone after Columbia, but the consequences are already visible.
The Trump administration has so far cut $800 million from the $4.2 billion annual funds to Johns Hopkins and 2,200 jobs at the university has been axed and several public health programmes and research programmes have been hit, according to The New York Times.
The unpublicised crackdown on Johns Hopkins is the latest in the Trump administration's campaign to use federal grants as a tool to bend the nation's public education system to its will and make university, their courses, and their graduates in the president's image.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
For more than a century, Johns Hopkins has been a pioneer in several fields, including in medicine and public health.
In 1889-1999, Dr William Stewart Halsted of Johns Hopkins made the rubber glove that massively reduced infections during surgery and are integral to surgeries and medical practice today. The university also developed the world's rechargeable cardiac pacemaker, the first effective treatment for sickle cell anemia, and helped develop a spacecraft that smashed into an asteroid that was hailed as the 'humanity's first planetary defense test'.
Trump's assault on Johns Hopkins' goes beyond US
So far, Trump has cut $800 million of the $4.2 billion federal grant to Johns Hopkins. The Times reported that officials at the university are expecting more cuts.
The newspaper listed the following programmes as being hit from budget cuts:
International research: The Trump administration's cuts to the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have affected programmes in more than 100 countries and led to losses of more than 2,200 jobs. More than 1,900 of those jobs were outside of the United States.
Judd Walson, the Chair in International Health, told the newspaper that these programmes covered the prevention of cervical cancer in Madagascar, diagnosing tuberculosis (TB) in Uganda, and building health systems in Bangladesh. He warned that millions of people were at the risk of dying from cuts.
Johns Hopkins also ran programmes related to TB, maternal and child health, and primary health management in India. These programmes are also expected to be affected from cuts.
Domestic research: Around 90 research programmes have been cancelled. These programmes addressed autism in children, reduction of HIV's spread among transwomen, and improving Covid-19 vaccination among low-income groups.
Other support: The Trump administration has also cut grants to support laboratories and administrative costs to the tune of $300 million.
New taxes: The Trump administration might slap Johns Hopkins with a new increased 'endowment tax'.
'Perplexing & distressing': Johns Hopkins president on Trump's cuts
Johns Hopkins President Ronald J Daniels has described Trump's cuts as 'perplexing and distressing'.
Daniels said that what started as threats have now turned into a campaign of 'cancellations and terminations'.
Daniels said, 'Over the past six weeks, we have experienced a fast and far-reaching cascade of executive orders and agency actions affecting higher education and federally sponsored research. What began as stop work orders or pauses in grant funding allocations has morphed into cancellations and terminations.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The university had little choice other than reducing the university's activities, according to Daniels.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brothers Blame Influencer Mum's 'Conspiracy Theories' After Sister's Death
Brothers Blame Influencer Mum's 'Conspiracy Theories' After Sister's Death

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

Brothers Blame Influencer Mum's 'Conspiracy Theories' After Sister's Death

Gabriel Shemirani blames his influencer mother's belief in conspiracy theories about medicine for his sister's death from cancer, after she rejected chemotherapy. "She was being fed fake information," the 24-year-old British student told AFP, saying their mother "was against her daughter seeking medical treatments that could have saved her". Gabriel's mother, Kate Shemirani, is one of a growing cohort of health influencers on social media accused of advocating and selling unproven treatments. She promotes alternative theories about Covid, vaccines and organ transplants, and has called chemotherapy "the poison path" and "mustard gas". Gabriel's twin sister, Paloma fell ill in 2023 aged 22, shortly after graduating from university, and was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, a type of cancer which is in most cases "very treatable" according to the UK's National Health Service. But Gabriel told AFP his sister opted not to start chemotherapy treatment advised by an oncologist, influenced by her mother's distrust of conventional medicine. "85 percent of people with my sister's cancer... would have survived" with chemotherapy, said Gabriel. Paloma died one year later at 23 after opting for a controversial treatment called "Gerson therapy", involving vegetable juices and coffee enemas. Kate often talks about surviving breast cancer by doing this, although she underwent surgery as well. According to Cancer Research UK, there is "no scientific evidence" for Gerson therapy as a cancer treatment. Australian "wellness" influencer Jess Ainscough died from cancer in 2015 after trying the therapy. Misinformation Gabriel and his older brother Sebastian took legal action in Paloma's last months to get her medical care assessed, and asked social services and police to intervene. Kate did not respond to AFP's request for comment. She released a statement on X saying Paloma was "never coerced" and presented a written statement signed by her daughter in April 2024. "I have suffered no abuse from my mum," Paloma wrote, describing her cancer diagnosis as not definitive. Paloma said she questioned medics about survival rates on her mother's advice, before discharging herself from the oncologist and moving in with Kate. Paloma said she was "delighted with her chosen treatment plan". But she died in July 2024 after suffering a heart attack at home. Kate blames her death on "a chain of gross medical failings, breaches of consent law, falsified medical records, and reckless emergency drug use". The brothers are awaiting an inquest on July 28, and hope a police investigation will follow. Many wellness influencers like Kate, who calls herself a "natural nurse", are accused of touting unproven treatments that are promoted by algorithms to ill people. A US study in 2023 found 70 percent of cancer patients questioned had seen cancer misinformation on social media. Royal 'Lizards' Kate was struck off as a NHS nurse after her speeches at anti-vaccine rallies made her a public figure during the Covid lockdown. "My mum's a national conspiracy theorist who called for doctors and nurses to be hung," said Gabriel. The student at London School of Economics says he grew up hearing conspiracy theories from his parents and once believed "the royal family were all lizards". Paloma shared some of these beliefs, such as rejecting the Covid jab, her friends told the BBC, who first covered the story. Gabriel is estranged from his mother, who he said "needs to feel important. And for her, conspiracy theories allow her to do that, to feel like this Messianic figure". Suspended from Twitter in 2022 over her Covid statements, Kate was reinstated on X in 2023 and has over 81,000 followers. She also has 28,000 followers on Facebook and 21,000 on Instagram. Her website offers paid consultations and sells apricot seeds and vitamins. While these figures "aren't actually huge", she is "definitely a prominent figure," said Stephanie Alice Baker, a sociologist researching health and wellness misinformation at City St George's, University of London. Gabriel is urging tighter social media controls on those making such unproven health claims. "You shouldn't be able to make medical claims against (scientific) consensus, and there should be a third party body that social medias have to be accountable to with medical claims," he said. Baker said she had seen a surge in content creators "selling unregulated products like soursop tea, apricot kernels and horse and dog dewormer". "This is something I feel very concerned about, and I think needs to be seriously regulated, both from social media companies, but also in terms of government regulation."

Maharashtra logs 13 new Covid-19 cases, one fatality; tally hits 2,462
Maharashtra logs 13 new Covid-19 cases, one fatality; tally hits 2,462

Business Standard

time2 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Maharashtra logs 13 new Covid-19 cases, one fatality; tally hits 2,462

Of the fresh cases, five were reported from Pimpri Chinchwad, three from Nagpur, two from Pune and one each from Thane, Navi Mumbai, and Satara, an official statement said Press Trust of India Mumbai Maharashtra on Friday recorded 13 new cases of COVID-19, which took the tally of infections to 2,462, and one death, the health department said. A 65-year-old woman suffering from comorbidities, including rheumatoid arthritis, died in Kolhapur, an official said. Since January 1, the state has recorded 2,462 COVID-19 cases and 37 deaths, the department said. Of the fresh cases, five were reported from Pimpri Chinchwad, three from Nagpur, two from Pune and one each from Thane, Navi Mumbai, and Satara, an official statement said. The health department has conducted 28,486 COVID-19 tests across the state since January 1, and 2,277 patients have recovered from the infection till date, it said. Mumbai has reported 980 cases, including 539 in June alone, so far this year. At least 37 patients have succumbed to the virus in the state since January 1, of whom 36 had comorbidities (pre-existing health conditions that can increase the risk of severe illness), the statement said. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Covid-19: Maharashtra reports 13 new cases & 1 death; total since January rises to 2,462
Covid-19: Maharashtra reports 13 new cases & 1 death; total since January rises to 2,462

First Post

time3 hours ago

  • First Post

Covid-19: Maharashtra reports 13 new cases & 1 death; total since January rises to 2,462

Maharashtra on Friday recorded 13 new cases of Covid-19, which took the tally of infections to 2,462, and one death read more Maharashtra reported 13 new Covid-19 cases on Friday, taking the total number of infections this year to 2,462, according to the state health department. One death was also recorded — a 65-year-old woman with underlying health conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, in Kolhapur. Since January 1, the state has reported 37 Covid-related deaths, with 36 patients suffering from comorbidities, the department noted. Among the new infections, Pimpri Chinchwad registered five cases, Nagpur three, Pune two, and one case each was detected in Thane, Navi Mumbai and Satara. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD So far this year, Maharashtra has conducted 28,486 Covid-19 tests and recorded 2,277 recoveries. Mumbai alone has seen 980 cases in 2024, with 539 infections reported in June. The health department continues to monitor the situation, urging people, particularly those with pre-existing conditions, to remain cautious. With inputs from agencies

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store