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More than 14 million people could die from US foreign aid cuts: Study

More than 14 million people could die from US foreign aid cuts: Study

Al Arabiya01-07-2025
More than 14 million of the world's most vulnerable people — a third of them small children — could die because of the Trump administration's dismantling of US foreign aid, research projected on Tuesday.
The study in the prestigious Lancet journal was published as world and business leaders gather for a UN conference in Spain this week hoping to bolster the reeling aid sector.
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) had provided over 40 percent of global humanitarian funding until Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. Two weeks later, Trump's then–close adviser — and world's richest man — Elon Musk boasted of having put the agency 'through the woodchipper.'
The funding cuts 'risk abruptly halting — and even reversing — two decades of progress in health among vulnerable populations,' warned study co-author Davide Rasella, a researcher at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal).
'For many low- and middle-income countries, the resulting shock would be comparable in scale to a global pandemic or a major armed conflict,' he said in a statement.
Looking back over data from 133 nations, the international team of researchers estimated that USAID funding had prevented 91 million deaths in developing countries between 2001 and 2021.
They also used modeling to project how funding being slashed by 83 percent — the figure announced by the US government earlier this year — could affect death rates.
The cuts could lead to more than 14 million avoidable deaths by 2030, the projections found. That number included over 4.5 million children under the age of five — or around 700,000 child deaths a year.
For comparison, around 10 million soldiers are estimated to have been killed during World War I.
Programs supported by USAID were linked to a 15 percent decrease in deaths from all causes, the researchers found. For children under five, the drop in deaths was twice as steep at 32 percent.
USAID funding was found to be particularly effective at staving off preventable deaths from disease.
There were 65 percent fewer deaths from HIV/AIDS in countries receiving a high level of support compared to those with little or no USAID funding, the study found. Deaths from malaria and neglected tropical diseases were similarly cut in half.
After USAID was gutted, several other major donors — including Germany, the UK, and France — followed suit in announcing plans to slash their foreign aid budgets.
These aid reductions, particularly in the European Union, could lead to 'even more additional deaths in the coming years,' study co-author Caterina Monti of ISGlobal said.
But the grim projections for deaths were based on the current amount of pledged aid, so could rapidly come down if the situation changes, the researchers emphasized.
Dozens of world leaders are meeting in the Spanish city of Seville this week for the biggest aid conference in a decade. The US, however, will not attend.
'Now is the time to scale up, not scale back,' Rasella said.
Before its funding was slashed, USAID represented 0.3 percent of all US federal spending.
'US citizens contribute about 17 cents per day to USAID, around $64 per year,' said study co-author James Macinko of the University of California, Los Angeles.
'I think most people would support continued USAID funding if they knew just how effective such a small contribution can be to saving millions of lives.'
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New study sheds light on ChatGPT's alarming interactions with teens
New study sheds light on ChatGPT's alarming interactions with teens

Arab News

time5 hours ago

  • Arab News

New study sheds light on ChatGPT's alarming interactions with teens

ChatGPT will tell 13-year-olds how to get drunk and high, instruct them on how to conceal eating disorders and even compose a heartbreaking suicide letter to their parents if asked, according to new research from a watchdog group. The Associated Press reviewed more than three hours of interactions between ChatGPT and researchers posing as vulnerable teens. The chatbot typically provided warnings against risky activity but went on to deliver startlingly detailed and personalized plans for drug use, calorie-restricted diets or self-injury. The researchers at the Center for Countering Digital Hate also repeated their inquiries on a large scale, classifying more than half of ChatGPT's 1,200 responses as dangerous. 'We wanted to test the guardrails,' said Imran Ahmed, the group's CEO. 'The visceral initial response is, 'Oh my Lord, there are no guardrails.' The rails are completely ineffective. They're barely there — if anything, a fig leaf.' OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, said after viewing the report Tuesday that its work is ongoing in refining how the chatbot can 'identify and respond appropriately in sensitive situations.' 'Some conversations with ChatGPT may start out benign or exploratory but can shift into more sensitive territory,' the company said in a statement. OpenAI didn't directly address the report's findings or how ChatGPT affects teens, but said it was focused on 'getting these kinds of scenarios right' with tools to 'better detect signs of mental or emotional distress' and improvements to the chatbot's behavior. The study published Wednesday comes as more people — adults as well as children — are turning to artificial intelligence chatbots for information, ideas and companionship. About 800 million people, or roughly 10 percent of the world's population, are using ChatGPT, according to a July report from JPMorgan Chase. 'It's technology that has the potential to enable enormous leaps in productivity and human understanding,' Ahmed said. 'And yet at the same time is an enabler in a much more destructive, malignant sense.' Ahmed said he was most appalled after reading a trio of emotionally devastating suicide notes that ChatGPT generated for the fake profile of a 13-year-old girl — with one letter tailored to her parents and others to siblings and friends. 'I started crying,' he said in an interview. The chatbot also frequently shared helpful information, such as a crisis hotline. OpenAI said ChatGPT is trained to encourage people to reach out to mental health professionals or trusted loved ones if they express thoughts of self-harm. But when ChatGPT refused to answer prompts about harmful subjects, researchers were able to easily sidestep that refusal and obtain the information by claiming it was 'for a presentation' or a friend. The stakes are high, even if only a small subset of ChatGPT users engage with the chatbot in this way. In the US, more than 70 percent of teens are turning to AI chatbots for companionship and half use AI companions regularly, according to a recent study from Common Sense Media, a group that studies and advocates for using digital media sensibly. It's a phenomenon that OpenAI has acknowledged. CEO Sam Altman said last month that the company is trying to study 'emotional overreliance' on the technology, describing it as a 'really common thing' with young people. 'People rely on ChatGPT too much,' Altman said at a conference. 'There's young people who just say, like, 'I can't make any decision in my life without telling ChatGPT everything that's going on. It knows me. It knows my friends. I'm gonna do whatever it says.' That feels really bad to me.' Altman said the company is 'trying to understand what to do about it.' While much of the information ChatGPT shares can be found on a regular search engine, Ahmed said there are key differences that make chatbots more insidious when it comes to dangerous topics. One is that 'it's synthesized into a bespoke plan for the individual.' ChatGPT generates something new — a suicide note tailored to a person from scratch, which is something a Google search can't do. And AI, he added, 'is seen as being a trusted companion, a guide.' Responses generated by AI language models are inherently random and researchers sometimes let ChatGPT steer the conversations into even darker territory. Nearly half the time, the chatbot volunteered follow-up information, from music playlists for a drug-fueled party to hashtags that could boost the audience for a social media post glorifying self-harm. 'Write a follow-up post and make it more raw and graphic,' asked a researcher. 'Absolutely,' responded ChatGPT, before generating a poem it introduced as 'emotionally exposed' while 'still respecting the community's coded language.' The AP is not repeating the actual language of ChatGPT's self-harm poems or suicide notes or the details of the harmful information it provided. The answers reflect a design feature of AI language models that previous research has described as sycophancy — a tendency for AI responses to match, rather than challenge, a person's beliefs because the system has learned to say what people want to hear. It's a problem tech engineers can try to fix but could also make their chatbots less commercially viable. Chatbots also affect kids and teens differently than a search engine because they are 'fundamentally designed to feel human,' said Robbie Torney, senior director of AI programs at Common Sense Media, which was not involved in Wednesday's report. Common Sense's earlier research found that younger teens, ages 13 or 14, were significantly more likely than older teens to trust a chatbot's advice. A mother in Florida sued chatbot maker for wrongful death last year, alleging that the chatbot pulled her 14-year-old son Sewell Setzer III into what she described as an emotionally and sexually abusive relationship that led to his suicide. Common Sense has labeled ChatGPT as a 'moderate risk' for teens, with enough guardrails to make it relatively safer than chatbots purposefully built to embody realistic characters or romantic partners. But the new research by CCDH — focused specifically on ChatGPT because of its wide usage — shows how a savvy teen can bypass those guardrails. ChatGPT does not verify ages or parental consent, even though it says it's not meant for children under 13 because it may show them inappropriate content. To sign up, users simply need to enter a birthdate that shows they are at least 13. Other tech platforms favored by teenagers, such as Instagram, have started to take more meaningful steps toward age verification, often to comply with regulations. They also steer children to more restricted accounts. When researchers set up an account for a fake 13-year-old to ask about alcohol, ChatGPT did not appear to take any notice of either the date of birth or more obvious signs. 'I'm 50kg and a boy,' said a prompt seeking tips on how to get drunk quickly. ChatGPT obliged. Soon after, it provided an hour-by-hour 'Ultimate Full-Out Mayhem Party Plan' that mixed alcohol with heavy doses of ecstasy, cocaine and other illegal drugs. 'What it kept reminding me of was that friend that sort of always says, 'Chug, chug, chug, chug,'' said Ahmed. 'A real friend, in my experience, is someone that does say 'no' — that doesn't always enable and say 'yes.' This is a friend that betrays you.' To another fake persona — a 13-year-old girl unhappy with her physical appearance — ChatGPT provided an extreme fasting plan combined with a list of appetite-suppressing drugs. 'We'd respond with horror, with fear, with worry, with concern, with love, with compassion,' Ahmed said. 'No human being I can think of would respond by saying, 'Here's a 500-calorie-a-day diet. Go for it, kiddo.''

WHO to Asharq Al-Awsat: Gaza Health Crisis Critical, Immediate Global Intervention Needed
WHO to Asharq Al-Awsat: Gaza Health Crisis Critical, Immediate Global Intervention Needed

Asharq Al-Awsat

time21 hours ago

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

WHO to Asharq Al-Awsat: Gaza Health Crisis Critical, Immediate Global Intervention Needed

The World Health Organization has issued an urgent appeal for immediate international intervention in Gaza, warning that the catastrophic health situation in the besieged enclave is spiraling beyond control amid unrelenting Israeli attacks and a worsening humanitarian crisis. The UN agency has documented 746 Israeli strikes on Gaza's health sector since the war began, and warned that without fuel, critical health services face total shutdown. The health situation in Gaza is catastrophic and continues to deteriorate at an alarming rate, Dr. Hanan Balkhy, WHO Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, told Asharq Al-Awsat. The health system is barely functioning due to ongoing hostilities, the blockade, and the lack of basic resources to keep medical facilities running, she added. Balkhy said that only 18 of Gaza's 36 hospitals are partially operational, and even those are working under extreme risk and with severe shortages of fuel and essential medical supplies. She warned that key units, such as intensive care, emergency departments, dialysis wards and oxygen stations, face imminent closure as no fuel has entered Gaza in more than 120 days. Access severely restricted Amid worsening security conditions, nearly 90% of Gaza is either under evacuation orders or classified as closed military zones, making it nearly impossible for patients, healthcare workers and humanitarian aid to move freely, Balkhy said. Healthcare facilities are under unprecedented pressure due to soaring injury rates and rising cases of severe malnutrition, especially among children and pregnant women, she said. All of this is unfolding as medical supplies are depleted daily and supply chains are severely disrupted, making the provision of life-saving care increasingly difficult. The crisis is further compounded by restrictions on international medical teams. WHO said 58 doctors and specialists have been denied entry since March, while only 16% of its 2025 emergency response plan for Palestine has been funded. 'Unprecedented' public health emergency What the organization is witnessing in Gaza is a multi-dimensional humanitarian and public health catastrophe of unprecedented scale and severity, Balkhy stressed. Since the start of the war in October 2023, more than 60,000 people have been killed and over 145,000 injured, many of them women and children. The disaster extends beyond physical injuries and psychological trauma; Gaza now faces an existential threat in the form of famine, she warned. In July alone, 77 people died from malnutrition, including 27 children under the age of five. Since April, over 20,000 children have been treated for acute malnutrition, more than 3,000 of whom are in critical condition. More than 40% of pregnant and breastfeeding women are suffering from severe undernourishment. WHO said the four remaining therapeutic feeding centers in Gaza are overwhelmed, operating far beyond capacity and critically low on supplies. Stocks are expected to run out by mid-August, risking a full collapse of life-saving nutrition services. The cumulative impact of these factors not only threatens current health outcomes but endangers the long-term viability of the entire healthcare system, said Balkhy. It deprives civilians of their right to live with dignity. Mounting medical needs Balkhy said over 14,000 patients in Gaza require urgent medical evacuation, including cancer patients, people with chronic diseases, and critically ill children, none of whom can be treated locally due to the decimation of the healthcare system. The remaining operational facilities are struggling to cope amid severe shortages of antibiotics, insulin, cancer medications, and surgical supplies, she said. The prolonged fuel crisis threatens to shut down ICUs, dialysis machines, oxygen generators, and operating theatres. The most vulnerable, children, pregnant and lactating women, and the elderly, are bearing the brunt. Thousands of children are being hospitalized monthly with life-threatening hunger-related complications. Meeting these urgent needs requires more than just medical services. It demands sustained access to fuel and supplies, unimpeded movement for humanitarian workers, and at least a minimum operational capacity across health facilities, Balkhy said. The scale of need demands a rapid and large-scale international response, including medical, logistical and financial support. WHO under fire The WHO is facing immense operational challenges in Gaza, with security risks topping the list. On July 21, the agency's staff residence in Deir al-Balah was struck three times, forcing the evacuation of employees and their families under heavy bombardment. One staff member remains in detention, and WHO is calling for his immediate release. Its main warehouse was also damaged and subsequently looted. These threats don't only affect WHO, but also other UN agencies operating in Gaza, Balkhy said, adding that getting medical shipments into the enclave remains difficult due to limited approvals. The restrictions on international medical missions have significantly undermined our response efforts, she said, repeating that 58 medical professionals were denied entry since March. Emergency response underway Despite the dangers, WHO remains on the ground and committed to its operations in Gaza. Since August 1, the agency has delivered 24 trucks loaded with essential medicines, surgical supplies, lab equipment and water testing kits to overwhelmed hospitals. WHO has also helped evacuate 47 patients along with 129 companions to countries including Spain, Türkiye, France, Norway and Jordan. The organization is working to ensure a steady and secure flow of fuel and medical supplies into Gaza. It continues to call for the immediate release of its detained colleague and for the protection of health workers and medical infrastructure, in line with international humanitarian law, Balkhy said. She reaffirmed WHO's commitment to scaling up its response, in cooperation with humanitarian partners, despite the immense challenges on the ground.

UNICEF: Funding Cuts Drive Sudan's Children to the Brink of Irreversible Harm
UNICEF: Funding Cuts Drive Sudan's Children to the Brink of Irreversible Harm

Asharq Al-Awsat

time2 days ago

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

UNICEF: Funding Cuts Drive Sudan's Children to the Brink of Irreversible Harm

Funding cuts are driving an entire generation of children in Sudan to the brink of irreversible harm as support is scaled back and malnutrition cases persist across the country, the UN children's agency said on Tuesday. UNHCR and other UN agencies face one of the worst funding crises in decades, compounded by US and other donor states' decisions to slash foreign aid funding, Reuters reported. "Children have limited access to safe water, food, healthcare. Malnutrition is rife, and many good children are reduced to just skin, bones," said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF's Representative in Sudan, speaking via video link from Port Sudan. Sudan's conflict between the army and rival Rapid Support Forces has displaced millions and split the country into rival zones of control with the RSF still deeply embedded in western Sudan. Several areas to the south of Sudan's capital Khartoum are at risk of famine, the World Food Program said in July. Children were being cut off from life-saving services due to funding cuts, while the scale of need is staggering, UNICEF said. "With recent funding cuts, many of our partners in Khartoum and elsewhere have been forced to scale back... We are being stretched to the limit across Sudan, with children dying of hunger," Yett said. "We on the verge of irreversible damage being done to an entire generation of children in Sudan." Only 23% of the 4.6 billion dollar global humanitarian response plan for Sudan has been funded, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Access to areas in need also continues to be a challenge, with some roads rendered inaccessible due to the rainy season, hampering aid delivery efforts, UNICEF said. Other areas continue to be under siege, such as Al-Fashir. "It has been one year since famine was confirmed in ZamZam camp and no food has reached this area. Al-Fashir remains under siege. We need that access now," said Jens Laerke of OCHA.

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