Health association takes legal action against NHI ActBy Aarti BhanaThe association argued that the Bill is not fiscally feasible and would have adverse effects on the economy and healthcare system
It’s the ‘Donald disease’ that’s making us sickWith the 12 specialised key population clinics in South Africa funded by the US government, and now shuttered, getting treatment at government clinics has been difficult, if not impossible By Tanya Pampalone and Mia MalanChildhood stunting is also stunting South Africa’s economyMore than a quarter of children under the age of five in the country are chronically malnourished By David HarrisonBreakthrough research finds two new breast cancer genes in black women in South AfricaThe study highlights the need for more research to focus on African demographics on the continent to personalise treatments By Aarti BhanaPartner ContentHow AI Is changing journalism and why we must detect it earlyBy Partner Content Trump’s HIV funding cuts will also hit diabetes, cervical cancer and depression hardBy Zano KuneneAs government clinics take on HIV patients who were previously treated by Pepfar-funded projects, the treatment of conditions like diabetes and heart disease will come under pressure The case of the minister and the HIV activists: Are we entering denialism 2.0?By Mia MalanActivists say the health minister is in denial over the impact of US funding cuts and accusing them and the media of overblowing the crisis and spreading disinformation Why so many newborns and foetuses are abandoned in landfills and the veldBy Bhekisisa TeamResearchers from the University of the Witwatersrand have gathered data from the Diepkloof Forensic Pathology Service in Soweto to better understand why so many women turn to desperate measures instead of seeking legal and safe abortions HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Childhood stunting is also stunting South Africa’s economyMore than a quarter of children under the age of five in the country are chronically malnourished By David HarrisonBreakthrough research finds two new breast cancer genes in black women in South AfricaThe study highlights the need for more research to focus on African demographics on the continent to personalise treatments By Aarti BhanaPartner ContentHow AI Is changing journalism and why we must detect it earlyBy Partner Content Trump’s HIV funding cuts will also hit diabetes, cervical cancer and depression hardBy Zano KuneneAs government clinics take on HIV patients who were previously treated by Pepfar-funded projects, the treatment of conditions like diabetes and heart disease will come under pressure The case of the minister and the HIV activists: Are we entering denialism 2.0?By Mia MalanActivists say the health minister is in denial over the impact of US funding cuts and accusing them and the media of overblowing the crisis and spreading disinformation Why so many newborns and foetuses are abandoned in landfills and the veldBy Bhekisisa TeamResearchers from the University of the Witwatersrand have gathered data from the Diepkloof Forensic Pathology Service in Soweto to better understand why so many women turn to desperate measures instead of seeking legal and safe abortions HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Breakthrough research finds two new breast cancer genes in black women in South AfricaThe study highlights the need for more research to focus on African demographics on the continent to personalise treatments By Aarti BhanaPartner ContentHow AI Is changing journalism and why we must detect it earlyBy Partner Content
Trump’s HIV funding cuts will also hit diabetes, cervical cancer and depression hardBy Zano KuneneAs government clinics take on HIV patients who were previously treated by Pepfar-funded projects, the treatment of conditions like diabetes and heart disease will come under pressure The case of the minister and the HIV activists: Are we entering denialism 2.0?By Mia MalanActivists say the health minister is in denial over the impact of US funding cuts and accusing them and the media of overblowing the crisis and spreading disinformation Why so many newborns and foetuses are abandoned in landfills and the veldBy Bhekisisa TeamResearchers from the University of the Witwatersrand have gathered data from the Diepkloof Forensic Pathology Service in Soweto to better understand why so many women turn to desperate measures instead of seeking legal and safe abortions HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
The case of the minister and the HIV activists: Are we entering denialism 2.0?By Mia MalanActivists say the health minister is in denial over the impact of US funding cuts and accusing them and the media of overblowing the crisis and spreading disinformation Why so many newborns and foetuses are abandoned in landfills and the veldBy Bhekisisa TeamResearchers from the University of the Witwatersrand have gathered data from the Diepkloof Forensic Pathology Service in Soweto to better understand why so many women turn to desperate measures instead of seeking legal and safe abortions HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Why so many newborns and foetuses are abandoned in landfills and the veldBy Bhekisisa TeamResearchers from the University of the Witwatersrand have gathered data from the Diepkloof Forensic Pathology Service in Soweto to better understand why so many women turn to desperate measures instead of seeking legal and safe abortions HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
HIV programmes will not collapse after Trump funding cuts, Motsoaledi saysBy Aarti BhanaThe health minister said local investment and support from other global partners would keep the country’s treatment efforts going The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynToday, people over 50 make up the second largest group of South Africa’s HIV-positive population — 20 years ago, they were the smallest proportion Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Tiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak caseBy Sheree BegaVictims could see justice as the company begins settlement for the outbreak that was linked to contaminated food Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Female & Guardian | African women at higher risk of preeclampsia – a dangerous pregnancy complicationBy Annettee NakimuliPreeclampsia is a complication characterised by high blood pressure and organ damage, arising during the second half of pregnancy, in labour or in the first week after delivery. It plays a major part in about 16% of the deaths of women in sub-Saharan Africa. And it’s on the rise. The incidence of preeclampsia in Africa […] Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Female & Guardian | Newborns still dying needlessly in South AfricaBy Aarti BhanaBudget cuts, staff shortages and socio-economic barriers continue to undermine efforts to improve neonatal care and reduce infant mortality Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Confessions of a medical studentBy Sarah SteinMany people told Sarah Stein that practising medicine would be difficult. Now, as a fifth year medical student at the University of Cape Town, she wishes she would have listened more carefully The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
The US’s NIH funds R6.65 billion of research in South AfricaBy Linda Pretorius and Jacques VerrynIf all of its National Institutes of Health funding falls away, the country could lose 70% of its medical research capacity How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
How this Limpopo NGO prepared for Trump’s funding cutsBy Zano KuneneThe Anova Health Institute, which received the lion’s share of the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids funding in South Africa, had its support halted in February along with dozens other nonprofits Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More Latest News NWU honours Prof Christa Rautenbach with the Chancellor’s Medal New water crisis threatens as invasive plants overrun North West’s Vaalkop Dam MK party’s power problem: The fragility of proximity politics Tanzania leads the fight to end maternal deaths Reimagining SA-US relations in the aftermath of the Oval Office spectacle Unpacking the dangers of the proposed amendments to Zambia’s constitution, Part II Ask Ash | Johannesburg’s housing crisis is like a movie on loop It’s time to talk about weaponising visas against Africans Less testing, more thinking: The case for project-based learning in schools Editors Pick PoliticsNational Health Insurance: DA cites government failures and risk of looting CrosswordCryptic Crossword JDE 483 Press ReleasesCall for nominations: Power of Women 2024The proportion of people 50+ with HIV has doubled in 10 yearsToxic storm brewing in Soweto’s Snake Park neighbourhoodTiger Brands offers first settlement in deadly listeriosis outbreak case Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Fighting for funds: A new era of HIV activismBy Ida JoosteInstead of the Aids denialism of decades past, it’s US funding cuts that could lead to up to 300 000 more HIV infections in the next four years. Activists like Sisonke Msimang say the past has answers for the present fight Load More