At the end of each year, I like to check in on Future Crunchâs annual â99 Good News Storiesâ post. I donât necessarily see every inclusion as good (âChinaâs birthrate fell again!â), but they nicely aggregate a lot of global health and development stories.
Some of my favorite inclusions from this year (note: havenât closely filtered to detect possible exaggerations or cloudy data, would appreciate knowing if anything sounds fishy):
32. Africa announced this year that it is officially free from wild polio. 25 years ago the disease still paralyzed more than 75,000 children across the continent every year. Since then, billions of oral vaccines have been provided, preventing 1.8 million cases. Itâs one of the greatest healthcare success stories of all time, and an extraordinary human achievement. BBC
33. There was a major breakthrough in 2020 in the fight against AIDS. A new antiretroviral administered as an injection six times a year was shown to be 89% more effective at preventing HIV in women compared to standard ARVs, which are taken as a daily pill. âA major, major advance. I donât think we can overemphasize its importance.â NYT
36. The WHO also published its annual tuberculosis report this year, showing that between 2015 and 2019, global deaths fell by 14%. In fact, progress against TB puts malaria in the shadeâsince 2000, treatments have averted more than 60 million deaths.
38. In 2020 we discovered that humanity is winning its fight against the second leading cause of disability in the worldâelephantiasis, a horrible parasitic disease causing irreversible disfigurement. In the last 20 years, the number of annual infections has fallen by three quarters, from 199 million to 51.4 million, and last year three countries, Malawi, Kiribati and Yemen, eliminated it altogether. The Lancet
39. The proportion of the worldâs children under the age of five infected with hepatitis B has now dropped to just under 1%, down from 5% in the early 2000s. 85% of kids around the world are now getting all three doses of the HBV vaccineâand Gavi says it is on track to avert a further 1.2 million infection-related deaths between 2021 and 2035. WHO
43. New research this year showed that the risk of a person developing dementia in the US and Europe is now 13% lower than it was in 2010 (Alzheimerâs is falling too, by 16% per decade). Researchers think itâs down to less smoking, better cardiovascular health, and better education. NYT
66. New research this year showed that during the 2000s and 2010s, the global Gini coefficient dropped by 15 points and the earnings share of the worldâs poorest half doubled. The reason this feels so surprising is that most of us hardly ever read journalism written by people from Asia, Africa and South America. Uppsala
71. A UNICEF report on the Swachh Bharat Mission, Indiaâs massive sanitation drive, showed that it has brought major benefits to poor households across the country. The average benefit per household was US$727 per year, mainly from health savings such as reduced diarrhoea incidence (55%) and savings from sanitation access time (45%).
72. Indonesia, the fourth most populated country in the world, reported a significant decline in its number of illiterate people, from 4.63% of the population in 2011 to 1.78% in 2019. That means that almost 8 million adults there have gained the ability to read and write in the last decade. Jakarta Post
74. The IEAâs annual report contained a hidden nugget of very, very good news this year. The number of people without access to electricity dropped from 860 million to 770 million, a new record low. Africa has made particularly good progress; the number of people gaining access to electricity doubled from 9 million a year in 2013, to 20 million a year by 2019.
The IEAâs annual report on access to electricity highlights that the pandemic had a huge negative impact on progress, and raise concerns about the potential for recovery. Furthermore, if the relevant SDG policies would continue as they are then they predict about 62% of people in sub-saharan africa with electricity (today we are at 48%). They suggest that further $35 billion per year is needed to get global worldwide access to electricity by 2030.
Thanks for providing the additional context! Progress Thread or no, itâs still useful to hear when weâve gone off-track from a progress goal, or seen a trend get worse.
At the end of each year, I like to check in on Future Crunchâs annual â99 Good News Storiesâ post. I donât necessarily see every inclusion as good (âChinaâs birthrate fell again!â), but they nicely aggregate a lot of global health and development stories.
Some of my favorite inclusions from this year (note: havenât closely filtered to detect possible exaggerations or cloudy data, would appreciate knowing if anything sounds fishy):
Cautionânegative outlook!
The IEAâs annual report on access to electricity highlights that the pandemic had a huge negative impact on progress, and raise concerns about the potential for recovery. Furthermore, if the relevant SDG policies would continue as they are then they predict about 62% of people in sub-saharan africa with electricity (today we are at 48%). They suggest that further $35 billion per year is needed to get global worldwide access to electricity by 2030.
Thanks for providing the additional context! Progress Thread or no, itâs still useful to hear when weâve gone off-track from a progress goal, or seen a trend get worse.