HEALTH NEWS

Showing 12 articles

ICE Ends Reporting on Detainee Deaths After Release, Raising Concerns About Accountability","description":"The U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) has discontinued its reporting of fatalities that occur within 30 days of a former detainee’s release, reversing a Biden‑era policy that aimed to keep the public informed about health conditions in detention. The change could make it harder for observers to assess the long‑term impact of the Trump administration’s mass detention strategy.","summary":"ICE has stopped documenting deaths that happen after a detainee has left its facilities, a move that critics argue will mask the true toll of post‑detention mortality. The policy reversal removes a mechanism designed to expose gaps in medical care, breathing new life into debates over accountability and the human costs of U.S. immigration enforcement.","image":"<img src=\"https://dims.apnews.com/dims4/default/22eefdf/2147483647/strip/true/crop/7952x5304+0+0/resize/599x400!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.apnews.com%2F0c%2F5c%2F6c4c9fa44933e8827518a58c3d9a%2F841c7bdc7e67435681cc8b1f968aad5f\" alt=\"Pedestrians slalom between traffic to cross the road in Kinshasa, Congo, Tuesday Jan. 8, 2019.\" width=\"599\" height=\"400\" loading=\"lazy\">","text":"<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">In a policy shift announced Thursday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will no longer report deaths that occur within 30 days of an individual’s release from its custody. The announcement follows a 2021 Biden‑era directive that required the agency to submit data to Congress and investigate such deaths, a measure that many analysts argued would prevent ICE from sidestepping accountability by releasing critically ill detainees.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">ICE’s “common sense” statement simply notes that once a person is no longer in the agency’s care, the responsibility for monitoring and reporting deaths ends. The agency also claims that it maintains procedures for timely notification of deaths that result directly from its custody conditions, but it has not released the full text of the revised policy.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The policy reversal comes amid growing evidence that the number of detainee deaths has spiked. At least 18 individuals have died since January 1, a figure that is projected to exceed last year’s death toll—by far the highest in two decades. Data published by experts shows that many of these deaths involve suicide, while other fatalities from natural causes may have been preventable with earlier medical intervention.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">Health professionals such as Dr. Sanjay Basu of UCSF criticize the change. He has published an analysis of more than 270 ICE custody deaths, concluding that the elimination of post‑release reporting will make mortality statistics appear lower without improving the underlying health care conditions. \"The period immediately after release is when deaths attributed to inadequate care during confinement become apparent,\" Basu told a health news briefing. \"Missed diagnoses, interrupted medications, untreated infections, and decompensating chronic conditions often kill someone only after they leave the facility.\"\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">ICE has long denied allegations of medical neglect, claiming its detainees receive comprehensive health services. However, as of early April, the agency claimed to hold more than 60,000 detainees nationwide—an increase from 40,000 at the start of President Donald Trump’s second term—highlighting a growing demand for resources, especially medical care, that ICE has struggled to provide.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The policy change follows a DHS statement in which acting assistant secretary Lauren Bis said that there were no detainee deaths in May 2024, the first month without a fatality since November. Bis did not answer questions about whether reporting policies had altered, and she previously emphasized that deaths in ICE custody are exceptionally rare.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">Observers warn that the removal of this death‑reporting requirement could effectively narrow the view of ICE’s accountability. \"Tracking deaths immediately after custody is a standard approach that allows health systems in jails, prisons and immigration detention to learn about gaps in care that may occur before a person leaves a facility,\" said Dr. Homer Venters, former chief medical officer of the New York City jail system. \"Eliminating reporting of these deaths represents a willful act of ignoring the most serious health outcome that can reflect inadequacies in care or help track outbreaks.\"\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The decision to halt death reporting underscores ongoing concerns about the transparency and public accountability of U.S. immigration enforcement practices, especially as public scrutiny of the Trump administration’s mass detention policies continues to intensify.\n</p>
AP

ICE Ends Reporting on Detainee Deaths After Release, Raising Concerns About Accountability","description":"The U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) has discontinued its reporting of fatalities that occur within 30 days of a former detainee’s release, reversing a Biden‑era policy that aimed to keep the public informed about health conditions in detention. The change could make it harder for observers to assess the long‑term impact of the Trump administration’s mass detention strategy.","summary":"ICE has stopped documenting deaths that happen after a detainee has left its facilities, a move that critics argue will mask the true toll of post‑detention mortality. The policy reversal removes a mechanism designed to expose gaps in medical care, breathing new life into debates over accountability and the human costs of U.S. immigration enforcement.","image":"<img src=\"https://dims.apnews.com/dims4/default/22eefdf/2147483647/strip/true/crop/7952x5304+0+0/resize/599x400!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.apnews.com%2F0c%2F5c%2F6c4c9fa44933e8827518a58c3d9a%2F841c7bdc7e67435681cc8b1f968aad5f\" alt=\"Pedestrians slalom between traffic to cross the road in Kinshasa, Congo, Tuesday Jan. 8, 2019.\" width=\"599\" height=\"400\" loading=\"lazy\">","text":"<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">In a policy shift announced Thursday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will no longer report deaths that occur within 30 days of an individual’s release from its custody. The announcement follows a 2021 Biden‑era directive that required the agency to submit data to Congress and investigate such deaths, a measure that many analysts argued would prevent ICE from sidestepping accountability by releasing critically ill detainees.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">ICE’s “common sense” statement simply notes that once a person is no longer in the agency’s care, the responsibility for monitoring and reporting deaths ends. The agency also claims that it maintains procedures for timely notification of deaths that result directly from its custody conditions, but it has not released the full text of the revised policy.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The policy reversal comes amid growing evidence that the number of detainee deaths has spiked. At least 18 individuals have died since January 1, a figure that is projected to exceed last year’s death toll—by far the highest in two decades. Data published by experts shows that many of these deaths involve suicide, while other fatalities from natural causes may have been preventable with earlier medical intervention.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">Health professionals such as Dr. Sanjay Basu of UCSF criticize the change. He has published an analysis of more than 270 ICE custody deaths, concluding that the elimination of post‑release reporting will make mortality statistics appear lower without improving the underlying health care conditions. \"The period immediately after release is when deaths attributed to inadequate care during confinement become apparent,\" Basu told a health news briefing. \"Missed diagnoses, interrupted medications, untreated infections, and decompensating chronic conditions often kill someone only after they leave the facility.\"\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">ICE has long denied allegations of medical neglect, claiming its detainees receive comprehensive health services. However, as of early April, the agency claimed to hold more than 60,000 detainees nationwide—an increase from 40,000 at the start of President Donald Trump’s second term—highlighting a growing demand for resources, especially medical care, that ICE has struggled to provide.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The policy change follows a DHS statement in which acting assistant secretary Lauren Bis said that there were no detainee deaths in May 2024, the first month without a fatality since November. Bis did not answer questions about whether reporting policies had altered, and she previously emphasized that deaths in ICE custody are exceptionally rare.\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">Observers warn that the removal of this death‑reporting requirement could effectively narrow the view of ICE’s accountability. \"Tracking deaths immediately after custody is a standard approach that allows health systems in jails, prisons and immigration detention to learn about gaps in care that may occur before a person leaves a facility,\" said Dr. Homer Venters, former chief medical officer of the New York City jail system. \"Eliminating reporting of these deaths represents a willful act of ignoring the most serious health outcome that can reflect inadequacies in care or help track outbreaks.\"\n</p>\n<p style=\"margin-top: 0;\">The decision to halt death reporting underscores ongoing concerns about the transparency and public accountability of U.S. immigration enforcement practices, especially as public scrutiny of the Trump administration’s mass detention policies continues to intensify.\n</p>

Hantavirus Outbreak on Cruise Ship Spurs New Hope for Treatment","description":"A deadly hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship has sparked renewed scientific focus on treatments and vaccines, including a promising drug used for autoimmune disease and the development of antibody‑based therapies.","summary":"The Andes hantavirus has caused fatalities on a cruise ship and in several countries, prompting researchers to test the drug tocilizumab and explore antibody therapies. While progress is slow due to limited funding and rare occurrence, the outbreak underscores the urgent need for effective interventions.","image":"https://dims.apnews.com/dims4/default/1f65cc3/2147483647/strip/true/crop/6240x4160+0+0/resize/1440x960!/format/webp/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.apnews.com%2F1e%2F24%2Fb6e8792884e1e642fbe174465f46%2Fadce3b6a211d479abb0f10aadd970f95","text":"<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship ignites new research efforts</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">When a rare but deadly rodent‑borne virus struck passengers on a cruise ship and seemed to spread, there were no treatments for those who fell ill and no vaccines to protect others.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">That was the case even though it wasn’t a novel germ that the world had never seen before, like the virus that caused the coronavirus pandemic. It was a hantavirus, one of a family of viruses that have been known for decades and are thought to exist around the world.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Teams of researchers, including in Chile, Argentina and the United States, have long been trying to find and develop drugs and vaccines. But because the viruses are relatively rare and don’t spread easily between people, there hasn’t been enough sustained investment by governments, global health groups, or drug companies to pay for the extensive safety and efficacy testing needed to make them available.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Still, there have been promising developments. Researchers published a hint that a drug used for an autoimmune disease may help hantavirus patients fight off the most deadly symptoms.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">They and others hope the attention that the cruise ship outbreak brought to the virus – and concern that hantavirus infections could become more common as a changing climate is expected to increase contact between people and rodents – may bring new momentum to the hunt.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"I hope this situation will help us continue our research and strengthen the collaboration between healthcare workers, the community, and the necessary resources,\" said Dr. Fernando Tortosa of the National University of Río Negro in Patagonia, Argentina, the study’s lead author.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Different species of hantavirus cause different symptoms</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Hantaviruses usually spread when people inhale contaminated residue of rodent droppings. But there are unique species of hantavirus found in different parts of the world that have their own characteristics and can cause different symptoms.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The Andes virus, the germ behind the cruise ship outbreak, is a particular focus of researchers because it is the only hantavirus thought to be able to spread between people in some cases. And while hantavirus infections are rare, they can be extremely deadly.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">“That is why it is a public health problem,” said María Inés Barría, a virologist at the Universidad San Sebastián in Chile who studies hantaviruses.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Three of the 13 likely cases among cruise ship passengers ended in death. Separately, in Chile, the Ministry of Health has confirmed 15 deaths and 42 cases of hantavirus so far this year. Authorities in Argentina have reported 32 deaths and 102 cases since June 2025. In the U.S., 35% of the hantavirus cases since tracking began in 1993 have resulted in death, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">The search for treatments to fight the worst symptoms</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">In Argentina, researchers are testing whether a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis might help fight hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a severe infection caused by both the Andes virus and the Sin Nombre virus, a type of hantavirus found in North America.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The drug tocilizumab tampers down a molecule called IL-6 that triggers damaging inflammation in some autoimmune and other diseases. IL-6 also is a suspect in the inflammatory reaction to the infection, which can rapidly cause lungs to fill with fluid and fail.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Four of five patients in an Argentinian hospital survived after receiving tocilizumab in addition to traditional supportive care for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, the research team reported in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The report is unusual, tracking the first people to receive tocilizumab in an ongoing “compassionate use” study – meaning doctors can use it in patients they deem eligible. Another five who were deemed eligible for tocilizumab but didn’t get it and instead received only standard care died. Two worsened too quickly and the hospital lacked supply for the others, the researchers reported.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The research team cautioned that the five patients who didn’t receive the drug were sicker and older than those who did. Still, they said tocilizumab warrants further investigation.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Efforts to stop hantavirus have also shown promise</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Barría’s team, which includes Chilean scientists, researchers from the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s Rocky Mountain Laboratories and the Robert Koch Institute in Germany, is working on another approach – using cloned antibodies from hantavirus survivors to fend off infections. The team published research in 2018 showing the approach worked in animals, but they were not able to get funding to continue with human trials, in part because resources were diverted to fight the coronavirus pandemic.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">“We are truly at the forefront, at a very important stage of moving to the next phase,” Barría said.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Several other groups, including at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and the Vanderbilt Center for Antibody Therapeutics, are also working on antibody treatments.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Vaccines against so-called Old World hantaviruses have been developed and used, though the World Health Organization says there are no current licensed hantavirus vaccines. But there are new vaccines in the works, including ones aimed to fight the Andes virus. A team lead by Jay Hooper of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases is working on a vaccine that has successfully generated antibodies against the virus in early‑stage human trials.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Hantavirus treatments and vaccines have many hurdles still to clear</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Dr. Paul Bollyky, an infectious disease doctor and researcher at Stanford Medical Center in California, said attracting and sustaining the support needed to produce vaccines and treatments is extremely difficult for rare diseases like hantavirus.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">For one, labs typically don’t have what Bollyky calls the necessary machinery they need to test and validate vaccines and treatments for rare infections. Also, because hantavirus outbreaks are so sporadic and unpredictable, that virus is much harder to study compared with a common germ that regularly circulates, such as the flu.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"That also makes clinical trials in this space super difficult because of the number of people you would have to immunize to protect against one infection,\" he said. \"It’s just impractical.\"</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">And it means there might not be a large or steady market for a vaccine or treatment, because it would be hard to know who is going to be exposed, and when.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Still, it frustrates researchers and doctors who know there are potential treatments that, with enough sustained investment, could be helping people now.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"What happened was a tragedy, but it can happen not only with this but also other diseases,\" Tortosa said, referring to the cruise ship outbreak.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">---<br>Montoya Bryan reported from Albuquerque, New Mexico. AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard in Washington contributed to this story.---<br>The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.  The AP is solely responsible for all content.</p>
AP

Hantavirus Outbreak on Cruise Ship Spurs New Hope for Treatment","description":"A deadly hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship has sparked renewed scientific focus on treatments and vaccines, including a promising drug used for autoimmune disease and the development of antibody‑based therapies.","summary":"The Andes hantavirus has caused fatalities on a cruise ship and in several countries, prompting researchers to test the drug tocilizumab and explore antibody therapies. While progress is slow due to limited funding and rare occurrence, the outbreak underscores the urgent need for effective interventions.","image":"https://dims.apnews.com/dims4/default/1f65cc3/2147483647/strip/true/crop/6240x4160+0+0/resize/1440x960!/format/webp/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.apnews.com%2F1e%2F24%2Fb6e8792884e1e642fbe174465f46%2Fadce3b6a211d479abb0f10aadd970f95","text":"<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Hantavirus outbreak on cruise ship ignites new research efforts</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">When a rare but deadly rodent‑borne virus struck passengers on a cruise ship and seemed to spread, there were no treatments for those who fell ill and no vaccines to protect others.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">That was the case even though it wasn’t a novel germ that the world had never seen before, like the virus that caused the coronavirus pandemic. It was a hantavirus, one of a family of viruses that have been known for decades and are thought to exist around the world.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Teams of researchers, including in Chile, Argentina and the United States, have long been trying to find and develop drugs and vaccines. But because the viruses are relatively rare and don’t spread easily between people, there hasn’t been enough sustained investment by governments, global health groups, or drug companies to pay for the extensive safety and efficacy testing needed to make them available.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Still, there have been promising developments. Researchers published a hint that a drug used for an autoimmune disease may help hantavirus patients fight off the most deadly symptoms.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">They and others hope the attention that the cruise ship outbreak brought to the virus – and concern that hantavirus infections could become more common as a changing climate is expected to increase contact between people and rodents – may bring new momentum to the hunt.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"I hope this situation will help us continue our research and strengthen the collaboration between healthcare workers, the community, and the necessary resources,\" said Dr. Fernando Tortosa of the National University of Río Negro in Patagonia, Argentina, the study’s lead author.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Different species of hantavirus cause different symptoms</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Hantaviruses usually spread when people inhale contaminated residue of rodent droppings. But there are unique species of hantavirus found in different parts of the world that have their own characteristics and can cause different symptoms.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The Andes virus, the germ behind the cruise ship outbreak, is a particular focus of researchers because it is the only hantavirus thought to be able to spread between people in some cases. And while hantavirus infections are rare, they can be extremely deadly.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">“That is why it is a public health problem,” said María Inés Barría, a virologist at the Universidad San Sebastián in Chile who studies hantaviruses.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Three of the 13 likely cases among cruise ship passengers ended in death. Separately, in Chile, the Ministry of Health has confirmed 15 deaths and 42 cases of hantavirus so far this year. Authorities in Argentina have reported 32 deaths and 102 cases since June 2025. In the U.S., 35% of the hantavirus cases since tracking began in 1993 have resulted in death, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">The search for treatments to fight the worst symptoms</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">In Argentina, researchers are testing whether a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis might help fight hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a severe infection caused by both the Andes virus and the Sin Nombre virus, a type of hantavirus found in North America.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The drug tocilizumab tampers down a molecule called IL-6 that triggers damaging inflammation in some autoimmune and other diseases. IL-6 also is a suspect in the inflammatory reaction to the infection, which can rapidly cause lungs to fill with fluid and fail.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Four of five patients in an Argentinian hospital survived after receiving tocilizumab in addition to traditional supportive care for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, the research team reported in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The report is unusual, tracking the first people to receive tocilizumab in an ongoing “compassionate use” study – meaning doctors can use it in patients they deem eligible. Another five who were deemed eligible for tocilizumab but didn’t get it and instead received only standard care died. Two worsened too quickly and the hospital lacked supply for the others, the researchers reported.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">The research team cautioned that the five patients who didn’t receive the drug were sicker and older than those who did. Still, they said tocilizumab warrants further investigation.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Efforts to stop hantavirus have also shown promise</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Barría’s team, which includes Chilean scientists, researchers from the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s Rocky Mountain Laboratories and the Robert Koch Institute in Germany, is working on another approach – using cloned antibodies from hantavirus survivors to fend off infections. The team published research in 2018 showing the approach worked in animals, but they were not able to get funding to continue with human trials, in part because resources were diverted to fight the coronavirus pandemic.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">“We are truly at the forefront, at a very important stage of moving to the next phase,” Barría said.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Several other groups, including at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and the Vanderbilt Center for Antibody Therapeutics, are also working on antibody treatments.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Vaccines against so-called Old World hantaviruses have been developed and used, though the World Health Organization says there are no current licensed hantavirus vaccines. But there are new vaccines in the works, including ones aimed to fight the Andes virus. A team lead by Jay Hooper of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases is working on a vaccine that has successfully generated antibodies against the virus in early‑stage human trials.</p>\n<h2 style=\"font-size:1.5em; margin-top:30px;\">Hantavirus treatments and vaccines have many hurdles still to clear</h2>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Dr. Paul Bollyky, an infectious disease doctor and researcher at Stanford Medical Center in California, said attracting and sustaining the support needed to produce vaccines and treatments is extremely difficult for rare diseases like hantavirus.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">For one, labs typically don’t have what Bollyky calls the necessary machinery they need to test and validate vaccines and treatments for rare infections. Also, because hantavirus outbreaks are so sporadic and unpredictable, that virus is much harder to study compared with a common germ that regularly circulates, such as the flu.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"That also makes clinical trials in this space super difficult because of the number of people you would have to immunize to protect against one infection,\" he said. \"It’s just impractical.\"</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">And it means there might not be a large or steady market for a vaccine or treatment, because it would be hard to know who is going to be exposed, and when.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">Still, it frustrates researchers and doctors who know there are potential treatments that, with enough sustained investment, could be helping people now.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">\"What happened was a tragedy, but it can happen not only with this but also other diseases,\" Tortosa said, referring to the cruise ship outbreak.</p>\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:15px;\">---<br>Montoya Bryan reported from Albuquerque, New Mexico. AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard in Washington contributed to this story.---<br>The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.</p>


Follow us

© 2024 SwissX REDD UK ltd. All Rights Reserved.