rotating globe
7 Jul 2026


Health

Delhi air turns toxic at 386 AQI

Delhi air quality hits toxic level of 386 AQI

Delhi woke up on Saturday to a thick blanket of smog that reduced visibility and left the air tasting of dust and…

Tuberculosis incidence falling in India by 21 a year

India cuts TB 21%, ahead of world trend, WHO

India has made impressive progress in reducing tuberculosis (TB), cutting new cases by around 21% between 2015 and 2024 — nearly twice…

Eli Lillys weight loss therapy Mounjaro tops India drug sales by value in October

Mounjaro becomes India’s top-selling drug by value

Eli Lilly’s obesity and diabetes drug, Mounjaro, became India’s highest-selling medicine by value in October, marking a significant rise in demand for…

Henna Dye Shows Promise in Healing Liver Fibrosis

Henna Dye Promises to Heal Liver Fibrosis

A natural pigment used for centuries in henna art may soon find a place in medicine. Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University, Japan,…

Delhi Conducts Cloud Seeding Trial to Curb Pollution

Delhi Conducts Cloud-Seeding Trial to Curb Pollution

Delhi’s war against toxic air took to the skies on Tuesday as scientists from IIT-Kanpur launched the city’s first full-scale cloud-seeding experiment,…

Caribbean Reels as Hurricane Melissa Claims 7 Lives in Jamaica

Caribbean Reels as Hurricane Melissa Claims 7 Lives in Jamaica

Jamaica is battling widespread devastation after Hurricane Melissa, a powerful Category 5 storm, made landfall late Monday night, unleashing catastrophic winds, flash…

Andhra Odisha on Alert as Cyclone Montha Intensifies

Andhra, Odisha on Alert as Cyclone Montha Intensifies

As Cyclone Montha accelerates towards India’s east coast, state authorities in Andhra Pradesh and Odisha have activated full disaster-response mechanisms, issuing bulletins…

Modi Shah Endorse Nitish as NDAs Bihar CM Face

Modi, Shah Endorse Nitish as NDA’s Bihar CM

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah have reaffirmed their support for Chief Minister Nitish Kumar as the National…

Cold Showers Can Refresh But Theyre Not Risk Free

Cold Showers Can Refresh, But They’re Not Risk-Free

Cold showers may be the latest viral wellness trend, but a wave of online warnings has sparked anxiety, especially among men in…

Sunfeast Ad Pulled After ‘Misleading Claim Sparks Backlash

Sunfeast Ad Pulled After ‘Misleading’ Claim Sparks Backlash

The power of the ‘honest’ speech can move mountains in no time. This is how, in just a few hours, a short…

About This Category

Health News That Goes Beyond the Press Release

Health reporting at its worst is a recycled advisory or a pharmaceutical press release dressed up as news. This section tries to do something different — to cover health developments the way any serious beat deserves: with sourcing, context, and a clear sense of what changed and why it matters.

India's health story is more complicated than most headlines suggest. The same country that has produced a genuine first-of-its-kind antibiotic — Wockhardt's Zaynich, a fully indigenous compound developed against drug-resistant bacteria — is also an Ebola alert away from activating surveillance systems that have been dormant for years. Covering both with the same rigour is the job.

Pharmaceutical Milestones and Drug Policy

India manufactures roughly 20% of the world's generic medicines, but original drug research has historically been thin. That is slowly changing, and this section tracks it. Approvals matter not just as corporate news but as indicators of where India's pharmaceutical R&D is actually going — what disease areas are attracting investment, what regulatory pathways are being used, and what gaps in global medicine supply Indian companies are now positioned to fill.

Outbreak Reporting

When cases appear — Ebola in Bengaluru, Hantavirus on a cruise ship, an El Niño-linked disease surge — this section publishes what is confirmed by health authorities and not what is being speculated on social media. The WHO risk classifications, ICMR advisories, and state health department alerts are the primary sources. Outbreak coverage exists to inform, and the line between informing and alarming is one this section takes seriously.

Research That Changes the Picture

Not every study deserves coverage. The ones that do are those that revise something previously assumed to be settled — like research confirming alcohol is linked to over 20 medical conditions, including several where "moderate drinking" was long considered safe. Or findings on toxin accumulation in high-puff vapes, a product category that arrived in the market faster than the science around it. These stories are covered when the evidence base is strong, not when the headline is convenient.

Climate as a Health Issue

El Niño isn't just a weather event. It is a driver of vector-borne disease spread, food and water insecurity, and heat-related illness at a population scale. The UN's warnings on the current cycle belong in health coverage because that is where their consequences will eventually be felt — in hospital admission rates, in outbreak risk maps, in mortality data for vulnerable populations. This section covers climate-health links not as opinion but as epidemiology.

The Health section does not give medical advice. It reports health news — accurately, quickly, and without institutional cheerleading for any government body, pharmaceutical company, or health authority.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. What does the Health section at The Summary cover?

Pharmaceutical approvals, disease outbreaks, WHO and government health advisories, peer-reviewed research with clear public health implications, and the climate and environmental developments that drive disease risk. The coverage spans India-specific stories and global events where the consequences eventually reach Indian readers.

Q2. Does The Summary cover global outbreaks even when they haven't reached India?

Yes, when WHO has formally classified the risk or when the outbreak trajectory makes spread plausible. The Congo Ebola outbreak was covered before the Bengaluru alert — because the international picture is how editors and readers alike should be tracking the timeline, not just reacting once a case arrives domestically.

Q3. How does The Summary handle pharmaceutical news — isn't that just corporate coverage?

Drug approvals are covered for what they mean clinically and for public health, not as company milestones. Zaynich's approval was reported in the context of antimicrobial resistance — a global health crisis — not as a Wockhardt earnings story. Where a drug matters, the coverage explains why. Where it doesn't, it isn't covered.

Q4. Does the section cover lifestyle health or wellness content?

No. Research findings are covered when they carry genuine clinical or public health significance — not because they're trending. There are no diet tips, fitness advice, or wellness features here. Readers looking for that content are on the wrong page; readers looking for what the science actually says are in the right place.

Q5. How fast does The Summary publish during a health emergency?

Stories go up as confirmed information becomes available from official sources. During the Bengaluru Ebola alert, for instance, the priority was publishing what health authorities actually confirmed — not racing to be first with a worst-case interpretation. Speed matters, but not more than accuracy on a story where public anxiety can cause real harm.

Q6. Is the health reporting accessible to non-medical readers?

Yes, consistently. Technical terms are defined on first use, clinical findings are explained in plain language, and regulatory or governmental processes are given context. The goal is a reader who knows nothing about antimicrobial resistance leaving a story on Zaynich understanding exactly why it matters — without the reporting being dumbed down for them.