SDG 3 Newsletter: Infectious Diseases

We had huge interest in contributing to this Springer Nature SDG3 Newsletter on infectious diseases! Read on for news & opinion updates, videos and Q&A interviews on meningitis, dengue virus, ebola, malaria, one health, health policy and more.
SDG 3 Newsletter: Infectious Diseases
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What are we learning from the UK's Meningitis B outbreak?

An outbreak of Meningitis B rippled through the UK's student population in March. Have we learnt anything about how the public react to infectious disease outbreaks since Covid? UK readers, learn how to check if you're vaccinated.  

Regional bias in research on land use change, ecosystem restoration and zoonotic disease risk

Research has long shown that land use change can impact zoonotic disease transmission, but there is a regional bias across the literature leaving glaring gaps where research is needed most, in countries with high levels of land use change and high risk of zoonotic disease infection. 

SDG3 and Me Video Series: Albert Osterhaus

Virologist and Editor-in-Chief of One Health Outlook, Professor Albert Osterhaus, discusses his research on virus discovery, particularly animal viruses that cross the species barrier to humans. Learn how his work supports intervention strategies such as new vaccines, which are key to achieving SDG 3 target 3.3 by 2030.

Lightbox view of the cover for Dengue Virus Evolution: From Emergence to a Global Health Crisis

Book Q&A: Dengue Virus Evolution: From Emergence to a Global Health Crisis

As climate change has worsened, so has dengue. But there’s hope. In this blog, we hear from Dr Duarte dos Santos and Dr Giovanetti about dengue virus, their book's connection to SDG 3 and the next steps forward.

Advances in infectious disease diagnostics – how can they help us achieve SDG3.3?

Diagnostic tools for infectious diseases have advanced dramatically in recent years. How important are these tools in achieving SDG3.3, and which options should we invest in? Discover more in this blog.

Scientist preparing to view a blood sample under a microscope in laboratory for medical testing.

SN BEN, SDG 3 & SDG 10: Ebola

Members of Springer Nature’s Black Employee Network (SN BEN) explore how Ebola virus disease disproportionately affects African communities, and how collective action with charities and public awareness can help destigmatise Ebola and advance good health (SDG 3) and reduced inequalities (SDG 10).

Lightbox view of the cover for BMC Global and Public Health

BMC Global and Public Health: Infectious Diseases and SDG 3 

As global health is called into focus, don't miss this blog championing some of BMC Global and Public Health's key infectious disease publications. 

Nature, BMC & Discover Collections: health policy, digital and personalised medicine 

Researchers, don’t miss these open collections. Two blogs from Nature Communications and npj journals showcase collections focusing on health policy and digital medicine. Discover Nano's Collection focuses on the application of nanomedicines in the treatment of infectious diseases. Meanwhile, BMC Infectious Diseases calls for submissions to Collections on personalised medicine, HIV, malaria, and tropical vector‑borne diseases. 

Documenting Disruption: Harm Reduction Research on Infectious Disease is Urgently Needed

Global health gains are being undone by aid cuts, conflict and political retreat. Harm Reduction Journal is calling for content to document the impact on infectious disease.


In other news...

A call to action from the Global Think-tank on Steatotic Liver Disease

SLD is no longer an emerging issue. It is an established component of the global metabolic public health threat. The question is not whether solutions exist, but whether they will be implemented at scale. Learn more about the authors' publication in this blog. 

European Public Health Week 4-8 May

Want to write a blog about your research? Wish to highlight a public health cause close to your heart? Contact us last-minute to contribute a blog for our campaign, which goes live next week! Email campaign lead Alex Goodridge at alex.goodridge@springernature.com 


Get involved!

If you would like to be involved with our SDG 3 initiatives, contact me or Virginia MercerFollow me, Alice Coe, on Research Communities to be notified of future SDG 3 newsletters.

With special thanks to this newsletter's 21 contributors: Anthony Armenta, Freyja Austin, Binta Bah, Vivian Bai,  Emma Brode, Emma Campbell, Rebecca Chen, Ben Cranfield, India Sapsed-Foster, Louis Gautier, Dr Marta Giovanetti, Sophie Gray, Natasha Hirst, Amy Joint, Abiola Lawal, Dr Jeffrey Lazarus, Virginia Mercer, Dr Claudia Nunes Duarte dos Santos, Prof Albert Osterhaus, Will Shadbolt and Rebecca Shen

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Public Health
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Public Health
Infectious Diseases
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Microbiology > Medical Microbiology > Infectious Diseases
Epidemiology
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Biomedical Research > Epidemiology
Global Health
Humanities and Social Sciences > Society > Sociology > Health, Medicine and Society > Global Health

Related Collections

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The Enhanced Games: Human Enhancement, Risk, and Harm Reduction in a Post-Doping Era

Debates about performance-enhancing substances in sport have historically been framed through prohibition, anti-doping enforcement, and ideals of fairness, natural ability, and sport integrity. The proposed Enhanced Games – an international sporting event that explicitly permits the use of performance-enhancing substances – have been presented as a profound rupture in how sport, medicine, and society understand human limits, bodily risk, and enhancement. This collection asks what it means to govern, reduce harm, and protect wellbeing in a world where the use of performance-enhancement substances is increasingly visible, normalised, and commercialised.

The Enhanced Games position themselves as rejecting prohibition, reframing enhancement as positive when transparent and regulated, and describe it as technologically inevitable. In doing so, the Games propose a departure from paternalistic-type interventions in favour of autonomy and science. However, the goals of the Enhanced Games stretch far beyond the sporting arena into the supplement and pharmaceutical industries, sparking concerns regarding competing and conflicting interests. Their scale, visibility, and commercial profile have drawn significant public attention, making questions about governance, enhancement, health, fairness, and harm increasingly urgent to address.

Importantly, this collection does not advocate for or against the Enhanced Games. Instead, it aims to provide a forum for scholarly discussion of the ethical, clinical, regulatory, and social questions raised by this proposal. Given the limited empirical literature currently examining such models of openly permitted enhancement, contributions both supporting and critically challenging this idea are particularly needed. This Collection is explicitly dedicated to examining the Enhanced Games as a social, ethical, public health, and harm reduction phenomenon.

Beyond the existence of human enhancement, the Enhanced Games themselves raise urgent questions:

  • Could an openly permitted and regulated model of performance enhancement reduce or mitigate harms associated with the current prohibition of enhancement drugs in sport?
  • What are the strongest arguments against such an approach, and how do these concerns compare with the potential benefits claimed by proponents?
  • Who bears responsibility for risk in environments where pharmacological enhancement is permitted?
  • What does autonomy look like within the Enhanced Games model?
  • What constitutes informed consent in high-stakes, financially sponsored performance contexts?
  • Can harm reduction meaningfully coexist with elite competition and commercial sport promoted as spectacle?
  • Are the vast monetary rewards offered the Enhanced Games for athletes that break ‘world records’ a coercive offer?
  • Are there differences between public perceptions of the Games and the realities of athlete participation, and how might both shape decision-making among athletes and spectators?
  • Are athletes vulnerable within the Enhanced Games model?
  • What lessons might this model offer for broader enhancement practices beyond sport?

The Harm Reduction Journal invites interdisciplinary contributions that critically engage with the Enhanced Games, situating them within wider enhancement cultures, drug use practices, regulatory systems, and harm reduction frameworks. The legitimacy of the Enhanced Games as an alternative model for harm reduction remains an open question. Lived-living experience perspectives on enhancement and risk are specifically encouraged.

This Collection aims to provide the first dedicated harm reduction–focused scholarly examination of the Enhanced Games. The Editors seek to promote evidence-based analysis and discussion of policy, sport governance, and public health responses to emerging enhancement models.

Scope of the Special Issue

We welcome empirical, theoretical, policy, and commentary papers addressing topics including, but not limited to:

1. Enhanced Games–Embedded Research and Case Studies

Empirical papers drawing directly on the Enhanced Games, affiliated teams, athletes, or operational settings, including, where ethically appropriate and critically engaged:

  • Biomedical, performance, and health monitoring data from Enhanced Games athletes
  • Case studies of elite athletes using enhancement drugs within enhancement-permissive environments
  • Governance, safety, and medical oversight models implemented by the Enhanced Games
  • Ethical and operational challenges encountered in practice

2. Comparative Studies, Trials, and Harm Analysis

Research examining empirical evidence that may support or challenge the implementation of the Enhanced Games, including quantitative, qualitative, mixed-methods, and trial-based studies that compare:

  • Enhanced Games athletes using enhancement drugs vs elite athletes operating under prohibition-based regimes
  • Elite athletes using enhancement drugs vs non-athletes using similar substances
  • Consumers vs non-consumers in comparable populations (e.g., fitness, strength, or aesthetic domains)

3. Commentary, Policy, and Lived-Living Experience

Analytical and reflective contributions examining:

  • Ethical, legal, and public health implications of the Enhanced Games
  • Athlete autonomy, consent, coercion, and commercialisation
  • Lived and living experience of athletes and others who use enhancement drugs
  • Perspectives from clinicians, harm reduction workers, regulators, and policymakers
  • Implications for future sport governance, drug policy, and harm reduction frameworks

This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being.

All submissions in this collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Where necessary, Guest Editors will ensure peer-review is provided by those unaffiliated with the Enhanced Games in any way and will ensure diversity is strongly considered with regards to gender, ethnicity, geography and lived/living experience. All manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (APC). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit Harm Reduction Journal's Fees and Funding page, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Dec 16, 2026

Repairable damage: harm reduction and US policy

Recent shifts in US policy and the approach to public health have placed renewed pressure on communities that already face significant health and social challenges. Policy decisions increasingly prioritize criminalization or abstinence-based strategies over interventions that have been consistently shown to reduce harm. These choices reflect a broader trend of sidelining empirical evidence, with real-world consequences for public health.

As a result, morbidity and mortality have increased among people who use drugs, experience homelessness, or who are involved in the US criminal justice system. Rates of preventable illness and infectious disease are also rising. Rhetoric and stigma further undermine public trust and discourage engagement with health services, disproportionately affecting marginalized populations.

Harm Reduction Journal has commissioned a collection of articles to highlight how evidence-based harm reduction strategies – grounded in science, dignity and practical outcomes – can inform more effective, humane public health responses.

This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being, SDG 5, Gender Equality, SDG 10, Reduced Inequalities, and SDG 16, Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions.

All submissions in this collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Aug 18, 2026