BACK TO MAIN  |  ONLINE BOOKSTORE  |  HOW TO ORDER

TWN Info Service on UN Sustainable Development (Jan26/02)
23 January 2026
Third World Network


Rights: MSF sounds alarm on catastrophic impact of US aid cuts
Published in SUNS #10367 dated 23 January 2026

Penang, 22 Jan (Kanaga Raja) — One year on, the harmful consequences of the Trump administration’s drive to reshape United States foreign assistance have only just started to unfold, the medical humanitarian organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) warned on 21 January.

Witnessing the immense toll of the US actions throughout 2025, MSF said that the human costs have been catastrophic, with clinics shutting their doors, lifesaving medicines being stranded at ports, and health workers losing their jobs.

One year ago on 21 January, the Trump administration issued a series of executive actions that upended global health and humanitarian programmes around the world and severely damaged global cooperation and solidarity on these issues, MSF said in a press release.

“While the world is still reeling from these cuts to aid, it’s already clear that they were merely the Trump administration’s opening salvo in reshaping global health and humanitarian assistance,” said Mihir Mankad, Global Health Advocacy and Policy Director at MSF USA.

“Different administrations have always had varying priorities and agendas when it comes to global health, but what we are seeing now is a startling turn away from the fundamental principle that providing basic humanitarian care, fighting epidemics, malnutrition, and vaccine-preventable diseases and supporting the world’s most marginalized communities are worthy causes,” Mankad added.

Though MSF said that it does not accept US government funding, over the course of 2025 its teams saw the devastating impact of the US government’s retreat from the communities that it serves.

For instance, it said that in Somalia, aid disruptions caused shipments of therapeutic milk to stop for months. The number of severely malnourished children admitted to MSF-supported facilities rose from 1,937 in the first nine months of 2024 to 3,355 in the same period in 2025.

In Baidoa Bay Regional Hospital alone, deaths among severely malnourished children increased by 44 percent in the first half of 2025, compared to the same period in 2024, with 47 percent of deaths occurring within two days of a child’s arrival due to the severity of their condition, it added.

At Renk County Hospital in South Sudan, funding cuts abruptly forced an aid organization to stop supporting 54 hospital staff in June, leaving severe gaps in maternity care, said MSF.

The hospital’s MSF-run pediatric ward received more newborns with critically low birthweights and other needs due to a lack of medical care during pregnancy and childbirth. In response, MSF began supporting the maternity ward in September 2025.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the dismantling of USAID led to the cancellation of an order for 100,000 post-rape kits, which included medication for preventing HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

“MSF teams see extremely high levels of sexual violence in DRC – we provided care to 28,000 survivors in the first half of 2025 alone – and made unplanned purchases of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) for HIV in response to supply gaps in North Kivu.”

These examples – and countless others over the past year – signify more than budgetary cuts; they represent a fundamental shift in how the United States engages with and imagines its role in the world, said MSF.

Last September, the Trump administration released its America First Global Health Strategy, which positions the US to play a dramatically diminished role in global health, it noted.

The strategy is narrow and shortsighted, pivoting US policy toward a misguided and likely ineffective approach to outbreak response, MSF emphasized.

“On key areas where the US has long been a global leader – sexual and reproductive health, nutrition, and non- communicable diseases – the strategy is silent.”

To begin implementing the America First Global Health Strategy, the administration has been rapidly negotiating a series of bilateral agreements with governments receiving US foreign health assistance, MSF noted.

These agreements will form the backbone of a new approach to global health – one that is openly transactional and negotiated behind closed doors, without input from civil society or the communities whose health and well-being are most at stake, it suggested.

The administration claims this approach encourages country ownership and strengthens sovereignty, it said.

Yet, the US government has simultaneously been pressuring recipient governments to restrict access to services along ideological lines – particularly for marginalized populations and in sexual and reproductive health.

“The claim that these agreements advance national ownership rings hollow when, at the same time, you have State Department officials openly telling countries that global health assistance is contingent on their willingness to strike a minerals deal with the US,” said Mankad.

“Global health assistance should be guided by public health need, sound medical evidence, and epidemiology -not crude political calculations, economic extraction, or ideological coercion,” he stated.

The cuts of 2025 were devastating, but what is emerging now is a wholesale re-imagining of why and how the US provides aid and engages with the world at large on health and humanitarian issues, MSF concluded. +

 


BACK TO MAIN  |  ONLINE BOOKSTORE  |  HOW TO ORDER