Alex Kong
alexckong.bsky.social
Alex Kong
@alexckong.bsky.social
1.4K followers 570 following 36 posts
PhD International Health, Johns Hopkins PharmD, University of Kansas Former “radical lunatic” working to prevent malaria deaths at USAID. Access to medicine/antimicrobial resistance are my jam. Views/opinions are my own.
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Thanks for reading, stay tuned for resumption of more regular musings on the state of global health and access to health technologies/anguished memes and re-posts, and feel free to reach out if you have any questions!
I'm excited to support today's launch of Maisha ACT, which I was legitimately astonished to learn tracks 80% of antimalarial consumption in sub-Saharan Africa. Info on private sector use is critical, but has been opaque, for understanding antimalarial drug resistance.

maishameds.org/news/maisha-...
Maisha ACT: Africa's Largest Antimalarial Tracker Goes Live
Maisha ACT covers 80% of antimalarial use across 40+ countries, delivering unprecedented visibility into the private and public sectors.
maishameds.org
Dusting off my Bluesky to happily share that I've joined Maisha Meds: a start-up I was introduced to early in my (too) short time at USAID. MM equips 5k+ pharmacies in Africa with point-of-sale software, develops innovative programs to increase access to meds, and sheds light on critical data gaps.
At least we have herd immuni—funding for scientific resear—non-partisan public hea—support of evidence-backed interven—
Reposted by Alex Kong
Telling researchers to keep doing the work & adapt while weathering the storm ain't gonna cut it. American higher education simply cannot survive this systematic dismantling and attack. There's no weathering a category 5 hurricane. Many will simply leave if this continues
www.wsj.com/health/healt...
Johns Hopkins Plans Staff Layoffs After $800 Million Grant Cuts
Local and international health research efforts are already winding down as the university braces for even more potential cuts.
www.wsj.com
Reposted by Alex Kong
DOCUMENT DESTRUCTION:

My reporter Brett Murphy obtained a remarkable directive to folks at USAID: Empty the safes with the classified and personnel records and then,

"Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break."
Reposted by Alex Kong
if you've had an NIH grant terminated, I want to hear about it. Signal: katherinejwu.12
Chris Coons [D-Del.], "...says even some Republicans have been shocked by the scope of cuts. “‘We wanted to squeeze the ‘woke’ out of it. We wanted a little reshaping, but we didn’t mean to starve children’,” was their reaction, he says."

Um.
Reposted by Alex Kong
Rubio terminated 5800 USAID contracts – more than 90% of its foreign aid programs – in defiance of the courts.

Here’s a list of just some of the lifesaving awards that were terminated. Nearly all were Congressionally mandated. They’ve saved millions of lives. 🧵
Every day we are finding a new way to trumpet that we are not reliable partners: for development assistance, medical guidance, geopolitical support, clinical trials, higher education funding, and (even before these PubMed scares) preserving decades of research and data. Our word means nothing now.
Reposted by Alex Kong
So.

It has officially happened. I have been officially let go from my position at CDC. I wasn’t a probationary employee. I had stellar performance reviews every year.

I’ll be ok. But please understand that many worked HARD to get into these positions and were doing great public health work.
Especially when COVID rapid tests have only gone up in price and when there are multiple circulating respiratory illnesses. Lowering the barrier for individuals to test can help people to make more informed decisions on the risk they might pose to others at a very delicate time.
This paragraph from @washingtonpost.com's reporting on Trump potentially ending free COVID tests is factually incorrect.

According to CDC wastewater data, COVID levels are currently HIGH.

COVID still causes serious illness and death for too many. People still need free tests!
This feels like the perfect storm for an “n-demic” to rival the “tripledemic” of COVID/flu/RSV of the past.

We’re going to have to brush up on our Greek number prefixes real fast.
Every day we weaken our health system more, and we’re gearing up to lift voices who have built followings from their “let ‘er rip” mentalities to handling COVID-19. We’re cutting ourselves off from collaborative health efforts by leaving WHO, and encouraging the efflux of scientific/health experts.
I genuinely wonder how quickly this gov will reverse course on health when the diseases USAID/CDC scientists prevented/contained arrive, vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks spread, and people become more susceptible to severe infection bc they can’t afford their routine meds. Maybe all at once.
Reposted by Alex Kong
It is really short-sighted and stupid to be gutting public health and outbreak surveillance capacity right now:
- H5N1 nationwide - uncontrolled
- TB in Kansas - largest U.S outbreak
- Measles in Texas - Expanding
- Seasonal flu - Worst in 15 years
- Pertussis - outbreaks in multiple states.
Reposted by Alex Kong
With an anti-science conspiracy theorist leading the US Department of Health and Human Services, preventative action is critical to protecting your health and the health of your community.

A good place to start would be getting back into the practice of regularly wearing a mask.
Reposted by Alex Kong
I am worried about:
- the future of vaccines
- the unchecked spread of bird flu
- the suppression of public health voices
- the rolling back HIV care access
- the assault on science and researchers
Today more than ever, I am worried about these things and the threat to our collective health.
The devastation of USAID has been called a pilot: to see how completely and rapidly agencies and departments can be dismantled. I hope that the courts can prevent a total loss. There are still exceptional, good people working there. But they, and the people who depend on them, need our support.
Cutting funding and our workforce could mean that resistance will spiral out of control, and millions of lives will be lost. No one believes foreign aid is perfect. But swiftly razing rather than reforming USAID upends the "journey to self-reliance" the agency promoted in Trump's first term.
Before I was furloughed, I was working to support efforts to combat antimalarial drug resistance (AMDR). The disruptive impact of COVID-19, AMDR, and stagnant funding have contributed to a worrisome flat-lining of progress in lowering the global malaria death rate. Malaria programs need more money.