Credits: AIDA.com and Canva
Norovirus Outbreak: In a globe-hopping cruise ship, more than 100 guests and crew reported being sick with norovirus outbreak. As per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the 21st outbreak of gastrointestinal disease on a cruise ship monitored by the agency this year.
AIDA Cruises alerted the CDC to the outbreak aboard the AIDAdiva on November 30, confirmed the agency. So far, the outbreak has impacted 95 passengers out of the 2,007 onboard, and 6 out of 640 staff members, noted CDC.
The passengers also suffered symptoms like diarrhea and vomiting on voyage, which had begun on November 10 and is slated to last through December 16. The cruise line responded by stepping up cleaning and disinfection efforts, separating sick passengers and crew from others, working closely with the CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program, and collecting stool samples for testing, the agency said.
“Seasonal illness peaks between November and April, and the AIDAdiva report mirrors what we’re seeing on land,” AIDA told People. “We’ve increased hygiene measures onboard, and cases are already declining.”
The Independent reports that AIDAdiva is currently midway through its 133-day voyage from Hamburg, Germany, with planned stops across North America. According to CruiseMapper, the ship is now in Costa Rica.
This outbreak is the 21st recorded this year on a CDC-regulated cruise ship, most of them caused by norovirus. That’s higher than the recent yearly totals: 18 outbreaks in 2024 and 14 in 2023. While cruises are often linked with norovirus, only a small share of overall cases actually occur at sea. In most years, ship outbreaks simply mirror seasonal spikes happening on land.
Officials say it’s too soon to say why numbers are up.
“Although cruise ship outbreaks have been higher than in pre-pandemic years, we don’t yet know if this is a lasting trend,” the CDC told USA TODAY in April. They added that a newly dominant norovirus strain is driving many land-based outbreaks this season, and ships usually follow the same pattern.
Norovirus is the leading cause of vomiting, diarrhea, and foodborne illness in the U.S. It triggers acute gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the stomach or intestines. Most people recover within one to three days, but they can remain contagious even after symptoms improve.
The virus spreads easily through contaminated food, surfaces, or close contact. Regular handwashing, proper cooking and cleaning of produce and shellfish, and routine disinfection of surfaces are key steps to prevent infection.
Often called the “stomach flu” or “stomach bug,” norovirus is not related to influenza. It causes acute gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the stomach and intestines. Most people recover within 1 to 3 days, but the virus can still be contagious for several days afterward. In 2025 alone, the CDC has recorded 19 gastrointestinal outbreaks on cruise ships, 14 of which were caused by norovirus. The CDC notes that such illnesses spread quickly in enclosed environments like cruise ships.
Norovirus symptoms usually appear 12 to 48 hours after exposure. While diarrhea, vomiting, nausea, and stomach cramps remain common, this outbreak has shown some unusual signs:
Credits: PA Media
A health minister is standing down at the age of 53 from her role in government after she was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer. Ashley Dalton, has been diagnosed with incurable metastatic breast cancer and wants to continue her role as the MP for West Lancashire because her work is "central" to her identity. However, she would stand down from her role as a health minister because she is concerned that she will become too sick to fulfil "any of the roles I love" if she is to continue to serve the designation.
Also Read: 3 US Hospitals Rank in the Top 10 List of World's Best Hospitals
Writing in The Times, she said, "I have to consider what reasonable adjustments I might make. Before being made a government minister, I was elected by the people of West Lancashire to represent them as their MP. My priority has to be to do that job. But to continue to serve my constituents as they deserve, whilst adequately managing the side effects of chemo as well as caring for my elderly mum, I must make reasonable adjustments to my workload. The alternative would likely be more regular trips to Liverpool Aintree, making myself sick and unable to fulfil any of the roles I love.”
She writes that she is currently undergoing chemotherapy treatment. She also writes that cancer is different for every patient and that this is not a "homogenous disease".
She also writes that while anyone who hears of chemotherapy thinks of the absolute worse, with IV drip hanging in their arm, in hospital and bald. However, she clarifies that this is not the case with her. "But, for now at least, my treatment is not like that. You likely wouldn’t be able to guess I am undergoing major medical intervention as I stand in front of you. I take five tablets twice a day for two weeks, with a week of rest as part of a three-week cycle," she writes.
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She also says that her disease is stable and she is also well aware that she will never beat the cancer. When people ask her when will she know that she has beaten her cancer, she says, "when I have died of something else."
When Dalton was diagnosed with metastatic — stage 4 — breast cancer, she was told, gently but firmly, that support was available. That she could step back. That she could give up work.
“But the biggest mistake anyone could make about me and my cancer is to write me off,” she has said.
For some, stepping away from work is the right and necessary choice. “But just as cancer is not homogeneous,” Dalton writes, “neither are we people living with cancer.” Her diagnosis did not mark the end of her public life. Instead, it sharpened her sense of purpose — particularly in shaping how government responds to serious illness.
As a health minister in the UK government, Dalton led the development of the National Cancer Plan — a sweeping strategy aimed not only at improving survival rates but transforming life after diagnosis.
Beyond what she describes as “the fastest rate of improvement in health outcomes for cancer patients in a century,” the plan is designed to save 320,000 lives over its course. But the statistic she seems most proud of is less numerical and more human.
“What I’m so proud of is the support the plan gives to people living with cancer not just to survive, but to live, and to live well. To work, to have a family, to thrive. To exist beyond the diagnosis.”
It is policy shaped by lived experience. Dalton has insisted that cancer patients remain central to decision-making — “because there was a cancer patient at the head of the plan.”
The National Cancer Plan places stronger emphasis on early diagnosis, faster treatment pathways, and equitable access to care. But it also pushes for something often overlooked: reasonable adjustments in workplaces, better psychosocial support, and a recognition that patients are not defined solely by their illness.
In just 12 months, Dalton led work on three major national strategies:
“These aren’t just words on paper,” she wrote. “They will make real and positive differences to the lives of people in our communities.”
The HIV Action Plan builds on efforts to reduce new transmissions and tackle stigma, while improving access to testing and treatment. The Men’s Health Strategy addresses disparities in life expectancy, mental health support, and late diagnosis of conditions like prostate cancer. Together, they reflect a broader push toward preventive, inclusive healthcare.
Dalton’s approach has consistently centred lived realities — from men reluctant to seek help, to people navigating long-term treatment, to families balancing work and care.
Launching the Cancer Plan on World Cancer Day was a professional milestone. It was also deeply personal.
“Advocating for reasonable adjustments to allow cancer patients to thrive meant that to continue thriving myself, I have to consider what reasonable adjustments I might make.”
Before becoming a minister, Dalton was elected to represent West Lancashire as a Member of Parliament. That responsibility, she says, remains her priority. But chemotherapy side effects and caring for her elderly mother forced her to confront limits.
“The alternative would likely be more regular trips to Liverpool Aintree, making myself sick and unable to fulfil any of the roles I love.”
In a difficult decision, she chose to step down from her ministerial role and return to the back benches — not as a retreat, but as a recalibration.
“For that reason, I have taken the difficult — but I think correct — decision to return to the back benches.”
Dalton is clear: she is not leaving politics. She is not relinquishing her voice.
“I’m not stepping away from public life, the government, or my work as a politician,” she has said. “I’m taking the steps necessary to continue to represent the people of West Lancashire… and I will continue to use my voice to fight for the rights of cancer patients to live as well as they are able for as long as possible.”
Credits: Canva
A list by Newsweek features World's Best Hospital list in 2026. The list analyzed hospitals across 32 countries, including Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.
Also Read: Ashley Dalton Diagnosed With Incurable Breast Cancer Stands Down From Her Position
These countries were also selected using multiple comparability criteria, which also included:
Out of the 250 hospitals listed by Newsweek, using data from Statista, the hospitals in the United States hold four ranks in the top 10 list.
Each hospital was assessed and scored using four key data sources: recommendations from medical professionals—including doctors, hospital administrators and other healthcare experts—hospital quality metrics, existing patient experience data, and Statista’s Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) Implementation Survey. PROMs are standardized, validated questionnaires completed by patients to evaluate their own functional well-being and overall quality of life.
The 2026 methodology builds on previous editions of the ranking, with Philippines and Turkey included for the first time. This year’s evaluation places greater emphasis on hospital quality metrics, integrates newly available accreditation, safety, quality and patient experience data from multiple countries, and further strengthens the importance of PROMs through increased weighting and an updated Implementation Survey.
More than 2,500 hospitals were evaluated globally, with special distinction awarded to the top 250 institutions. The five highest-ranked hospitals are: Mayo Clinic-Rochester (Rochester, Minnesota); Toronto General-University Health Network (Toronto); Cleveland Clinic (Cleveland); Karolinska Universitetssjukhuset (Stockholm); and Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston).
Access to reliable and transparent data can play a crucial role in guiding healthcare decisions. This ranking aims to serve as a practical reference for patients, families and healthcare leaders seeking trusted insight into some of the world’s most respected medical institutions.
| Rank | Hospitals | Countries |
| 1 | Mayo Clinic - Rochester | United States |
| 2 | University Health Network - Toronto General Hospital | Canada |
| 3 | Cleveland Clinic | United States |
| 4 | Karolinska Universitetssjukhuset | Sweden |
| 5 | Massachusetts General Hospital | United States |
| 6 | The Johns Hopkins Hospital | United States |
| 7 | Sheba Medical Center | Israel |
| 8 | Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin | Germany |
| 9 | Universitätsspital Zürich | Switzerland |
| 10 | Singapore General Hospital (SGH) | Singapore |
Of the 250 list of hospitals, India made it to the list with four hospitals. Medanta - The Medicity ranked at 110, All India Institute of Medical Sciences - Delhi ranked at 115, PGIMER - Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research ranked at 214 and CMC Vellore - Town Campus at 245.
Credits: FSSAI
Just ahead of Holi, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) seized fake paneer near Noida, along with 1,400 kg of fake khoya in Jhansi, and 400kg of expired ghee. The FSSAI started a series of raids in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan ahead of the festivities, when the demands of these food items are increased. Health and Me previously reported on the FSSAI raids in Kanpur where oil, rotten dates, and sweets were found to be adulterated.
FSSAI on 27 February posted a video where officials could be seen disposing of a large quantity of adulterated paneer at a landfill site. FSSAI noted that the consignment was intercepted late at night at Jewar Toll Plaza on the Yamuna Expressway. The sample was seized and sent for laboratory testing, while rest of the stock was destroyed immediately.
From time and again news of adulterated paneer have made headline. Fake paneer is an adulterated, non-dairy, or low-quality substitute made using starch, hydrogenated oil (vanaspati), urea, detergent, or ammonium sulphate to mimic real milk cheese. It is found in street foods and local markets, and feels rubbery.
How to test fake paneer? The easy way to test is to use iodine on it, and if it turns blue or black, it means it is fake.
In another series of raid by FSSAI in Jhansi, officials confiscated nearly 1,400kg of adulterated khoya. This too happened as a part of a late night operation.
A mobile laboratory unit detected starch adulteration and fungal contamination in the product. The khoya confiscated was worth 3.5 lakh and was destroyed on the spot after inspectors determined that they were unsafe for consumption.
In the images shared by FSSAI, it could be clearly seen that mould-infested khoya had been dumped and discarded.
FSSAI on March 1 raided in Salumbar district of the Indian state of Rajasthan, where authorities confiscated nearly 400 kg of expired and contaminated food items. This included ghee, cooking oil, tea leaves and spices. Samples from several shops were collected and sent for tests.
Not too long ago, Health and Me reported food contamination from Indore's Bhagirathpura, the same place which was the epicentre of water contamination that took many lives. Health and me also reported the news of Horlicks adulteration in Odisha.
In another news, bacteria were found in Amul milk packages, along with Mother Dairy and Country Delight. Eggoz too landed in a controversy, when a YouTube video went viral claiming that the sample tested positive for Nitrofuran.
MicrobioTx, a Bengaluru-based gut health startup tested samples from urban populations across 9 Indian states and 14 cities and found that people are significantly exposed to pesticides, insecticides, antibiotics, steroidal growth regulators, and forever chemicals.
The independent study found:
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