This Article supports SDG 3 by providing robust evidence of health-care financing policies deployed by 15 countries representing all WHO regions and offering an overview and illustrative examples of the modifications made to these policies for countries to rapidly mobilise fiscal resources for health.
The research on enveloped viruses' response to environmental factors supports SDG 3 by informing effective disinfection strategies, crucial for preventing disease spread and promoting public health.
The study underscores the importance of understanding VOC emissions from flame retardant industrial parks to address potential carcinogenic risks and formulate effective reduction strategies, contributing to both Sustainable Development Goal 3 (Good Health and Well-being) and SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities).
This Article supports SDG 3 by highlighting the importance of not just measuring life expectancy but also disability-free life expectancy as an indicator of population health, and showing that in Hong Kong, a word leader in life expectancy, there has been a trend of increasing disability burden, particularly in women. The authors discuss the public health implications of their findings.
Elsevier,

Current Opinion in Microbiology, Volume 76, December 2023

Reminder that Biological diversity is important also for health, supporting SDG 3.
Identify how hiPSC models can contribute to understanding Alzheimer's Disease-associated synaptic dysfunction and axonal loss
A meta-analysis of the relationship between sleep and β-Amyloid biomarkers in Alzheimer’s disease
This review reported the sensitivity and specificity of biomarkers and neurocognitive assessment in predicting the progression from Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) to Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
This cross sectional study found that serum lipid levels were significantly correlated with lower-extremity function in participants with and without AD but not with gait disorder in participants with AD.
This article supports SDG 3 by analysing associations between socioeconomic status and dementia risk, and finding that associations were more pronounced for early-onset than late-onset dementia risk.

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