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Barcelona, Liverpool, Bayern and Atletico reach Champions League quarter-finals
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Tudor impressed by 'improved' Spurs despite Champions League exit
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PSG will not relish Liverpool reunion, says Slot
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Kane says Bayern 'don't fear anyone' ahead of Real clash
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Venezuelan leader sacks defense minister, a Maduro stalwart
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Kane and Bayern swat aside Atalanta to set up Real clash
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Thailand's new parliament set to elect Anutin as PM
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Atletico survive Spurs scare to reach Champions League quarters
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Liverpool thrash Galatasaray to reach Champions League quarters
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Costa Rica cuts ties with Cuba, closes embassy in Havana
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Music popstar will.i.am meshes AI and 'micromobility'
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US Fed Chair says 'no intention' of leaving board while probe ongoing
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Iran targets Gulf energy sites after intel chief killed
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Colombia detains alleged mastermind of Ecuadoran candidate assassination
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Costa Rica closes Havana embassy, tells Cuba to withdraw diplomats
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NY's New Museum returns contemporary to heart of Manhattan
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Cesar Chavez, icon of US labor movement, accused of serial sex abuse: report
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Barcelona demolish Newcastle 7-2 to reach Champions League quarters
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Trump nominee for Homeland Security chief grilled at fiery Senate hearing
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First international aid convoy arrives in crisis-hit Cuba
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Eight killed during Rio police operation, including drug kingpin
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Iran suffers new blow as Israel kills intel chief
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Slovakia curbs diesel sales, ups prices for foreigners
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Oscar-winner Sean Penn meets troops in frontline Ukraine
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Thousands rally in Istanbul to mark year since mayor's arrest
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WNBA, players union agree 'transformative' labor deal: official
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US Fed holds rates unchanged over 'uncertain' Iran war implications
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Senegal govt calls for investigation into Cup of Nations decision
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From Faraja to Sepah: Iran's multiple security forces
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Billionaire Dyson buys 50 percent stake in Bath rugby
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Senegal demands 'corruption' probe over AFCON decision as Morocco defend appeal
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The platypus is even weirder than thought, scientists discover
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PSG's Barcola ruled out for several weeks with ankle injury
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Colombia detains suspect in 2023 killing of Ecuador politician
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Iran condemned as UN maritime body holds emergency talks on Mideast shipping
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Iraqi Kurdish shepherds stoic in face of yet another war
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Iran women's football team return after asylum tussle
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US launches new era of drug war with Latin American allies
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How many cargo ships are passing Hormuz strait?
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'Free France': Macron reveals name of Europe's largest warship
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Oil surges as Iran gas facilities hit, stocks slide
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Foreign press group slams Israeli police for breaking journalist's wrist
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McIlroy happy with back injury recovery as Masters looms
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Vinicius 'should be loved by everyone' says Donnarumma after celebration row
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Iran was not rebuilding nuclear enrichment, US intelligence finds
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Carrick urges England boss Tuchel to call up United trio
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Three sporting champions to be stripped of titles for non-doping reasons
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Chilean GDP beats 2025 forecast despite mining dip
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Storms, warm seas drove sudden drop in Antarctic ice: study
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Aston Villa want to be more than a 'maybe team' in quest for Europa League
Silencing science: How Trump is reshaping US health
Medical researchers left to compile national data by hand, contraceptive guidelines deemed essential by doctors erased, and the nation's largest tuberculosis outbreak left unreported: President Donald Trump's administration has thrown the US health system into uncharted territory.
Here's a look at some of the biggest impacts.
- Key medical journal goes silent -
Within days of Trump taking office last month, the Health and Human Services Department imposed an indefinite "pause" on communications.
One of its first casualties was The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), a venerable epidemiological digest published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
For the first time in 60 years, the journal -- which once published the first case studies of what would become the AIDS crisis -- has missed two editions, with no word on when it will return.
"MMWR is the voice of science. The delay in publishing is dangerous," wrote former CDC director Tom Frieden on BlueSky.
Meanwhile, Jeremy Faust, a physician and Harvard instructor who runs the Inside Medicine Substack, reported that CDC scientists have been instructed to retract or pause all papers submitted to external journals to remove language deemed offensive -- including the word "gender."
- Critical resources for doctors scrubbed -
Doctors nationwide are reeling after the sudden removal of a CDC app that helped determine the suitability of contraceptives based on patients' medical history and medications.
Also deleted: Clinical Guidance for PrEP (a critical HIV-prevention tool), resources on intimate partner violence, and guidelines on LGBTQ+ behavioral health.
Some pages have been restored but now carry an ominous banner: "CDC's website is being modified to comply with President Trump's Executive Orders." Others remain missing, causing widespread confusion.
Jessica Valenti, a feminist author and founder of the Abortion Every Day Substack, has been archiving the deleted materials on CDCguidelines.com to preserve the original, inclusive versions.
"The hope is to have it be a resource for the people who need it," she told AFP, adding that even if documents are restored, words like "trans" may be scrubbed from them.
- Infectious outbreaks unreported -
As medical associations sound the alarm over the lack of federal health communication, outbreaks are slipping under the radar.
In Kansas City, Kansas, the largest tuberculosis outbreak in US history is unfolding with 67 active cases since 2024 -- yet no national health authority has reported on it.
"The National Medical Association (NMA) is calling for a swift resolution to the federal health communications freeze, which has the potential to exacerbate this outbreak and other public health threats," wrote the group, which represents African American physicians.
Similarly, a measles outbreak among unvaccinated schoolchildren in Texas has gone unreported at the national level.
Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist who studies influenza trends, wrote on her blog that she has resorted to manually tallying cases from all 50 state health departments because the CDC's central data repository has been taken down.
L.Miller--AMWN