Health Sector Turmoil: Resignations, Shortages, and New Approvals
The health sector faces significant developments, including the resignation of Gerresheimer's CFO, CDC officials exiting over vaccine policy changes, food shortages in Africa, a rise in a rare syndrome in Gaza, and the FDA's approval of a generic obesity drug by Teva Pharmaceuticals.

The health industry is witnessing a series of critical updates. Gerresheimer's CFO Bernd Metzner has resigned, set to be succeeded by Wolf Lehmann, with backing from an activist shareholder.
In the U.S., three senior officials from the CDC have left the agency, citing concerns over vaccine policy changes pushed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Meanwhile, imminent shortages of life-saving food in Nigeria, Kenya, Somalia, and South Sudan threaten malnourished children, according to Save the Children.
The World Health Organization reports a shortage of vital medical supplies in Gaza, amidst a surge in Guillain-Barré syndrome cases. On the pharmaceutical front, the US FDA has approved Teva Pharmaceuticals' generic version of the obesity drug Saxenda, offering a cheaper alternative to the original.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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