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The Global Stories Of 2019 That You Probably Missed

Patients line up for remote health consultation sessions on a remote island near Rangpur, Bangladesh.
Allison Joyce for NPR
Patients line up for remote health consultation sessions on a remote island near Rangpur, Bangladesh.

Sure, everybody thinks it's great when a story is read by many hundreds of thousands of folks. That's definitely a success.

But what about stories that don't get a lot of pageviews? Maybe the headline just didn't catch a reader's eye. Or maybe there was so much news that day that the story slipped through the cracks of the internet and tumbled into digital oblivion.

That doesn't mean these stories were not a success. Sometimes just one person will send an email about how a story touched them — and that makes a correspondent (and an editor) feel really good about their work.

Nonetheless, getting lots of folks to read our stories is one of our goals. So we'd like to give some of our least-read stories of 2019 another chance to reach our readers.

The Doctor Will Skype You Now

"I diagnose them through conversation," says Dr. Tina Mustahid (pictured above). She's part of a pioneering effort to bring medical care to isolated islands in Bangladesh via Skype. The text and photos take readers into the daily lives of people living in these remote places.

Read the story here.

Kids Run A Race Through Unsafe Smog

Students cover their faces with masks to protect themselves from air pollution in Delhi.
Raj K Raj / Hindustan Times/Getty Images
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Hindustan Times/Getty Images
Students cover their faces with masks to protect themselves from air pollution in Delhi.

Yes, this really happened. The annual "Run for Children" in Delhi took place in November, with some 2,000 participants, even though the air quality was so poor that the government was urging people not to go jogging. "It was silly and criminal to make kids run in this pollution," Dr. Anupam Sachdeva, a Delhi-based pediatrician, tells NPR. Social media users agreed.

Read the story here.

Mangroves Aren't Getting Enough Respect

Mangroves by the water in Mumbai.
Bhaskar Paul / The India Today Group/Getty Images
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The India Today Group/Getty Images
Mangroves by the water in Mumbai.

They're a natural weapon against climate change. They act as buffers against coastal erosion and flooding, and they store up to four times as much carbon as other forests. So why is India destroying more and more mangroves?

Read the story here.

The Former Prime Minister Who's A Selfie Star

Helen Clark, former prime minister of New Zealand and gender equality champion, takes a selfie with attendees of the Women Deliver conference in Vancouver.
/ Sonia Narang for NPR
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Sonia Narang for NPR
Helen Clark, former prime minister of New Zealand and gender equality champion, takes a selfie with attendees of the Women Deliver conference in Vancouver.

She's Helen Clark of New Zealand. We spoke to her about women's rights ("Well, women aren't tired [of raising the issue] because we're not there yet") and her popularity among young people (she credits, among other things, her embrace of Snapchat). And when she delivers a speech, young woman line up to get a selfie with the 69-year-old former prime minister.

Read the story here.

The Mercy Corps/Facebook Connection

It seems an unlikely pairing: a respected aid organization and a social media giant fined $5 billion for privacy violations. The connection came as Facebook announced plans to launch a global digital currency with Mercy Corps as a partner. We talked to sources about the pluses — and drawbacks — of this potential relationship.

Read the story here.

Until recently, the Chinese public has been slow to embrace the #MeToo movement. One social media celebrity hopes to change that.
Towfiqu Photography / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Until recently, the Chinese public has been slow to embrace the #MeToo movement. One social media celebrity hopes to change that.

A Pop-Up Pub Where People Talk About Sexual Consent

The #MeToo movement has been slow going in China. In a country where frank talk about sex is rare, pop-up pubs are trying to make a difference: A host fields questions from youth about such topics as turning down unwanted sexual advances.

Read the story here.

Rosine Mbakam and her mother on the set of 'The Two Faces of a Bamiléké Woman,' which represents their intergenerational differences.
/ Icarus Films
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Icarus Films
Rosine Mbakam and her mother on the set of 'The Two Faces of a Bamiléké Woman,' which represents their intergenerational differences.

Meet The Filmmaker Reinventing How African Women Are Portrayed In Movies

Living in Belgium, filmmaker Rosine Mbakam of Cameroon says she "started to just write a portrait of my mother because I was missing her." That led to a documentary about Mbakam's return to her homeland for the first time in seven years — and about the differences between her generation and her mother's. The Two Faces Of A Bamiléké Woman, released in the U.S. this year, is, she says, a way to say "thank you" to her mother and the women of her generation who gave Mbakam the freedom "to just dream and do what I want to do because of all the sacrifice."

Read the story here.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Marc Silver, who edits NPR's global health blog, has been a reporter and editor for the Baltimore Jewish Times, U.S. News & World Report and National Geographic. He is the author of Breast Cancer Husband: How to Help Your Wife (and Yourself) During Diagnosis, Treatment and Beyond and co-author, with his daughter, Maya Silver, of My Parent Has Cancer and It Really Sucks: Real-Life Advice From Real-Life Teens. The NPR story he co-wrote with Rebecca Davis and Viola Kosome -- 'No Sex For Fish' — won a Sigma Delta Chi award for online reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists.