The quest for the coronavirus vaccine | Seth Berkley

151,309 views ・ 2020-03-28

TED


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Transcriber: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Camille Martínez
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Whitney Pennington Rodgers: Hello everyone,
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and welcome back to TEDConnects.
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If you're (Audio feedback)
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joining us for the --
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If you're joining us for the first time,
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we've been bringing interviews all week with some of the world's greatest minds
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to help us make sense of this unprecedented moment that we're living in.
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I'm Whitney Pennington Rodgers, TED's current affairs curator
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and one of your hosts.
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This week,
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thousands of you have tuned in to these live events each day,
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and hundreds of thousands more have watched these interviews
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after the fact.
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We've really loved seeing your questions. They add so much to these conversations.
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So please keep them coming.
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In a few minutes, I'm going to disappear to work with our team behind the scenes
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to monitor our Facebook feed,
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where you can leave some of your questions.
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I'll work to figure out which ones are the ones
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that we can bring back to our guest,
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and I will ask as many of them as I can during the live interview.
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Today, we're going to be touching on a subject that I think is top of mind
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for a lot of people,
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so I'd like to turn things over to the head of TED, Chris Anderson,
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who will introduce today's guest.
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Chris Anderson: Hello.
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WPR: Hi Chris. How's it going today?
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CA: Nice to see you again, Whitney.
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It's going pretty good here. Amazing days.
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WPR: That's good. That's great. We have sunshine here in the Northeast,
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which is nice.
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CA: So look, I am excited to introduce this guest,
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because I've known Seth Berkley for a long time.
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I count him as a friend.
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He's a man who has really devoted his life
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to the most profound questions about public health.
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Vaccines are extraordinary.
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They save millions of lives.
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The quest for a coronavirus vaccine
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is, I think, the biggest single question that the world faces now
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if we're going to get out of this.
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So it's just a delight to welcome Dr. Seth Berkley
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to TED Connects.
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Come on in, Seth.
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Seth Berkley: Good to see you there, Chris,
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and delighted to be with you and all of the TED community.
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CA: Well, so look, on Tuesday, Bill Gates was here,
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and he mentioned that your organization, Gavi,
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is really at the heart of the quest for a vaccine.
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So tell us a bit -- what is Gavi?
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SB: So Chris, thank you for that.
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What's interesting is that 20 years ago --
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we just celebrated our 20th anniversary --
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there were all these powerful new vaccines that were being used in wealthy countries,
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and the challenge is,
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they weren't getting to the places that they could make the most difference:
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the developing world.
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So Gavi was formed as an alliance --
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WHO, the World Bank, the Gates Foundation, UNICEF -- all working together
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to try to bring these vaccines to the developing world.
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And it's been very successful.
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We've launched 433 new vaccines
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in the most difficult countries in the world,
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in the Somalias and Yemens and DRCs and Nigerias.
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But we've also set up emergency stockpiles for outbreak-based vaccines,
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so if there's an outbreak anywhere in the world
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of yellow fever or of things like cholera or meningitis and now Ebola,
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we have vaccines that are available to do that.
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And the last thing we are trying to do is build the health systems out
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to deliver these vaccines,
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but also to make sure that we can pay attention to new diseases that pop up
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in different parts of the world.
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CA: And just give us a sense of the scale of this.
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How many vaccines do you distribute in a given year?
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And how many lives do you believe that that may be saving?
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SB: So, let me give you a macro number.
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We've immunized more than 760 million additional children --
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760 million additional children --
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and prevented more than 13 million deaths.
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In an average year, we give about a half a billion doses
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because we started out with six diseases,
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but now we vaccinate against 18 different diseases.
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CA: Yeah, the scale of that is incredible,
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and amidst all the bad news that's happening,
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it's kind of amazing that this intervention can save so many lives.
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I mean, help us understand what a vaccine is.
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SB: So, the original idea, the word "vaccine,"
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comes from "vaca," or cow.
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And the observation made in the 1700s
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was that milkmaids had beautiful skin,
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whereas everybody else had pockmarks from having gotten over smallpox.
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And the concept was that she was getting infected with a zoonosis,
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that is, with naturally occurring cowpox,
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not smallpox.
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That then protected against smallpox.
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And it was tested in those days: Could you artificially do that?
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They of course didn't understand virology,
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they didn't understand any of those issues.
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But what a vaccine is is something that you give
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to artificially stimulate the immune system,
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hopefully to not make you sick.
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But then later on, when the body comes in contact with the real disease,
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it thinks it's already seen it and it is able to fight it off
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without making the person sick.
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CA: I mean, it's kind of a miraculous thing to me
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that they work that way,
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that your body is always there looking for these threats.
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And a vaccine, I guess, the body perceives it as a threat,
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and therefore arms itself against that threat, right?
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And that's what gives the protection.
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So, is that why some people are sort of -- irrationally, I will say --
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irrationally scared of vaccines
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and feel that they may be dangerous,
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because they are a kind of threat that you're putting into your body
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in a very subtle way?
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SB: Well, of course, when this first started,
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there were two ways to make vaccines.
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You could grind them up and inject them,
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so-called "whole killed vaccines."
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So you took organisms and you got an immune response,
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and sometimes those organisms, even though they were dead,
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gave you a pretty whopping immune response:
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your arms were sore, you got fevers.
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Then we moved to these weakened live viruses,
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and frankly, those are the best vaccines.
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That's what measles is.
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That's what yellow fever is.
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These are weakened viruses.
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They don't give you disease,
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but because they look like the natural viruses,
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your body gets protection and, frankly, you get protection for your whole life.
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Today, because people are worried about side effects,
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we've begun to use molecular biology and use little bits of it,
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and therefore, it's moved forward.
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But the reason people are mostly scared
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is because, frankly, vaccines have been so successful.
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You don't expect, if you have a child or two children,
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that those children are going to die of these diseases,
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unlike in the past, when three or four out of your five or six or seven kids
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would die.
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So today, people think, well, gee, these diseases aren't around,
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they're not that bad and, by the way, if I'm injecting these things,
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maybe they're not organic, maybe it'll make my child cry,
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maybe it'll make them sick, and I don't need to do it.
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And that's the challenge.
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You don't want to scare people to death on how bad these diseases can be,
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but at the same time,
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you want them to understand that these diseases are serious
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and can cause really bad disease and sequela.
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CA: So yesterday, you issued a really powerful call
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for this massive, coordinated global response
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to tackle the search for a coronavirus vaccine.
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We're going to come that in a bit,
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because I think that's a very exciting topic.
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But I think we need some more background first.
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I want to go back five years to when you stood on the TED stage
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and you held up two candidate Ebola vaccines.
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This was just a few months after Ebola had been terrifying the world.
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It was basically amazing how quickly those vaccines had been developed.
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What happened to them?
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SB: It's a great question,
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and let me tell a little bit of the story,
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but at the end, there were two vaccines.
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One, it turned out, couldn't finish its testing,
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because the epidemic died down.
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The other one was fully tested.
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It had a hundred percent efficacy.
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We then went on to work with manufacturers to produce that vaccine,
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at least temporarily,
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in an investigational form, just in case there were more outbreaks.
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There were, and those are the vaccine doses
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that we've used in the DRC.
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In the last two outbreaks,
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280,000 people have been vaccinated with this experimental vaccine,
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and today, there is a licensed vaccine,
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and we are now procuring a global stockpile of a half a million doses.
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But let me just say, Chris,
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the reason they came so quickly at that moment is, after September 11th,
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there was concern in the US about bioterrorism.
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Remember, there were anthrax attacks.
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And so what happened was there was a list of agents,
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and Ebola, for a short time, was on that list of agents,
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so people started making vaccines,
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and later on, they decided that was not necessarily a good bioterrorism agent,
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so they dropped that off the list.
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But in the freezers were vaccines that had been started,
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and they were dusted off,
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and that's why we could move so quickly in that moment.
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CA: And yet, how long was it from that moment on the TED stage
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with the candidate vaccine
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to actual deployment?
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SB: So, what happened was,
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the epidemic began to go down.
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The clinical trial I told you about was done.
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It was a heroic clinical trial done by WHO,
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and it showed that it had these results.
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That epidemic then stopped.
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We didn't know if there were going to be more epidemics.
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It took another number of years to finish the work on the vaccine
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to make sure it was pure,
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to figure out how to manufacture it at scale.
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It's during that period that we put vaccine away
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and had it available in case there were other outbreaks.
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And it turned out, there were three outbreaks.
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One went away quickly, but there were two.
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I was there on day 13 of the second outbreak.
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We injected the vaccine, cases went up, then they went down, and controlled it.
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And then this DRC in North Kivu outbreak,
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which really was terrible because it was in a war zone.
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And that's the one where we've been not only vaccinating in DRC
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but in surrounding countries.
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By the way, that is now, I believe, day 38 or 39 out of the 42 necessary
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to say it's over.
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We hope it is.
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And that would be, again, an enormous example
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of what vaccines can do, even in a very difficult setting.
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CA: And yet, in one way, Seth, it's kind of shocking
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that the outbreak that happened at the start of 2015, end of 2014,
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that it happened at all,
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because the world has known about Ebola for a long time.
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It's been sequenced and so forth.
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A vaccine could have been developed and got ready for a possible outbreak.
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Why didn't that happen?
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SB: Well, there had been 26 outbreaks before,
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but each one of them was small --
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couple of hundred people or a couple of dozen people --
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in the poorest African countries in the world.
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There was no market for it.
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People didn't know how to test it
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because they would just pop up and then go away.
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And so even though it was obviously a disease that potentially could spread,
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it had never really spread before.
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Of course, in West Africa,
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they didn't have a good surveillance system;
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it spread for three months before people identified that it was Ebola,
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and by that time, it was too late.
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It had spread.
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What's important about that lesson
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is that then caused huge disruption across Africa, across the world,
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because cases went to other places.
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And the challenge then was, and the reason we had to step in,
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was because there still was no market.
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So the Gavi board said,
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"We will put out 390 million dollars.
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We'll put it out there and tell companies, we're open for business,
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we'll create a market, we'll buy the vaccine."
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And that led to companies being willing to finish the investment
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to get us to where we are today.
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CA: Right, right.
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So it's a real paradox, right?
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In a way, the very thing that makes vaccines so extraordinary,
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that once they're developed, they are so cheap to administer,
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for a few dollars, I guess, you can administer this dose
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that will save someone maybe a lifetime of illness
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or save their lives,
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and yet so much of medical research and invention and development
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is done by companies who need to see a revenue stream,
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and so they don't see it from those tiny little cheap things
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that might save a lot of lives.
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So it's a real market failure that in this circumstance now --
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That's one of the things I guess you're thinking hard about,
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how on earth do we get round and avoid that market failure
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crippling the response this time?
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SB: Well, first of all, one of the reasons Bill Gates likes vaccines is,
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in a sense, it's a little bit like software creation.
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You put a lot of money and effort into creating it,
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but once you've got it, you can produce it pretty cheaply
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and use it in different places around the world.
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I don't want to beat up the pharmaceutical industry here
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because they were heroic in Ebola,
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but I think realistically, they are for-profit entities,
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and they have to say to their shareholders,
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"Somebody's going to pay for this,
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or we're going to do it as a charitable thing."
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And if we do it as a charitable thing, they can't keep doing it.
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Since then, there is a new initiative
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called CEPI, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations.
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It was set up at Davos a few years ago,
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and its purpose is to try to make vaccines
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for the list of diseases that aren't yet known epidemics
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but that can potentially be there.
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And the idea would be using public sector money
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to get us prepared.
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Of course, they jumped in on this coronavirus as well.
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Last thing is, of course,
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I'm not worried on a coronavirus stage that this is a problem,
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with not having a market.
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One of the challenges here is that there may be too big a market for this,
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and therefore, how do we make sure there's access for developing countries.
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CA: All right, so talk about this virus, Seth.
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How is it different from Ebola?
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How challenging is it
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to create a vaccine for it?
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SB: So what's interesting about coronaviruses
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is that they are animal viruses,
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probably primarily in bats.
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They jump into other animals sometimes,
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and then they jump into humans.
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So this shouldn't have been a surprise.
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This is the third coronavirus that has jumped into humans.
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We had SARS in early 2002,
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we had MERS a number of years later,
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and now we have this virus.
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What's interesting is there is a database
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that shows there are 30,000-some-odd isolated coronaviruses in animals,
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and one of the things that people tried to do
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was say the way these coronaviruses work is they have a spike on them.
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They're called "corona" because they look like the sun.
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That spike is where it attaches to a certain receptor in people's lungs.
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And so somebody said, well, maybe we can begin to look at those spikes
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and see if they're similar to the human receptors
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and they can be predicted.
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But the problem is people don't invest in those types of research.
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And, of course, I think that,
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given it's an evolutionary certainty, we're going to see this,
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that we should be.
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But one other point about this is
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coronavirus jumped into humans in ancient history as well,
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and so we have now about a third to a quarter of the common cold viruses
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are actually coronaviruses.
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And what's interesting about those is they don't make you deathly ill
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like these,
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but you also don't have long-term immunity to them,
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so you can get reinfected with these viruses
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after 10 months, a year.
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And so that does raise an issue on vaccinology,
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because you want to ideally have lifetime immunity.
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CA: The reason why we get reinfected is because the virus mutates slightly,
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and so it escapes the antibodies?
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SB: No, no, not in this case.
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Not in this case.
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So in flu, that's what happens. The viruses are always mutating.
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In HIV, the reason we don't have a vaccine is because they're all mutating.
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In this case, the immune response seems to get weaker and go away,
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and people get reinfected with the same viruses.
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Now, that is potentially a solvable problem using vaccinology
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and many different techniques,
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but the point is, we just can't assume.
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Some people now are talking about herd immunity
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as a way to deal with this virus,
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and the idea there is if you could get enough people infected --
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you know, forget for a moment that a lot of people are going to die
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and be miserable while that happens --
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but the idea is that you get a certain level immunity in the community,
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and then the disease will go away.
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Well, that is only true if you get long-term immunity.
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If you don't, then you could go through all of that horrible experience,
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have all those deaths,
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and then not have the protection you need to protect against this disease.
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CA: OK, so in a way, the quest we're looking for
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is a vaccine that will work for the long term.
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I mean, I guess any vaccine that works at all will be a huge gift,
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but it could well be one that we have to retake every year,
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or something like that.
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SB: Right. That is certainly possible.
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Of course, we have to remember, though,
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that SARS and MERS both had even higher mortality than this virus does,
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and they give a much more profound immune response.
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So it may be that they react differently than the common cold viruses.
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The challenge, of course, is that we haven't had the opportunity
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to study these over a long time,
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and this new disease -- three and a half months, we've had it.
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More science has been done for this disease
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in this short period of time,
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but we don't understand fully the epidemiology of the virus,
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the immune response, what's protective, which is the best animal model.
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All of that is being worked on by science and at breakneck pace,
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but a lot to learn.
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CA: So talk about how the medical and the research community responded.
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Because, the Chinese authorities -- I guess we heard it yesterday --
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only found out about this sometime in December.
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Already, early in January --
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I think the virus started in November, they found out about it in December --
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by early January, they had already released a sequence of the virus
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to the world,
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and now here we are.
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And I think I saw that more than 40 companies
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are already claiming candidate vaccines.
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What does it mean to have a candidate vaccine?
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Like, have companies tested this already against animals or something?
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Or are they just looking at a computer model where they go,
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"That should work"?
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SB: Well, it's an interesting question you ask there.
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So first of all, China was heroic on this.
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They did post the genetic sequence of it.
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Today, we have companies that can sit down with a computer
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and from that genetic sequence, make what is a candidate vaccine.
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Now, a candidate vaccine obviously means it's not a licensed product.
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It's something that somebody wants to work on.
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But you're right, you have to have the right nomenclature,
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because "candidate" can mean I'm working on something, it's in my head,
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I'm just doing a little work on it, I've got something in a vial,
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I'm beginning to do testing on it.
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And so what we saw in that case was a company called Moderna.
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That was the first vaccine that went into humans.
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It's a messenger RNA-based system.
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I actually visited the company, not in this outbreak but before,
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because the technology is interesting.
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And what they were able to do was, in 42 days,
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make a candidate vaccine from the genetic sequence.
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19:57
They didn't need the organism.
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That now is in clinical testing.
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Now, there is no licensed mRNA vaccine, so we're going to have to figure out,
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is it safe?
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20:07
Does it work in different age groups? How are we going to scale it up?
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20:11
All of that.
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20:12
But there are many others who are using conventional vaccinology.
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20:15
An example would be, the French are working on a measles-based vaccine.
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4441
20:20
The idea is to put the spiked protein in the measles vector,
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20:24
and it takes a little bit longer to do that work,
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2530
20:26
but once you have that done, of course, we know how to make measles vaccine.
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20:31
We make hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of millions of doses
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20:35
and provide it to the whole world.
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20:37
If that was to work, that might be easier to scale up.
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20:41
So I think what we want in the race is to have multiple different vaccines
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20:46
moving forward.
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20:47
We don't want one or two.
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20:49
We don't want a hundred in the late stages,
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20:51
because it's expensive and hard to do.
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20:53
But we want to have a diversity of science approaches going forward.
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20:58
CA: Which of the other candidates out there are you excited by
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21:01
or at least intrigued by?
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SB: Well, for me,
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the critical issue here is going to be we have to optimize for speed,
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and so that means, as I said,
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21:11
having examples of all the different new technologies
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that could potentially work,
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21:15
as well as conventional doses moving forward at the same time.
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21:19
So what you're going to want to do is have this bubble up.
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21:23
And it's not just companies, or big companies.
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21:26
It's also biotech companies.
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It's also academic researchers that are working on this.
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21:30
You want all of those to bubble up.
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21:32
Then you want to be able to look at what's the most promising,
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21:36
and that will depend upon animal results.
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21:39
It'll depend upon being able to produce those vaccines,
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21:42
have a pathway,
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21:43
and eventually, you will want to put those into human clinical trials.
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21:47
That requires a certain amount of safety work.
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You can try to accelerate that.
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But then you need to say, OK,
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21:53
we need to know, do we need one dose, do we need multiple doses,
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do we need 50 micrograms, 100, 150?
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Do we need a chemical stimulant we call an adjuvant?
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Given that this disease,
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its big problems in outcomes are in the elderly,
446
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22:11
we might need to put some stimulants in to make it a more potent immune response.
447
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22:15
So all of that work has to go on. That's what the clinical testing is.
448
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22:18
Eventually you say, "Aha! Here's the vaccine we're going to use."
449
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22:22
Now you test it in an efficacy trial.
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And that is to see, does it work?
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And at that point,
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you then have a vaccine that you know works.
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22:30
But there is a stage after that,
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22:32
and that stage is, you've got to work out the manufacturing,
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22:37
have it all worked out so that the regulators know
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22:40
that you can really make this,
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22:41
and that it's pure, it doesn't have any problems with it.
458
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22:45
And during that period, and that's what we did in Ebola,
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22:48
we were able to use those vaccines to help in outbreaks
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22:52
under a clinical trial protocol while monitoring them and learning.
461
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22:55
So there's a lot of steps there, and it's complicated,
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and I've shortened it a little bit.
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23:00
CA: But summarize the steps that they basically need to go through.
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I heard probably an animal test,
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23:07
and then --
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SB: Well, for example, Moderna.
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They went into humans at the same time they're doing animal testing.
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23:14
We don't have a perfect animal model.
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23:16
But normally it takes 10 to 15 years to do this,
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23:20
and that's the compression you're trying to do here.
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23:22
So the challenge is, we can compress all those different clinical trials.
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The basic way you think about it is, preclinical studies, animals,
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23:30
understanding it, purity, reproducibility.
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Then you move into human studies.
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You start off with a small number of healthy people.
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You then work on the dosing, how much, how often.
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23:41
Then you move into people at risk for the disease --
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that might be in this case the elderly or people with other conditions --
479
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23:47
and then eventually do an efficacy trial.
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23:50
Now, one of the cool new things we can do today
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23:52
is something called "adaptive trial design."
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So rather than do these sequentially,
483
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23:58
what you can begin to do is enroll people
484
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1983
24:00
and then, as you get the data you need,
485
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24:01
you can just begin to bring in the next set of groups,
486
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24:05
and by doing that, you can speed it up dramatically.
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24:09
CA: When you say enroll people,
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you mean enroll people who have their eyes wide open.
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They have informed consent. I think that's the term.
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SB: Absolutely.
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CA: And they're willing to, I guess, take the risk
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24:21
that this isn't a fully tested vaccine but it may well be efficacious,
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and so that obviously can help a lot.
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That's crucial to this, right?
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2013
24:33
SB: Absolutely. They are the unsung heroes of vaccinology,
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24:37
because people go out, they volunteer to take a substance,
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24:40
particularly early on, that don't know how it's going to react.
498
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3201
24:43
Is it going to make the disease worse? Make it better?
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24:46
Is it going to protect them? Is it going to make them sick?
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24:49
So you try to predict that if you can with animals,
501
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24:51
but people do do that, and the informed consent says
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not only you may have these side effects or these problems,
503
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24:58
but also this vaccine may not work.
504
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25:00
And so it's important for people to understand that,
505
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3201
25:03
because you don't want people to go and put themselves at high risk,
506
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3239
25:06
saying, "Oh, gee, I had a vaccine, and so I'm protected."
507
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25:09
We don't know that until we get to the efficacy stage of trials.
508
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25:12
CA: But Seth, even putting together all those dots,
509
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25:15
what I've heard most people say
510
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25:17
is that it is likely to take at least 18 months
511
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25:20
before the world will have a vaccine available
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25:24
at any kind of scale.
513
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2714
25:26
Is that time line right?
514
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25:29
And can the world remotely afford 18 months on this?
515
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25:33
SB: Well, I think, you know, I've given you many questions.
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I could raise lots more questions.
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So part of it's going to be luck:
518
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25:41
How easy is this particular candidate vaccine going to be?
519
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4508
25:45
How lucky will we be in getting a good immune response?
520
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25:49
Which approaches will work? Will they be scalable?
521
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25:51
So I think there's lot of questions there.
522
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25:54
The world will do everything they can to squeeze it down,
523
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3248
25:57
but I think that's the time line we're talking about.
524
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26:00
And remember, it's 10 to 15 years usually.
525
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3286
26:04
In the case of Ebola, we did it in five years to a licensed product.
526
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26:07
In this case, we are hoping to squeeze it down dramatically,
527
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3461
26:11
but there are many things we're going to have to go through,
528
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3293
26:14
and it's really about making sure that vaccine works and it is safe for use
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26:19
in what ultimately may be billions of people.
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26:23
CA: Whitney.
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26:24
WPR: Hi. So we have lots of questions coming in, Seth.
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26:27
One of them that's kind of related to this is, you know,
533
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26:30
a lot of us right now are isolating,
534
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1922
26:32
and we're not building our exposure to this virus,
535
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26:34
so how will that affect us in the long term?
536
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26:37
Will this make us vulnerable to the virus until a vaccine is available?
537
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26:43
SB: So that's a great question,
538
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1704
26:45
and, as you know,
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26:47
we don't fully understand the epidemiology of this virus,
540
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26:50
but there is some sense that there may be asymptomatics.
541
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26:53
Do they get immune protection?
542
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26:55
Are they afterwards resistant to infection?
543
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26:58
We don't know that, but we do know that people do get sick,
544
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27:01
including young people,
545
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27:03
and that sickness can be quite severe.
546
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27:05
Obviously, a lot of it is mild, but some of it is quite severe,
547
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27:08
and then it gets more severe in the elderly.
548
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27:10
So I wouldn't recommend that anybody go out
549
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27:13
and intentionally try to get exposed to this virus now.
550
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27:17
The whole idea of having isolation now
551
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27:19
is to try to stop the chains of transmission,
552
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27:22
protect health workers in hospitals,
553
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27:25
with the idea being that if you can suppress it enough --
554
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3003
27:28
and Bill talked about this in his talk --
555
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1952
27:30
and later on have testing available,
556
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2012
27:32
you might be able to go back to somewhat of a normal life
557
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3440
27:35
and then watch for reintroduction of this virus.
558
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3439
27:39
Of course, at the end of the day,
559
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2545
27:41
we will probably need a vaccine to be able to completely control that,
560
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3696
27:45
but the experiment is going on,
561
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1926
27:47
in China ...
562
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1174
27:48
Japan has done an amazing job of controlling this
563
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2493
27:51
with slightly less severe interventions.
564
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3565
27:54
We've seen in Korea similar things.
565
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2719
27:57
So the hope would be that if we take it seriously,
566
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3204
28:00
we actually damp down the exposures and stop this epidemic now,
567
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6308
28:07
we'll be able to remove to some form of normalcy.
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3172
28:10
And we also may have drugs,
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1559
28:11
and drugs will change the dynamics as well,
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2075
28:13
because people will then know that they are able to get treatment as well.
571
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28:18
WPR: Great. I'll be back later with other questions I'm seeing.
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3092
28:21
SB: Thanks, Whitney.
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CA: Thanks, Whitney.
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28:23
Thanks everyone watching. Keep those questions coming.
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2637
28:27
Seth, this time line, I've been puzzled about this,
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3870
28:30
because I get that there are so many things
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2023
28:33
that have to be checked out,
578
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2710
28:35
but I still worry
579
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2403
28:38
that the rules are not adapting rapidly enough
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5446
28:43
for the scale of the emergency.
581
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1696
28:45
I mean, my analogy would be: you're going about your lives,
582
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3071
28:48
and suddenly there's this emergency,
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2598
28:51
you see that there's this enemy force approaching you from the horizon
584
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3313
28:54
and coming your direction.
585
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1408
28:55
You don't, in that circumstance, spend a week trying to test all your guns
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5281
29:01
and make sure they're operating absolutely safely and in the right way.
587
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3356
29:04
You galvanize and you do take some additional risk
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5164
29:09
for the sake of avoiding the bigger risk.
589
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2477
29:12
Is that thinking prevalent right now?
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4250
29:16
Are there people trying to make those kinds of trade-offs?
591
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4287
29:20
How should we think about that?
592
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1507
29:22
Or do you really believe that the community is galvanizing
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3456
29:25
and moving forward as fast as it humanly can
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2164
29:28
and appropriately balancing the two risks?
595
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3302
29:32
SB: I think we're seeing heroics in moving forward here.
596
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3670
29:35
Obviously, you're right, and the reason we talk about going from 10 to 15 years
597
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3931
29:39
down to something like 18 months
598
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2090
29:41
is about squeezing those steps as much as possible.
599
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3505
29:45
The regulators in the Ebola experience were really fabulous.
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3189
29:48
They worked with us
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1352
29:50
and tried to keep any bureaucratic delays down to the smallest amount possible.
602
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5691
29:55
And I think that's what's going to be important here,
603
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2547
29:58
is we have to look at every single step
604
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1932
30:00
and say, "Is it critical?"
605
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1269
30:01
But you do need to answer a lot of these questions.
606
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3146
30:04
For example, if you have a vaccine that works in healthy people,
607
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4047
30:08
it very well may not give an immune response to the elderly.
608
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2840
30:11
We may need to change that vaccine to make it work there.
609
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3548
30:15
It may not work in young children.
610
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1919
30:17
So you need a certain amount of studies done.
611
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3444
30:20
Of course, if you work in areas that have big outbreaks,
612
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2712
30:23
you're able to also enroll more quickly
613
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3352
30:26
and follow people more quickly.
614
1826794
1544
30:28
That's one of the reasons we'll have to think about this globally,
615
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3120
30:31
because we don't know in 12 to 18 months,
616
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3045
30:34
or even six to 18 months, if we're really lucky,
617
1834575
3604
30:38
where the epidemic will be raging and where we want to do the clinical trials.
618
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4198
30:42
We should be prepared to do them wherever in the world it's possible,
619
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3391
30:45
and also do some in different types of countries.
620
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2773
30:48
Developing countries may have different immune responses
621
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2699
30:51
than in wealthy countries.
622
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1377
30:52
CA: What alarms me a bit
623
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2302
30:55
is that on the models I've looked at,
624
1855087
2314
30:57
with the possible exception of what happened in China and Japan,
625
1857425
4816
31:02
by distancing, we can bend the curve, we can reduce infection.
626
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6898
31:09
But as soon as you go back to normal,
627
1869187
2486
31:11
there's this huge risk of a massive resurge,
628
1871697
3050
31:14
and until the vaccine comes along, it feels like your choices are:
629
1874771
4116
31:18
one, sort of recklessly expose the whole population to the bug
630
1878911
4296
31:23
and develop some kind of herd immunity,
631
1883231
2260
31:25
or try and do this scary dance of really cramping down on the economy
632
1885515
6204
31:31
and all the risks that are associated with that,
633
1891743
3295
31:35
and risking, if you lift the lid on that, risking these really dangerous
634
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5251
31:40
second surges.
635
1900337
2260
31:42
So is that the right way to think about it?
636
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2434
31:45
There's a scenario where, until this happens,
637
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2631
31:47
and if it's 18 months,
638
1907734
1186
31:48
that's an incredibly long time for the world to be
639
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3377
31:52
in that sort of dangerous, scary dance.
640
1912345
3157
31:56
SB: Well, I think the issue here is that is a little bit the way to think of it,
641
1916480
4304
32:00
but the experiment is going on now.
642
1920808
1715
32:02
China is now releasing its controls, and we will see what happens there.
643
1922547
4956
32:07
We'll see where they have to clamp back down
644
1927527
2171
32:09
and what's going to happen,
645
1929722
1446
32:11
and we'll get a good idea of what that's like.
646
1931192
2212
32:13
Right now, in many countries, we're still in the upscale period
647
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3415
32:16
when we're seeing lots of cases.
648
1936867
1591
32:18
And so we have to break that transmission first
649
1938482
2254
32:20
before we can have that conversation.
650
1940760
2262
32:23
I'm the first person that would like a vaccine to occur quicker,
651
1943046
3947
32:27
and, of course, my job is to underpromise and overdeliver,
652
1947017
6996
32:34
not the other way around.
653
1954037
1231
32:35
And I think we have to be careful not to think about,
654
1955292
2720
32:38
"Oh, we can just have a vaccine in a couple of months."
655
1958036
2637
32:40
It may be that we're lucky. It may be that it's easy to do.
656
1960697
2837
32:43
It may be the first few candidates will show promise,
657
1963558
2561
32:46
we get efficacy, we can scale those up for at least some limited use
658
1966143
3740
32:49
while it's being worked out.
659
1969907
1632
32:51
But a lot of things have to fall in place for that to happen.
660
1971563
3347
32:54
And that's why we want to have an organized, global effort
661
1974934
2923
32:57
to absolutely incentivize the best possible chance
662
1977881
4216
33:02
for that to happen in the fastest way.
663
1982121
1998
33:04
CA: There's some kind of debate out there
664
1984701
1998
33:06
about whether there might be way, way more cases,
665
1986723
3889
33:10
mild cases, basically zero-symptom cases of coronavirus out there
666
1990636
4813
33:15
that may have granted more people immunity than we know.
667
1995473
4497
33:19
Is that a credible suggestion?
668
1999994
3310
33:23
More cases and much lower fatality rate than we know,
669
2003328
2577
33:25
because so many of the cases could be invisible?
670
2005929
2300
33:28
SB: You know, Mayor Bloomberg used to have a saying that I loved.
671
2008856
3089
33:31
He said, "In God we trust. Everybody else, bring data."
672
2011969
2757
33:34
And I think the answer here is we haven't done enough testing to know,
673
2014750
4394
33:39
and we started out with PCR tests to look for virus,
674
2019168
3124
33:42
and therefore, if you had recovered, didn't have the virus anymore,
675
2022316
3261
33:45
we weren't able to pick it up.
676
2025601
1451
33:47
Now there are beginning to be antibody tests
677
2027076
2133
33:49
to look to see if you've been exposed
678
2029233
2022
33:51
and don't have the virus now but have an immune response to it.
679
2031279
3235
33:54
Once we have those tests operating at scale,
680
2034538
3037
33:57
we'll be able to understand what the epidemiology is
681
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2559
34:00
and what's happening,
682
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1150
34:01
and then we'll be in a much better place to understand how this is playing out.
683
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4245
34:05
Also, I mean, even the question:
684
2045625
1837
34:07
We don't see a lot of cases in children --
685
2047486
1980
34:09
is that because the children get infected but they don't get symptoms,
686
2049490
3304
34:12
and therefore they might be potential spreaders?
687
2052818
2328
34:15
Or, is it because those children don't get it at all?
688
2055170
3976
34:20
CA: So tell us, Seth, about this call that you issued yesterday.
689
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4489
34:24
I mean, you've said that scientists are behaving heroically.
690
2064667
4627
34:29
But you've called for something more here
691
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3431
34:32
from both scientists, companies, governments.
692
2072773
3062
34:35
Tell us what your call is.
693
2075859
1804
34:38
SB: So, first of all, I believe that, given the situation here,
694
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3237
34:41
this is not the time to just let the normal system work,
695
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3614
34:45
as we've talked about.
696
2085382
1312
34:46
I think we have to think about vaccines as a global public good.
697
2086718
3488
34:50
And what that means is that initially, it ought to be public sector financed.
698
2090230
4170
34:54
Obviously, if others want to contribute resources,
699
2094424
3143
34:57
I believe they should, fine.
700
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2330
34:59
But we want to make sure the best approaches come,
701
2099945
2502
35:02
and it doesn't matter where they come from in the world.
702
2102471
2763
35:05
We want to make sure if the best approach is in China or Japan or in South Korea
703
2105258
4459
35:09
or in the US, wherever it comes from, whatever company has the ideas,
704
2109741
4477
35:14
get them on the table.
705
2114242
1484
35:15
Then we want a process to say, realistically,
706
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2730
35:18
how are these being compared?
707
2118504
2296
35:20
How do we decide which ones are most likely to succeed?
708
2120824
3557
35:24
And then, as I explained, some diversity in taking those risks.
709
2124405
3737
35:28
Maybe some new technology, some old technologies to drive forward.
710
2128166
4601
35:32
Once that happens, then, to try to get clinical trials
711
2132791
3058
35:35
to drive forward as quickly as possible.
712
2135873
1962
35:37
Now, the delay here is actually likely to be in manufacturing,
713
2137859
4470
35:42
because we might want billions and billions of doses,
714
2142353
4364
35:46
so how do we then begin to invest, at risk, in manufacturing plants?
715
2146741
5249
35:52
If it's a big company, they may have adequate manufacturing,
716
2152014
3250
35:55
but we may want to work with contract manufacturers,
717
2155288
2595
35:57
other companies, or even build plants or use new technologies,
718
2157907
3885
36:01
modular technologies to do this.
719
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1905
36:03
And then, of course, at the end is going to be the process
720
2163745
2763
36:06
of getting the vaccine out to all those who need it,
721
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2463
36:09
and that's going to need to be dependent upon the risk at that time.
722
2169019
3316
36:12
CA: Help me understand this better, Seth,
723
2172938
1973
36:14
because right now, it feels like there's this huge effort going on,
724
2174935
3159
36:18
but companies are operating, in a way, competitively with each other.
725
2178118
3489
36:21
To an extent, countries are operating competitively with each other.
726
2181631
4800
36:26
Are you saying that what the world needs is some kind of widely supported
727
2186455
5121
36:31
global -- I don't know -- vaccine czar
728
2191600
2381
36:34
that is pulling together different efforts,
729
2194005
2517
36:36
coordinating, encouraging everyone to work together for the common good,
730
2196546
4462
36:41
and trying to get agreement on these big decisions
731
2201032
3608
36:44
like what are the smart few candidates to get behind,
732
2204664
3836
36:48
rather than this confusing explosion?
733
2208524
2610
36:51
And then, how do we coordinate manufacturing, etc?
734
2211158
3383
36:54
Like, is that a person or a small organization
735
2214565
3815
36:58
that some combination of governments, WHO, UN needs to put together?
736
2218404
3607
37:02
SB: So, first of all, you want science to bubble up at the beginning.
737
2222724
3410
37:06
You don't want to have centralized control,
738
2226158
3214
37:09
somebody saying, "I know best and I'm going to predict this."
739
2229396
2906
37:12
So you want it bubbling up from all over the place,
740
2232326
2435
37:14
but then you want a coordinated effort.
741
2234785
1862
37:16
The group that is best-placed to do that is the World Health Organization,
742
2236671
3691
37:20
maintaining a list of all the different programs that are going on.
743
2240386
3603
37:24
We also have other organizations. I mentioned CEPI before.
744
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3290
37:27
CEPI has now supported eight different candidates.
745
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2685
37:30
I think it's going to support more.
746
2250036
2660
37:32
Right now, WHO has on its list 44 candidates,
747
2252720
3137
37:35
but some people think as many as double that.
748
2255881
2557
37:38
So what you want to do is say, which are the most likely to succeed,
749
2258462
3765
37:42
and then put them through some type of standardized set of criteria
750
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5387
37:47
to pick a few of them to move forward aggressively for the world.
751
2267662
3938
37:51
Obviously, science is going to keep moving,
752
2271624
2079
37:53
they're going to keep changing,
753
2273727
1494
37:55
and it may be that your original approach isn't right and new ideas may come up,
754
2275245
4822
38:00
but you do need to have some process of moving this forward.
755
2280091
4075
38:04
And really, that's what I called for.
756
2284190
1782
38:05
What we need to make sure is that if companies have adequate resources
757
2285996
4511
38:10
to do this on their own,
758
2290531
1280
38:11
that's fine,
759
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1157
38:13
but if not, they need to be supported by the public sector
760
2293016
2740
38:15
and, again, making sure there's adequate manufacturing and ultimately distribution.
761
2295780
4193
38:19
Then, after a period of time, we can go back to normal
762
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2812
38:22
and return to the normal way vaccines are handled.
763
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4166
38:27
But I think that's probably the best way to get there.
764
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3636
38:31
CA: How much might this cost, and who should pay for it?
765
2311463
3515
38:36
SB: Well, it depends how many cases there are.
766
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2206
38:38
The good news is, we're talking now about trillions of dollars in economic loss,
767
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6136
38:44
and this is going to be --
768
2324765
1292
38:46
CA: I would hardly call that good news.
769
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1912
38:48
SB: I mean, I'm making the comparison. Sorry, you're absolutely right, Chris.
770
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4089
38:52
I mean, we're talking about tens of billions of dollars here,
771
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3828
38:55
not trillions of dollars, and the reason that's important is
772
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3772
38:59
you want to make sure that any good idea has its best chance of moving forward,
773
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4212
39:04
and we ought to, again, optimize for speed
774
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4507
39:08
and not optimize for being cost-effective at this time.
775
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3035
39:12
CA: So I guess you're saying that, like,
776
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4366
39:16
the rich countries may well be able to afford some kind of vaccine program.
777
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3554
39:20
I think what I hear you doing here is representing a lot of the countries
778
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3482
39:23
that can't afford it,
779
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1164
39:25
and what you're saying is that the world may have to find a way
780
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2975
39:28
of spending tens of billions of dollars
781
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1887
39:30
to avoid trillions of dollars of economic damage
782
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2379
39:32
and all the hardship that goes with it around the world.
783
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2624
39:35
Is that about right?
784
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1286
39:36
SB: That's absolutely right, but I think the important point is,
785
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3019
39:39
this needs to be a global perspective.
786
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2070
39:42
I mean, look at what happened with Ebola.
787
2382076
1971
39:44
We had a vaccine that was originally made in Canada
788
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2396
39:46
by the Public [Health] Agency of Canada.
789
2386491
1929
39:48
It was then transferred to a US biotech, then to Merck and Company,
790
2388444
3709
39:52
which is obviously a global player based in the US,
791
2392177
2400
39:54
and they're manufacturing it in Germany.
792
2394601
1956
39:56
That's the way science works,
793
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1448
39:58
and these vaccines may need components from other places.
794
2398053
3096
40:01
So how do we think about this in a global way and make sure that --
795
2401173
3725
40:04
By the way, the second vaccine that's in humans is from China.
796
2404922
2960
40:07
Of course, they've had a lot of time to work on it compared to some others.
797
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4298
40:12
And they have a candidate that's moving forward.
798
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2361
40:14
If that candidate is successful,
799
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1566
40:16
we want to make sure that's the one that's scaled up.
800
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2510
40:18
And so for me, it's making sure that we're looking at this
801
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4247
40:23
as a global ecosystem
802
2423008
2102
40:25
with the best candidates moving forward for the good of the world.
803
2425134
3304
40:29
CA: Whitney.
804
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1180
40:30
WPR: We have a lot of people watching from all over the world
805
2430762
2860
40:33
and we're seeing questions,
806
2433646
1295
40:34
especially from some of our friends in India who are watching,
807
2434975
2925
40:37
connected to this just basically about
808
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1928
40:39
how are poor nations going to get access to this vaccine?
809
2439852
3515
40:43
And then, specifically, when we think about who gets the vaccine first,
810
2443391
3856
40:47
will there be some sort of payment that people are paying for this vaccine
811
2447271
4668
40:51
and those who can afford it will get access before others?
812
2451963
3362
40:56
SB: Well, the decision on who will pay for it
813
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2116
40:58
will ultimately come from the political leaders,
814
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2277
41:00
and my recommendation would be, you start off as a global public good,
815
2460716
3397
41:04
you make the vaccine available because we're trying to stop the epidemic.
816
2464137
3505
41:07
Later on, we can have tiered pricing in different places.
817
2467666
2737
41:10
But one of the concerns, of course, is:
818
2470427
2337
41:12
Where is the epidemic going to be at that point,
819
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2323
41:15
and who needs it first?
820
2475135
1151
41:16
I would argue that people that will need it first are probably health workers,
821
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3712
41:20
because health workers are going to be on the front lines
822
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2702
41:22
and we want them to be there to be able to take care of people.
823
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2977
41:25
They're at risk of both contracting it as well as spreading it.
824
2485773
3000
41:28
Then you probably want to think about the high-risk individuals,
825
2488797
3134
41:31
the elderly, people who have preexisting conditions,
826
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2756
41:34
and then eventually, the rest of the population, if it's needed.
827
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3659
41:38
So having some type of way of thinking about that.
828
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2974
41:41
We'll also need to be thinking about equitable access,
829
2501416
2963
41:44
and that is going to mean thinking about the entire world.
830
2504403
3121
41:47
Now, Gavi, in the past, including in India,
831
2507548
2868
41:50
has worked to make sure these new technologies are there,
832
2510440
3124
41:53
but these are vaccines that existed and, in this case, it's a new vaccine.
833
2513588
4701
41:58
We have to make sure that it isn't hoarded only in wealthy countries
834
2518313
4759
42:03
or in a select set of countries.
835
2523096
1909
42:05
And one way to do that would be to have vaccine production in multiple places.
836
2525029
4001
42:09
So today a lot of the vaccines that Gavi uses are made around the world.
837
2529054
4443
42:13
Some are made in the United States and Europe,
838
2533521
2455
42:16
but some are made in South Korea, in India, in China, in other countries.
839
2536000
4860
42:20
And so what we could do is have a vaccine transfer the technology and manufacturing
840
2540884
5214
42:26
in multiple different sites
841
2546122
1476
42:27
so we could have enough vaccine for that original launch.
842
2547622
3203
42:30
But whatever happens, there will always be a period of time
843
2550849
3666
42:34
when we'll have an exciting vaccine and not enough doses to go around,
844
2554539
3682
42:38
and that's when we need to take hard decisions
845
2558245
2413
42:40
based upon science on who should get it.
846
2560682
2783
42:44
WPR: Thanks for that, Seth. I'll be back later with other questions.
847
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3389
42:48
CA: Thanks, Whitney. SB: Thank you.
848
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1695
42:50
CA: How confident are you that we'll eventually get one?
849
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2664
42:52
I mean, we still don't have a vaccine for HIV,
850
2572982
2889
42:55
nor for the common cold.
851
2575895
2378
42:58
How can you be confident that we can get one this time?
852
2578297
2734
43:01
SB: Well, first of all, as you know, I did a TED Talk even before the one of 2015
853
2581934
5542
43:07
talking about HIV and flu and how new science needs to come in,
854
2587500
4297
43:11
and frankly, we are making progress
855
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1694
43:13
against some of these incredibly difficult organisms.
856
2593539
2969
43:16
You talked about variability. That's the problem with HIV.
857
2596532
3024
43:19
It's constantly changing, and so you're chasing.
858
2599580
3135
43:22
You get a good immune response,
859
2602739
1680
43:24
but it's to the strain that was there before,
860
2604443
2142
43:26
and now you're chasing new strains.
861
2606609
1690
43:28
There are ways to work around that.
862
2608323
1680
43:30
It's new science.
863
2610027
1156
43:31
I, actually, I am optimistic.
864
2611207
1817
43:33
I'm optimistic because we have some experience with SARS vaccines
865
2613048
3814
43:36
and with MERS vaccines,
866
2616886
1498
43:38
and so people have worked on it.
867
2618408
1854
43:40
They've been able to get good immune responses in animals and in people
868
2620286
4214
43:44
for those vaccines.
869
2624524
1240
43:45
And so we can build on that experience.
870
2625788
2839
43:48
I can't tell you how long they'll last for,
871
2628651
2821
43:51
how effective they will be.
872
2631496
1332
43:52
Will they need to have local mucosal immunity,
873
2632852
3078
43:55
which is in the mouth and nose,
874
2635954
1497
43:57
as well as serum immunity in the bloodstream?
875
2637475
3164
44:00
Will they need to have just antibodies or the other arm of the immune system,
876
2640663
4038
44:04
the cellular arm?
877
2644725
1656
44:06
These are questions that will need to be answered,
878
2646405
2372
44:08
but I am a great believer in the power of science,
879
2648801
2771
44:11
and I think in this case the organism is not going to be quite as difficult
880
2651596
4563
44:16
as the ones you're talking about that are much more difficult.
881
2656183
3747
44:20
CA: You mentioned in your TED Talk five years ago, Seth,
882
2660949
2717
44:23
that we've got this situation where we're spending billions of dollars
883
2663690
3789
44:27
on nuclear submarines patrolling the oceans
884
2667503
3366
44:30
for a possible incoming threat, nuclear war threat or whatever,
885
2670893
5235
44:36
and almost nothing on preparation for a pandemic like the one we're suffering.
886
2676152
6423
44:43
If the world is adequately shaken up by what's happening now
887
2683210
4138
44:47
and gets rational about this,
888
2687372
2911
44:50
what is the key structural shift
889
2690307
3231
44:53
that would be the pandemic equivalent of having those nuclear submarines?
890
2693562
4173
44:57
How do we prepare for a new virus
891
2697759
5540
45:03
that we don't know what it will be or when it will come?
892
2703323
2653
45:06
How do we prepare to have a much more rapid response?
893
2706000
2994
45:10
SB: Well, it's a great question and I think the TED community
894
2710071
2909
45:13
has a role to play here.
895
2713004
1158
45:14
So first of all, we need better surveillance.
896
2714186
2121
45:16
We need surveillance everywhere in the world,
897
2716331
2176
45:18
and that's why we don't want to have another outbreak
898
2718531
2498
45:21
like in West Africa with Ebola.
899
2721053
1496
45:22
You want to have a resilient health system
900
2722573
2704
45:25
in every country that reaches out to the periphery.
901
2725301
2548
45:27
And that's an important priority.
902
2727873
1600
45:29
We're doing pretty good with immunization.
903
2729497
2067
45:31
We've reached 90 percent of the kids of the world
904
2731588
2471
45:34
with at least one dose of routine vaccine.
905
2734083
2012
45:36
That's the best of health interventions.
906
2736119
1911
45:38
But we need to reach that last 10 percent and put that health system in place.
907
2738054
3761
45:41
Then we need to have a different view.
908
2741839
1827
45:43
We need to start working,
909
2743690
1511
45:45
where are our likely hot spots?
910
2745225
1927
45:47
It's where we're cutting down forest.
911
2747176
2901
45:50
It's in urban slums, where there's density of populations.
912
2750101
3662
45:53
It's with climate change
913
2753787
1329
45:55
and movement of different vectors.
914
2755140
1996
45:57
And what we need to do is use predictive science,
915
2757160
2340
45:59
and that's where big data can help,
916
2759524
1693
46:01
that's where AI can help in terms of trying to do that.
917
2761241
3090
46:04
And we need to have a one-health approach,
918
2764355
2228
46:06
because we tend to think of animal diseases --
919
2766607
3001
46:09
and by the way, people have worked on coronavirus vaccines for animals,
920
2769632
3497
46:13
because they also cause disease there --
921
2773153
1920
46:15
we need to make sure that the scientists working on veterinary vaccines
922
2775097
3345
46:18
are connected to humans, are thinking about those whole ecosystem.
923
2778466
3559
46:22
And we need to invest in that.
924
2782049
1897
46:23
And unfortunately, after an epidemic, everybody wants to invest,
925
2783970
5334
46:29
and they say, "Whatever it takes,"
926
2789328
2055
46:31
and then we move to on other things, and investments go down.
927
2791407
4603
46:36
What's different about the military is that there is a baseline of investment
928
2796034
4143
46:40
that goes on all the time and nobody questions that.
929
2800201
2891
46:43
It continues, and that level of preparedness seems to be there.
930
2803116
3931
46:47
Bill Gates in his talk in TED, when we did that back-to-back, said,
931
2807071
3919
46:51
look, the military are doing war games,
932
2811014
2032
46:53
they're constantly testing, they have all this preparatory activities.
933
2813070
3317
46:56
Why are we not doing that in diseases?
934
2816411
2297
46:58
And, as you know, since then, there has been some war games,
935
2818732
3540
47:02
and they've basically said we weren't prepared,
936
2822296
2211
47:04
and I think we're seeing now that, in fact,
937
2824531
2074
47:06
we're not as prepared as we could be.
938
2826629
1796
47:08
So my hope, the silver lining would be that we prepare for the next big outbreak,
939
2828449
5368
47:13
because it's absolutely evolutionarily certain
940
2833841
3094
47:16
we will continue to have outbreaks.
941
2836959
2323
47:19
The question is: How prepared are we to deal with those?
942
2839306
2709
47:23
CA: As we wait for a vaccine,
943
2843266
2861
47:26
are there other interventions that could be made,
944
2846151
2893
47:29
for example, the serum from people who have been infected and have recovered?
945
2849068
6246
47:36
SB: So, that technique has been used in other infectious diseases
946
2856293
3384
47:39
and throughout history and even in Ebola recently.
947
2859701
3166
47:42
That's something that could potentially be done.
948
2862891
2398
47:45
Of course, today, it's more attractive if you can make antibodies in the laboratory
949
2865313
5113
47:50
and then have those available at scale
950
2870450
1932
47:52
and use those,
951
2872406
1150
47:53
and I know of a lot of companies that are working on producing those antibodies,
952
2873580
4116
47:57
which could be infused in an emergency situation, and do that.
953
2877720
4419
48:02
Obviously, drugs may play an important role here.
954
2882163
2643
48:04
There's a similar effort to try to create drugs
955
2884830
2552
48:07
that are active against this organism,
956
2887406
2299
48:09
and if we knew that you'd get sick but there was an effective treatment,
957
2889729
3929
48:13
that would also change a little bit of the dynamics
958
2893682
3019
48:16
of the fear that exists around this pandemic.
959
2896725
2940
48:19
So I think there are lots of interventions.
960
2899689
2706
48:22
Of course, traditionally,
961
2902419
1276
48:23
a preventive vaccine is the best way to deal with these types of epidemics.
962
2903719
4620
48:29
CA: So paint us -- it's the inner optimist in me, begging for something --
963
2909713
5439
48:35
paint us the best case scenario, Seth.
964
2915176
2419
48:37
Lots of people are saying,
965
2917619
1858
48:39
we don't want to be huddled in our homes by ourselves for 18 months,
966
2919501
4920
48:44
lovely though the internet is.
967
2924445
2391
48:47
What's the best case scenario, putting all the pieces together here?
968
2927226
5244
48:53
SB: Well, I think what is likely to happen,
969
2933261
2913
48:56
but I don't want to predict, because we're in unprecedented times here.
970
2936198
3599
48:59
What's likely to happen is that countries who don't take this seriously
971
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4866
49:04
will have severe outbreaks,
972
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1746
49:06
those that really take it seriously
973
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1831
49:08
and put these extraordinary mechanisms in place
974
2948336
3167
49:11
will control the disease.
975
2951527
1793
49:13
It'll take some time, it'll take --
976
2953344
1830
49:15
you know, this is weeks, maybe months, not years, to do that.
977
2955198
4415
49:19
And then you end up with a situation where the disease is controlled,
978
2959637
3598
49:23
and you then can go back to life as normal with some cautions around it.
979
2963259
4311
49:27
Now there's beginning to be new tests that are going to be home tests.
980
2967594
3605
49:31
We're going to be able to figure out whether classrooms, regions,
981
2971223
3520
49:34
countries have disease.
982
2974767
1556
49:36
We can go back to some level of normalcy,
983
2976347
2954
49:39
but one thing that's really important is we can't have areas of the world
984
2979325
3645
49:42
with raging disease.
985
2982994
1270
49:44
So for example, if people said,
986
2984288
1571
49:45
"Oh, we're not worried about Africa, we're only worried about our countries,"
987
2985883
3624
49:49
you might end up in a situation where you have large numbers of infections,
988
2989531
3559
49:53
the virus is mutating, it's actually adapting to humans.
989
2993114
3035
49:56
We saw some of that with SARS.
990
2996173
1888
49:58
And then it is easy to reintroduce.
991
2998085
2905
50:01
So what you want to do is dampen it down everywhere in the world.
992
3001014
4110
50:05
And maybe it'll burn out. Maybe that'll be it.
993
3005148
3265
50:08
I personally think we'll probably need a vaccine,
994
3008437
2288
50:10
but best case scenario is that those alone will stop the epidemic,
995
3010749
5076
50:15
and what we'll need is then a vaccine just in case it comes back,
996
3015849
3154
50:19
but of course if I was a betting man,
997
3019027
2528
50:21
I'd say let's get a vaccine as soon as possible,
998
3021579
2686
50:24
because that's the best way to control a viral infection,
999
3024289
3498
50:27
particularly one that is spread respiratorily.
1000
3027811
2289
50:31
CA: Yeah. It's so interesting what you said there.
1001
3031068
2410
50:33
Like, the vaccine doesn't know what continent it's on,
1002
3033502
2802
50:36
what country it's in.
1003
3036328
1763
50:38
It just does its thing.
1004
3038115
2119
50:40
SB: That's correct.
1005
3040258
2596
50:42
CA: So in terms of people listening here,
1006
3042878
2457
50:45
what kind of psychological advice can you give them?
1007
3045359
2710
50:48
What should expectations be?
1008
3048093
1818
50:49
Like, do we have to be ready to settle in for the long haul here,
1009
3049935
3136
50:53
or should we be looking forward to getting back to business
1010
3053095
4233
50:57
around about Easter time and celebrating?
1011
3057352
2633
51:00
SB: Well, again, I don't want to put a time line on it like others do.
1012
3060818
3310
51:04
What you're going to want to see is that bending of the curve.
1013
3064152
3744
51:07
I think Bill talked about this.
1014
3067920
2441
51:10
You want the reproductive rate below one.
1015
3070385
3028
51:13
You want to get it way below one if you can,
1016
3073437
2502
51:15
and then to begin to see the disease spread.
1017
3075963
2464
51:18
And what you don't want to do is, in the middle of that,
1018
3078451
2670
51:21
jump out and start having parties.
1019
3081145
1635
51:22
It's not time to go on spring break and start mixing again.
1020
3082804
3133
51:25
But with careful control,
1021
3085961
2585
51:28
you can begin to release the controls if that's what science shows us.
1022
3088570
3846
51:32
And I think the most important thing here is we need the data to tell us that.
1023
3092440
3717
51:36
That's why testing is so important.
1024
3096181
1952
51:38
With the wide availability of testing,
1025
3098157
2319
51:40
we'll be able to keep tabs, know what's happening.
1026
3100500
3154
51:43
We'll know how many people are asymptomatic, what's happened.
1027
3103678
2918
51:46
We'll know where there are hot communities,
1028
3106620
2063
51:48
and we'll be able to deal with this,
1029
3108707
2113
51:50
is my prediction.
1030
3110844
1156
51:52
So I don't think this is over a very, very long time,
1031
3112024
3671
51:55
but I wouldn't rush it during this unprecedented moment.
1032
3115719
3851
51:59
Otherwise, we're going to end up seeing what we saw in Italy.
1033
3119594
2858
52:02
What we're seeing in New York right now
1034
3122456
1900
52:04
is the overwhelming of the health system.
1035
3124356
1975
52:07
CA: Yeah, no kidding. New York is a scary place right now.
1036
3127090
3542
52:10
I was out walking today.
1037
3130656
1559
52:12
I hope that was OK.
1038
3132239
1195
52:13
But there was no one. There was no one.
1039
3133458
2122
52:15
Like, you couldn't get within six feet of someone if you tried right now,
1040
3135604
4186
52:19
on the busiest walk spots.
1041
3139814
3228
52:23
That was nice to see, but man, it's startling.
1042
3143581
5497
52:29
SB: I mean, recent data has shown that droplets can spread the disease,
1043
3149657
4841
52:34
and so people are rightfully being cautious.
1044
3154522
2416
52:36
And we didn't know that.
1045
3156962
1163
52:38
You remember when we started, we said it's a point outbreak,
1046
3158149
3237
52:41
out of Wuhan, wet market,
1047
3161410
1832
52:43
you had to be in the market to get the disease.
1048
3163266
2220
52:45
Then it was, if you were with sick people,
1049
3165510
2019
52:47
you got the disease.
1050
3167553
1183
52:48
Then it was maybe asymptomatics.
1051
3168760
1535
52:50
I think as we understand better,
1052
3170319
1570
52:51
that gives us the tools to do the right thing.
1053
3171913
2296
52:55
CA: There's a debate out there that seems to be growing again about masks.
1054
3175121
4879
53:00
The East and West take very different advice on masks.
1055
3180024
4928
53:04
We were hearing from Gary Liu yesterday that everyone in Hong Kong and China
1056
3184976
4360
53:09
is basically wearing masks,
1057
3189360
1318
53:10
and arguably, that has been effective.
1058
3190702
1998
53:12
The advice in the West against not wearing masks --
1059
3192724
2907
53:15
how much of that has been driven by just the fact that there's a shortage of masks
1060
3195655
3919
53:19
and that if anyone needs to wear them, it's medical professionals?
1061
3199598
3461
53:23
If it's water droplets, it seems like masks could be effective in prevention.
1062
3203083
6994
53:30
SB: I mean, the most important intervention, as you know,
1063
3210101
3275
53:33
is some isolation and very careful handwashing or use of sanitizers,
1064
3213400
4913
53:38
because what happens is, you touch your face --
1065
3218337
3098
53:41
I forget the number, I think it's like every one to two minutes --
1066
3221459
4530
53:46
and you touch your eyes,
1067
3226013
1182
53:47
so if you reach a door handle or you have contact with a surface,
1068
3227219
3645
53:50
and we know the virus can live on those surfaces,
1069
3230888
2369
53:53
and then you touch your face,
1070
3233281
1399
53:54
touch your mouth, touch your nose,
1071
3234704
1933
53:56
you can spread it.
1072
3236661
1153
53:57
So the purpose of a mask for a person who is not infected
1073
3237838
2692
54:00
is not so much to keep them from getting infected.
1074
3240554
2364
54:02
It is to keep them from touching their face.
1075
3242942
3204
54:06
So I think what's interesting here is,
1076
3246170
2674
54:08
how do we get people to have this personal sanitation?
1077
3248868
3558
54:12
If we have unlimited quantities of masks, people want to do it as a way
1078
3252450
3379
54:15
to remind themselves not to touch their face.
1079
3255853
3511
54:19
Now, that's very different if you're infected,
1080
3259388
2186
54:21
because if you're coughing,
1081
3261598
1808
54:23
having a mask on does reduce the spread of droplets,
1082
3263430
5058
54:28
and that's why they recommend it in a situation where somebody is infected
1083
3268512
5978
54:34
and has to go to the hospital or has to go out and be seen.
1084
3274514
3463
54:38
CA: Yeah, I was touching my face
1085
3278551
1538
54:40
all through the Bill Gates interview, apparently,
1086
3280113
2319
54:42
and I got called to task by our online friends,
1087
3282456
3704
54:46
which was very nice.
1088
3286184
1157
54:47
I don't know if I've been doing that today.
1089
3287365
2045
54:49
It's funny, you're unconscious of it. It's weird.
1090
3289434
2356
54:51
SB: Yes. No, it's automatic.
1091
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And in fact, there was a WHO challenge for safe handwashing,
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and I did a video, and I left my water running while I did it,
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and my friends in the developing world came to me and said,
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you know, I live in Switzerland by a lake where we have a lot of water,
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and I wasn't careful, and they were absolutely right.
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So it's really good we correct each other,
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that's an important point,
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and help each other in doing this
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to get us to be as compliant as we possibly can for these issues.
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Whitney.
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WPR: Yep. So feedback online is overwhelmingly positive.
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You're really answering all of everyone's questions out there,
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and people really appreciate what you're sharing, Seth.
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I think one big question is just for folks who are watching from home
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and maybe who are not part of your community
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55:39
in terms of the science community.
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How can they contribute to this global response effort?
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How can they do something to advance this?
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SB: That's a great question.
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So first of all, I think it's really important that citizens support leaders
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who are following science,
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are using science,
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because, as you know, sometimes political leaders say,
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"Well, I don't want to do this because it's not good for my image
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56:05
or it's not good for the economy or it's not good for whatever."
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56:08
And I think you want to have all of your decisions taken by science,
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understanding that they're not the best science.
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56:13
So, citizens need to applaud,
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even if it's a tough decision that politicians take for the good
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based upon science, that's a good thing.
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The second thing that really would be helpful
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is this concept: How do we keep our world focused on the fact
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that these epidemics will occur?
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56:32
Another example I didn't answer,
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which Chris, when he asked me about what could be done,
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we talked about this idea of platform technologies.
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These are vaccines that you can test, get them all ready,
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and then, when a new organism occurs, you can put it in there
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56:46
and you know how to manufacture it, how to scale it up.
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These types of things can be done. CEPI is trying to do that now.
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But the challenge is,
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if we, a year after this,
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go down to having no money available for these types of issues,
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that will be a problem.
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So what you need is citizens to say,
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"I understand now
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that health is precious,
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and I want my government, my leaders
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to invest in this, in the science,
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57:12
in the ways of working
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so that we will be as safe as we can be going forward."
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And I think I can't emphasize enough how important a message that is
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for citizens everywhere in the world.
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CA: Mmm.
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57:24
Hey Whitney, stay on as we wrap up here.
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I guess what I'd like to give you a chance to do, Seth,
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as we wrap this up
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is just to look at the camera
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and make your call to the world's leaders,
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companies,
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politicians, scientists, citizens.
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57:48
How do we move forward?
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57:50
How would you wrap this up?
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SB: So from my perspective,
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what we need is the world to come together at this moment,
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not to talk about our national programs,
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not to talk about our science are the best,
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58:03
and they may be the best,
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but how do we, as a world,
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pool our best science, our best resources,
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our best ways of working, our best manufacturing,
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58:13
our best clinical trials,
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58:15
to move this forward as fast as possible?
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The WHO is a global organization whose job is this normative function,
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58:22
and we can get scientists to help them make sure that the normative function
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is as strong as it can be.
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We can get the leaders of the world to come together
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58:32
and put the resources in place.
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Given the cost it's having on the economy,
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this will be a real bargain to invest in it.
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58:38
But what we need is to have that mindset of having science drive us
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and to make sure that we have no barriers in stopping that science going forward.
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That's my request to the world, and I think we can do it,
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58:51
and if we do that, we will end up seeing the power of science,
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which will give us the tools we need
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to either stop it -- hopefully, it'll be stopped by then --
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but stop it and then prepare us for the next one.
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CA: Mmm.
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Powerfully said.
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I have to say, Seth, it's incredibly encouraging
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59:10
to know that there are people like you out there in the trenches,
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59:13
trying to coordinate this immense and crucial effort on behalf of all of us,
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59:20
and also that there's an organization out there,
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59:23
that your organization is tasked
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to carry any effective vaccine
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to the many billions of people who may live in countries
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59:35
that can't afford to pay the same prices that the West can pay.
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59:39
That's really cool that you're doing that,
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59:43
and thank you so much for explaining so clearly to us
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what the situation is.
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59:48
I guess I speak for the majority of people listening
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59:52
to say all power to you with pulling these threads together.
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59:56
Thank you, Seth.
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59:58
WPR: Thank you, Seth.
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SB: Thank you, Chris and Whitney and the TED community
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60:02
for all of your support over the years.
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Let's continue to use science and technology
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60:08
for the good of the world to solve problems like this.
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60:11
CA: Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant.
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WPR: That was wonderful.
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I learned so much from this conversation.
1202
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60:20
It seems like everyone online also really did, which was helpful.
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60:23
And I'd like to remind everyone that, if you missed part of this interview,
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60:27
you can watch it on our Facebook page as soon as we finish,
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60:29
and then also -- and I'm going to read the link --
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60:32
it's go.ted.com/tedconnects.
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60:34
So our Facebook page, or go.ted.com/tedconnects.
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60:41
CA: Thanks so much for joining us.
1209
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60:43
We get the sense people,
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60:46
literally all over the world and in so many different circumstances,
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4351
60:50
and yet, this moment has given us a new excuse
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60:55
to bring you all together.
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60:58
Part of me,
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60:59
even though you really could wish that we weren't in this situation,
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61:05
it does give us a chance to explore some ideas in greater depth
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61:10
than we're normally able to, to have these conversations.
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61:13
These are not 15-minute talks on a red circle.
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61:16
You can just go a little bit deeper,
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61:19
and there's something really cool about that
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61:21
that I think we want to do more of,
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61:24
and we want to figure out how to hear from you and include you
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61:29
and make sure that your questions and your thoughts are coming in.
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61:34
As we speak, we're dreaming up what speakers to bring next.
1224
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61:38
We know about Friday.
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61:40
We don't necessarily know beyond that.
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61:42
But watch this space.
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61:43
Whitney, talk about what's going to happen tomorrow.
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61:46
WPR: So we're really excited.
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1395
61:47
We're going to have Priya Parker on to finish out the week for us.
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She is the author of "The Art of Gathering,"
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and she's going to give us some really helpful tips, I think,
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61:55
about how we can stay connected during this time,
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61:57
which is something I'm sure all of us are struggling with
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as we're trying to practice social distancing
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62:02
and are just spending more time physically apart.
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62:05
So going into the weekend, that feels like the type of thing
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62:08
I think all of us can really benefit from hearing.
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62:12
CA: If you've got value from this conversation,
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consider sharing it, sharing those links with people you know.
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62:21
That would be cool.
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62:22
And hang in there, everyone.
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These are hard days.
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62:27
We know many people are struggling hugely.
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62:30
Hang in there. We'll get through it together somehow.
1245
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62:33
And until tomorrow, take care.
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62:35
Bye for now.
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62:37
WPR: Take care, everyone.
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1819
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