Larry Brilliant: TED Prize wish: Help stop the next pandemic

242,294 views ・ 2007-01-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:25
I'm the luckiest guy in the world.
0
25261
1739
00:27
I got to see the last case of killer smallpox in the world.
1
27944
4032
00:33
I was in India this past year,
2
33182
1921
00:35
and I may have seen the last cases of polio in the world.
3
35127
3887
00:40
There's nothing that makes you feel more --
4
40395
3021
00:43
the blessing and the honor of working in a program like that --
5
43440
4543
00:48
than to know that something that horrible no longer exists.
6
48007
4044
00:52
So I'm going to tell you --
7
52401
1327
00:53
(Applause)
8
53752
2705
00:56
so I'm going to show you some dirty pictures.
9
56481
2405
00:59
They are difficult to watch, but you should look at them with optimism,
10
59314
6350
01:05
because the horror of these pictures will be matched
11
65688
5071
01:10
by the uplifting quality of knowing that they no longer exist.
12
70783
4072
01:15
But first, I'm going to tell you a little bit about my own journey.
13
75839
3822
01:20
My background is not exactly the conventional medical education
14
80455
3285
01:23
that you might expect.
15
83764
1236
01:26
When I was an intern in San Francisco,
16
86230
4909
01:31
I heard about a group of Native Americans who had taken over Alcatraz Island,
17
91163
3812
01:34
and a Native American who wanted to give birth on that island,
18
94999
2977
01:38
and no other doctor wanted to go and help her give birth.
19
98000
4141
01:42
I went out to Alcatraz, and I lived on the island for several weeks.
20
102165
3597
01:46
She gave birth; I caught the baby; I got off the island;
21
106588
2721
01:49
I landed in San Francisco;
22
109333
1856
01:51
and all the press wanted to talk to me,
23
111213
1888
01:53
because my three weeks on the island made me an expert in Indian affairs.
24
113125
4101
01:57
(Laughter)
25
117250
1004
01:58
I wound up on every television show.
26
118278
2039
02:00
Someone saw me on television; they called me up; and they asked me
27
120341
3112
02:03
if I'd like to be in a movie and to play a young doctor
28
123477
2605
02:06
for a bunch of rock and roll stars who were traveling in a bus ride
29
126106
3150
02:09
from San Francisco to England.
30
129280
2074
02:11
And I said, yes, I would do that,
31
131378
1598
02:13
so I became the doctor in an absolutely awful movie
32
133000
4256
02:17
called "Medicine Ball Caravan."
33
137280
1898
02:19
(Laughter)
34
139202
1046
02:20
Now, you know from the '60s,
35
140272
1472
02:21
you're either on the bus or you're off the bus; I was on the bus.
36
141768
3077
02:24
My wife of 37 years and I joined the bus.
37
144869
2997
02:27
Our bus ride took us from San Francisco to London,
38
147890
2680
02:30
then we switched buses at the big pond.
39
150594
2199
02:32
We then got on two more buses
40
152817
3428
02:36
and we drove through Turkey and Iran, Afghanistan,
41
156269
3072
02:39
over the Khyber Pass into Pakistan, like every other young doctor.
42
159365
3611
02:43
This is us at the Khyber Pass, and that's our bus.
43
163000
2667
02:45
We had some difficulty getting over the Khyber Pass.
44
165691
2655
02:49
But we wound up in India.
45
169529
1471
02:51
And then, like everyone else in our generation,
46
171465
2249
02:53
we went to live in a Himalayan monastery.
47
173738
2285
02:56
(Laughter)
48
176047
1953
02:59
This is just like a residency program,
49
179420
1811
03:01
for those of you that are in medical school.
50
181255
2156
03:03
(Laughter)
51
183435
1633
03:05
And we studied with a wise man, a guru named Karoli Baba,
52
185092
5200
03:10
who then told me to get rid of the dress,
53
190316
3642
03:13
put on a three-piece suit,
54
193982
1743
03:15
go join the United Nations as a diplomat
55
195749
3254
03:19
and work for the World Health Organization.
56
199027
2060
03:21
And he made an outrageous prediction that smallpox would be eradicated,
57
201111
4368
03:25
and that this was God's gift to humanity,
58
205503
3022
03:28
because of the hard work of dedicated scientists.
59
208549
2505
03:31
And that prediction came true.
60
211660
2004
03:34
This little girl is Rahima Banu,
61
214504
2310
03:36
and she was the last case of killer smallpox in the world.
62
216838
2965
03:40
And this document is the certificate that the global commission signed,
63
220232
4976
03:45
certifying the world to have eradicated the first disease in history.
64
225232
4768
03:51
The key to eradicating smallpox was early detection, early response.
65
231336
5640
03:57
I'm going to ask you to repeat that: early detection, early response.
66
237661
4007
04:01
Can you say that?
67
241692
1152
04:02
Audience: Early detection, early response.
68
242868
2422
04:05
Larry Brilliant: Smallpox was the worst disease in history.
69
245962
2909
04:08
It killed more people than all the wars in history.
70
248895
2518
04:11
In the last century, it killed 500 million people.
71
251437
4563
04:17
You're reading about Larry Page already.
72
257943
1906
04:19
Somebody reads very fast.
73
259873
1572
04:21
(Laughter)
74
261469
1554
04:23
In the year that Larry Page and Sergey Brin --
75
263047
2174
04:25
with whom I have a certain affection and a new affiliation --
76
265245
3616
04:28
in the year in which they were born,
77
268885
2180
04:31
two million people died of smallpox.
78
271089
2121
04:34
We declared smallpox eradicated in 1980.
79
274059
3595
04:38
This is the most important slide that I've ever seen in public health,
80
278760
3296
04:42
[Sovereigns killed by smallpox] because it shows you
81
282080
2484
04:44
to be the richest and the strongest,
82
284588
1871
04:46
and to be kings and queens of the world,
83
286483
1925
04:48
did not protect you from dying of smallpox.
84
288432
2074
04:50
Never can you doubt that we are all in this together.
85
290530
3812
04:55
But to see smallpox from the perspective of a sovereign
86
295469
3910
04:59
is the wrong perspective.
87
299403
1500
05:01
You should see it from the perspective of a mother,
88
301302
2674
05:04
watching her child develop this disease and standing by helplessly.
89
304000
3817
05:07
Day one, day two, day three,
90
307841
5731
05:13
day four, day five, day six.
91
313596
5605
05:19
You're a mother and you're watching your child,
92
319701
2913
05:22
and on day six, you see pustules that become hard.
93
322638
4976
05:28
Day seven, they show the classic scars of smallpox umbilication.
94
328400
4724
05:33
Day eight.
95
333148
1310
05:34
And Al Gore said earlier
96
334482
1728
05:36
that the most photographed image in the world,
97
336234
2889
05:39
the most printed image in the world,
98
339147
1747
05:40
was that of the Earth.
99
340918
1160
05:42
But this was in 1974, and as of that moment,
100
342516
3197
05:45
this photograph was the photograph that was the most widely printed,
101
345737
3623
05:49
because we printed two billion copies of this photograph,
102
349384
3485
05:52
and we took them hand to hand, door to door,
103
352893
3154
05:56
to show people and ask them if there was smallpox in their house,
104
356071
4881
06:00
because that was our surveillance system.
105
360976
2106
06:03
We didn't have Google, we didn't have web crawlers,
106
363106
2555
06:05
we didn't have computers.
107
365685
1730
06:08
By day nine -- you look at this picture and you're horrified;
108
368867
3857
06:12
I look at this picture and I say, "Thank God,"
109
372748
2533
06:15
because it's clear that this is only an ordinary case of smallpox,
110
375305
3961
06:19
and I know this child will live.
111
379290
1991
06:22
And by day 13, the lesions are scabbing, his eyelids are swollen,
112
382487
5343
06:27
but you know this child has no other secondary infection.
113
387854
3829
06:32
And by day 20, while he will be scarred for life, he will live.
114
392064
4317
06:37
There are other kinds of smallpox that are not like that.
115
397175
3049
06:40
This is confluent smallpox,
116
400248
2388
06:42
in which there isn't a single place on the body where you could put a finger
117
402660
3785
06:46
and not be covered by lesions.
118
406469
2809
06:49
Flat smallpox, which killed 100 percent of people who got it.
119
409302
4286
06:53
And hemorrhagic smallpox, the most cruel of all,
120
413612
2969
06:56
which had a predilection for pregnant women.
121
416605
3268
06:59
I've probably had 50 women die.
122
419897
1967
07:02
They all had hemorrhagic smallpox.
123
422310
2102
07:04
I've never seen anybody die from it who wasn't a pregnant woman.
124
424436
3324
07:08
In 1967, the WHO embarked on what was an outrageous program
125
428458
3921
07:12
to eradicate a disease.
126
432403
1484
07:14
In that year, there were 34 countries affected with smallpox.
127
434204
3572
07:18
By 1970, we were down to 18 countries.
128
438363
2906
07:21
1974, we were down to five countries.
129
441848
2612
07:24
But in that year, smallpox exploded throughout India.
130
444848
4314
07:30
And India was the place where smallpox made its last stand.
131
450154
3822
07:34
In 1974, India had a population of 600 million.
132
454548
3039
07:37
There are 21 linguistic states in India,
133
457611
3018
07:40
which is like saying 21 different countries.
134
460653
2192
07:43
There are 20 million people on the road at any time,
135
463242
2897
07:46
in buses and trains, walking; 500,000 villages, 120 million households,
136
466163
6019
07:52
and none of them wanted to report
137
472206
2304
07:54
if they had a case of smallpox in their house,
138
474534
2442
07:57
because they thought that smallpox was the visitation of a deity,
139
477000
3364
08:00
Shitala Mata, the cooling mother,
140
480388
2023
08:02
and it was wrong to bring strangers into your house
141
482435
4176
08:06
when the deity was in the house.
142
486635
1747
08:09
No incentive to report smallpox.
143
489048
2249
08:11
It wasn't just India that had smallpox deities;
144
491686
2605
08:14
smallpox deities were prevalent all over the world.
145
494315
3264
08:18
So, how we eradicated smallpox was --
146
498000
3412
08:21
mass vaccination wouldn't work.
147
501436
2274
08:23
You could vaccinate everybody in India,
148
503734
1903
08:25
but one year later there'd be 21 million new babies,
149
505661
2500
08:28
which was then the population of Canada.
150
508185
2095
08:30
It wouldn't do just to vaccinate everyone.
151
510693
2188
08:32
You had to find every single case of smallpox in the world
152
512905
3071
08:36
at the same time, and draw a circle of immunity around it.
153
516000
2976
08:39
And that's what we did.
154
519545
1455
08:42
In India alone, my 150,000 best friends and I went door to door,
155
522315
5195
08:47
with that same picture,
156
527534
2074
08:49
to every single house in India.
157
529632
1571
08:51
We made over one billion house calls.
158
531227
1876
08:54
And in the process, I learned something very important.
159
534541
3516
08:58
Every time we did a house-to-house search,
160
538763
4258
09:03
we had a spike in the number of reports of smallpox.
161
543045
4724
09:07
When we didn't search, we had the illusion that there was no disease.
162
547793
5135
09:12
When we did search, we had the illusion that there was more disease.
163
552952
4204
09:17
A surveillance system was necessary,
164
557180
2239
09:19
because what we needed was early detection, early response.
165
559443
5977
09:26
So we searched and we searched,
166
566722
2199
09:28
and we found every case of smallpox in India.
167
568945
2850
09:31
We had a reward. We raised the reward.
168
571819
2961
09:34
We continued to increase the reward.
169
574804
2056
09:36
We had a scorecard that we wrote on every house.
170
576884
2813
09:40
And as we did that,
171
580426
1731
09:42
the number of reported cases in the world dropped to zero.
172
582181
3376
09:46
And in 1980, we declared the globe free of smallpox.
173
586963
4680
09:51
It was the largest campaign in United Nations history,
174
591667
4505
09:56
until the Iraq war.
175
596196
1610
09:58
150,000 people from all over the world --
176
598657
3319
10:02
doctors of every race, religion, culture and nation,
177
602000
2916
10:04
who fought side by side, brothers and sisters,
178
604940
4895
10:09
with each other, not against each other,
179
609859
3238
10:13
in a common cause to make the world better.
180
613121
2222
10:16
But smallpox was the fourth disease that was intended for eradication.
181
616248
3796
10:20
We failed three other times.
182
620068
2253
10:22
We failed against malaria, yellow fever and yaws.
183
622345
3279
10:25
But soon we may see polio eradicated.
184
625648
3328
10:29
But the key to eradicating polio is early detection, early response.
185
629000
5737
10:35
This may be the year we eradicate polio.
186
635610
2849
10:38
That will make it the second disease in history.
187
638483
2690
10:41
And David Heymann, who's watching this on the webcast --
188
641197
4139
10:45
David, keep on going. We're close!
189
645360
2960
10:48
We're down to four countries.
190
648344
1632
10:50
(Applause)
191
650000
6407
10:56
I feel like Hank Aaron.
192
656431
1215
10:57
Barry Bonds can replace me any time.
193
657670
2003
10:59
Let's get another disease off the list of terrible things to worry about.
194
659697
4134
11:04
I was just in India working on the polio program.
195
664815
3249
11:08
The polio surveillance program is four million people going door to door.
196
668088
5763
11:13
That is the surveillance system.
197
673875
2101
11:16
But we need to have early detection, early response.
198
676000
4126
11:20
Blindness, the same thing.
199
680150
1627
11:21
The key to discovering blindness is doing epidemiological surveys
200
681801
4952
11:26
and finding out the causes of blindness,
201
686777
2199
11:29
so you can mount the correct response.
202
689000
2658
11:32
The Seva Foundation was started by a group of alumni
203
692261
4613
11:36
of the Smallpox Eradication Programme,
204
696898
2892
11:39
who, having climbed the highest mountain,
205
699814
2691
11:42
tasted the elixir of the success of eradicating a disease,
206
702529
4447
11:47
wanted to do it again.
207
707000
1976
11:49
And over the last 27 years, Seva's programs in 15 countries
208
709000
4868
11:53
have given back sight to more than two million blind people.
209
713892
3084
11:57
Seva got started because we wanted to apply these lessons
210
717982
3131
12:01
of surveillance and epidemiology
211
721137
2595
12:03
to something which nobody else was looking at as a public health issue:
212
723756
3925
12:07
blindness, which heretofore had been thought of only as a clinical disease.
213
727705
3986
12:12
In 1980, Steve Jobs gave me that computer, which is Apple number 12,
214
732834
6272
12:19
and it's still in Kathmandu, and it's still working,
215
739130
2453
12:21
and we ought to go get it and auction it off and make more money for Seva.
216
741607
3845
12:26
And we conducted the first Nepal survey ever done for health,
217
746214
4036
12:30
and the first nationwide blindness survey ever done,
218
750274
2857
12:33
and we had astonishing results.
219
753155
1821
12:35
Instead of finding out what we thought was the case --
220
755562
2711
12:38
that blindness was caused mostly by glaucoma and trachoma --
221
758297
3679
12:42
we were astounded to find out
222
762000
2464
12:44
that blindness was caused instead by cataract.
223
764488
3675
12:49
You can't cure or prevent what you don't know is there.
224
769092
4127
12:55
In your TED packages there's a DVD, "Infinite Vision,"
225
775145
4196
12:59
about Dr. V and the Aravind Eye Hospital.
226
779365
2611
13:02
I hope that you will take a look at it.
227
782000
2032
13:04
Aravind, which started as a Seva project,
228
784056
2174
13:06
is now the world's largest and best eye hospital.
229
786254
2948
13:09
This year, that one hospital will give back sight
230
789226
3397
13:12
to more than 300,000 people in Tamil Nadu, India.
231
792647
3551
13:16
(Applause)
232
796222
4274
13:20
Bird flu.
233
800520
1152
13:21
I stand here as a representative of all terrible things --
234
801696
2821
13:24
this might be the worst.
235
804541
1459
13:26
The key to preventing or mitigating pandemic bird flu
236
806791
4754
13:31
is early detection and rapid response.
237
811569
2407
13:34
We will not have a vaccine or adequate supplies of an antiviral
238
814000
5803
13:39
to combat bird flu if it occurs in the next three years.
239
819827
3149
13:43
WHO stages the progress of a pandemic.
240
823342
3634
13:47
We are now at stage three on the pandemic alert stage,
241
827346
4393
13:51
with just a little bit of human-to-human transmission,
242
831763
3555
13:55
but no human-to-human-to-human sustained transmission.
243
835342
3634
13:59
The moment WHO says we've moved to category four --
244
839000
4228
14:03
this will not be like Katrina.
245
843252
2163
14:05
The world as we know it will stop.
246
845439
2079
14:07
There'll be no airplanes flying.
247
847542
1742
14:10
Would you get in an airplane with 250 people you didn't know,
248
850000
3149
14:13
coughing and sneezing,
249
853173
1152
14:14
when you knew that some of them might carry a disease that could kill you,
250
854349
3493
14:17
for which you had no antivirals or vaccine?
251
857866
2880
14:21
I did a study of the top epidemiologists in the world in October.
252
861877
4017
14:25
I asked them -- these are all fluologists and specialists in influenza --
253
865918
4058
14:30
and I asked them the questions you'd like to ask them:
254
870000
2836
14:32
What do you think the likelihood is that there'll be a pandemic?
255
872860
3188
14:36
If it happens, how bad do you think it will be?
256
876072
2677
14:39
Fifteen percent said they thought there'd be a pandemic within three years.
257
879622
4091
14:43
But much worse than that,
258
883737
1936
14:45
90 percent said they thought there'd be a pandemic
259
885697
3462
14:49
within your children or your grandchildren's lifetime.
260
889183
2921
14:53
And they thought that if there was a pandemic,
261
893247
3524
14:56
a billion people would get sick.
262
896795
2016
14:59
As many as 165 million people would die.
263
899723
3429
15:03
There would be a global recession and depression
264
903850
2516
15:06
as our just-in-time inventory system
265
906390
2178
15:08
and the tight rubber band of globalization broke,
266
908592
3818
15:12
and the cost to our economy of one to three trillion dollars
267
912434
3944
15:16
would be far worse for everyone than merely 100 million people dying,
268
916402
5622
15:22
because so many more people would lose their job
269
922048
2302
15:24
and their healthcare benefits,
270
924374
1602
15:26
that the consequences are almost unthinkable.
271
926000
2455
15:30
And it's getting worse, because travel is getting so much better.
272
930169
3831
15:36
Let me show you a simulation of what a pandemic looks like.
273
936210
5699
15:42
So we know what we're talking about.
274
942746
2000
15:45
Let's assume, for example, that the first case occurs in South Asia.
275
945393
3607
15:50
It initially goes quite slowly.
276
950400
2350
15:52
You get two or three discrete locations.
277
952774
2616
15:57
Then there'll be secondary outbreaks, and the disease will spread
278
957128
4613
16:01
from country to country so fast that you won't know what hit you.
279
961765
4211
16:06
Within three weeks it will be everywhere in the world.
280
966510
3466
16:10
Now, if we had an "undo" button, and we could go back and isolate it
281
970786
5351
16:16
and grab it when it first started -- if we could find it early,
282
976161
3357
16:19
and we had early detection and early response,
283
979542
2434
16:22
and we could put each one of those viruses in jail --
284
982000
3690
16:25
that's the only way to deal with something like a pandemic.
285
985714
4881
16:32
And let me show you why that is.
286
992349
1651
16:35
We have a joke.
287
995095
1160
16:36
This is an epidemic curve, and everyone in medicine,
288
996279
2824
16:39
I think, ultimately gets to know what it is.
289
999127
2423
16:41
But the joke is,
290
1001574
1154
16:42
an epidemiologist likes to arrive at an epidemic right here
291
1002752
3109
16:45
and ride to glory on the downhill curve.
292
1005885
2138
16:48
(Laughter)
293
1008047
1103
16:49
But you don't get to do that usually.
294
1009174
1802
16:51
You usually arrive right about here.
295
1011000
1978
16:53
What we really want is to arrive right here, so we can stop the epidemic.
296
1013525
5284
16:59
But you can't always do that.
297
1019325
1431
17:01
But there's an organization that has been able to find a way
298
1021192
3557
17:04
to learn when the first cases occur,
299
1024773
2203
17:07
and that is called GPHIN;
300
1027000
2349
17:09
it's the Global Public Health Information Network.
301
1029373
2523
17:12
And that simulation that I showed you
302
1032246
2088
17:14
that you thought was bird flu -- that was SARS.
303
1034358
2197
17:16
And SARS is the pandemic that did not occur.
304
1036963
2800
17:20
And it didn't occur
305
1040332
1399
17:21
because GPHIN found the pandemic-to-be of SARS
306
1041755
6311
17:28
three months before WHO actually announced it, and because of that,
307
1048090
6038
17:34
we were able to stop the SARS pandemic.
308
1054152
3166
17:37
And I think we owe a great debt of gratitude
309
1057342
2081
17:39
to GPHIN and to Ron St. John,
310
1059447
2157
17:41
who I hope is in the audience some place -- over there --
311
1061628
3451
17:45
who's the founder of GPHIN.
312
1065103
1873
17:47
(Applause)
313
1067000
1483
17:48
Hello, Ron!
314
1068507
1469
17:50
(Applause)
315
1070000
6800
17:58
And TED has flown Ron here from Ottawa, where GPHIN is located,
316
1078610
4614
18:03
because not only did GPHIN find SARS early,
317
1083248
4437
18:07
but you may have seen last week
318
1087709
2117
18:09
that Iran announced that they had bird flu in Iran,
319
1089850
4331
18:14
but GPHIN found the bird flu in Iran not February 14 --
320
1094205
3692
18:17
but last September.
321
1097921
1857
18:19
We need an early-warning system
322
1099802
2660
18:22
to protect us against the things that are humanity's worst nightmare.
323
1102486
4335
18:27
And so my TED wish is based on the common denominator
324
1107639
3802
18:31
of these experiences.
325
1111465
1366
18:32
Smallpox -- early detection, early response.
326
1112855
2886
18:35
Blindness, polio -- early detection, early response.
327
1115765
3127
18:39
Pandemic bird flu -- early detection, early response.
328
1119249
3992
18:43
It is a litany.
329
1123265
1387
18:44
It is so obvious that our only way of dealing with these new diseases
330
1124676
5014
18:49
is to find them early and to kill them before they spread.
331
1129714
4327
18:54
So, my TED wish is for you to help build a global system --
332
1134065
4408
18:58
an early-warning system --
333
1138497
1479
19:00
to protect us against humanity's worst nightmares.
334
1140000
3731
19:04
And what I thought I would call it is "Early Detection,"
335
1144381
6123
19:11
But it should really be called ...
336
1151724
2124
19:15
"Total Early Detection." [TED]
337
1155223
1649
19:16
(Laughter)
338
1156896
1083
19:18
What?
339
1158003
1151
19:19
(Applause)
340
1159178
6985
19:26
What?
341
1166593
1150
19:27
(Applause)
342
1167767
2483
19:31
But in all seriousness,
343
1171219
1843
19:33
because this idea is birthed in TED,
344
1173086
3523
19:36
I would like it to be a legacy of TED, and I'd like to call it
345
1176633
5343
19:42
the "International System for Total Early Disease Detection."
346
1182000
5221
19:47
[INSTEDD]
347
1187245
1198
19:50
And INSTEDD then becomes our mantra.
348
1190800
4586
19:58
So instead of a hidden pandemic of bird flu,
349
1198235
2505
20:00
we find it and immediately contain it.
350
1200764
2000
20:03
Instead of a novel virus caused by bio-terror or bio-error,
351
1203723
4875
20:08
or shift or drift, we find it and we contain it.
352
1208622
3987
20:13
Instead of industrial accidents like oil spills
353
1213268
2486
20:15
or the catastrophe in Bhopal,
354
1215778
2198
20:18
we find them, and we respond to them.
355
1218000
3210
20:21
Instead of famine, hidden until it is too late,
356
1221790
3123
20:24
we detect it, and we respond.
357
1224937
2942
20:29
And instead of a system which is owned by a government,
358
1229061
3167
20:32
and hidden in the bowels of government,
359
1232252
2421
20:34
let's build an early detection system
360
1234697
2602
20:37
that's freely available to anyone in the world in their own language.
361
1237323
3829
20:41
Let's make it transparent, non-governmental,
362
1241858
4768
20:46
not owned by any single country or company,
363
1246650
3056
20:49
housed in a neutral country, with redundant backup
364
1249730
3420
20:53
in a different time zone and a different continent.
365
1253174
3167
20:57
And let's build it on GPHIN.
366
1257135
1993
20:59
Let's start with GPHIN.
367
1259152
1382
21:01
Let's increase the websites that they crawl
368
1261050
2914
21:03
from 20,000 to 20 million.
369
1263988
1988
21:06
Let's increase the languages they crawl
370
1266498
2509
21:09
from seven to 70, or more.
371
1269031
2793
21:12
Let's build in outbound confirmation messages,
372
1272173
3540
21:15
using text messages or SMS or instant messaging
373
1275737
3264
21:19
to find out from people who are within 100 meters
374
1279025
2810
21:21
of the rumor that you hear,
375
1281859
1751
21:23
if it is, in fact, valid.
376
1283634
1342
21:25
And let's add satellite confirmation.
377
1285000
2241
21:27
And we'll add Gapminder's amazing graphics to the front end.
378
1287614
3907
21:31
And we'll grow it as a moral force in the world,
379
1291545
3918
21:35
finding out those terrible things
380
1295487
2092
21:37
before anybody else knows about them,
381
1297603
2087
21:39
and sending our response to them,
382
1299714
2426
21:42
so that next year, instead of us meeting here,
383
1302164
3514
21:45
lamenting how many terrible things there are in the world,
384
1305702
3554
21:49
we will have pulled together,
385
1309280
1738
21:51
used the unique skills and the magic of this community,
386
1311042
4879
21:55
and be proud that we have done everything we can to stop pandemics,
387
1315945
3422
21:59
other catastrophes, and change the world, beginning right now.
388
1319391
4010
22:05
(Applause)
389
1325083
6397
22:23
Chris Anderson: An amazing presentation.
390
1343991
2185
22:26
First of all, just so everyone understands:
391
1346200
2783
22:29
you're saying that by creating web crawlers,
392
1349007
4516
22:33
looking on the Internet for patterns,
393
1353547
2881
22:36
they can detect something suspicious
394
1356452
4405
22:40
before WHO, before anyone else can see it?
395
1360881
2653
22:44
Give an example of how that could possibly be true.
396
1364478
2857
22:48
Larry Brilliant: You're not mad about the copyright violation?
397
1368174
2937
22:51
CA: No. I love it.
398
1371135
1159
22:52
(Laughter)
399
1372318
1202
22:53
LB: Well, as Ron St. John --
400
1373544
1553
22:55
I hope you'll go and meet him in the dinner afterwards and talk to him.
401
1375121
3420
22:58
When he started GPHIN --
402
1378565
2553
23:01
In 1997, there was an outbreak of bird flu -- H5N1.
403
1381142
4396
23:05
It was in Hong Kong.
404
1385562
1287
23:06
And a remarkable doctor in Hong Kong responded immediately,
405
1386873
3182
23:10
by slaughtering 1.5 million chickens and birds,
406
1390079
4817
23:14
and they stopped that outbreak in its tracks.
407
1394920
2888
23:17
Immediate detection, immediate response.
408
1397832
3212
23:21
Then a number of years went by,
409
1401068
1494
23:22
and there were a lot of rumors about bird flu.
410
1402586
2284
23:25
Ron and his team in Ottawa began to crawl the web --
411
1405584
3788
23:29
only crawling 20,000 different websites, mostly periodicals --
412
1409396
5190
23:34
and they read about and heard about a concern,
413
1414610
3223
23:37
of a lot of children who had high fever and symptoms of bird flu.
414
1417857
3819
23:42
They reported this to WHO.
415
1422613
1901
23:45
WHO took a little while taking action,
416
1425161
2012
23:47
because WHO will only receive a report from a government,
417
1427197
4659
23:51
because it's the United Nations.
418
1431880
1666
23:54
But they were able to point to WHO and let them know
419
1434396
3402
23:57
that there was this surprising and unexplained cluster of illnesses
420
1437822
4465
24:02
that looked like bird flu.
421
1442311
1404
24:04
That turned out to be SARS.
422
1444080
1734
24:05
That's how the world found out about SARS.
423
1445838
2372
24:08
And because of that, we were able to stop SARS.
424
1448805
2910
24:11
Now, what's really important is that, before there was GPHIN,
425
1451739
3578
24:15
100 percent of all the world's reports of bad things --
426
1455341
4215
24:19
whether you're talking about famine
427
1459580
1668
24:21
or you're talking about bird flu or you're talking about Ebola --
428
1461272
3078
24:24
100 percent of all those reports came from nations.
429
1464374
2739
24:27
The moment these guys in Ottawa --
430
1467526
1659
24:29
on a budget of 800,000 dollars a year -- got cracking,
431
1469209
4381
24:33
75 percent of all the reports in the world came from GPHIN,
432
1473614
4132
24:37
25 percent of all the reports in the world
433
1477770
2364
24:40
came from all the other 180 nations.
434
1480158
2057
24:43
Now, here's what's really interesting:
435
1483516
1968
24:45
after they'd been working for a couple years,
436
1485508
2643
24:48
what do you think happened to those nations?
437
1488175
2098
24:50
They felt pretty stupid.
438
1490297
1183
24:51
So they started sending in their reports early.
439
1491504
2213
24:53
And now, their reporting percentage is down to 50 percent,
440
1493741
3856
24:57
because other nations have started to report.
441
1497621
2418
25:00
So, can you find diseases early by crawling the web?
442
1500063
4166
25:04
Of course you can.
443
1504253
1181
25:05
Can you find it even earlier than GPHIN does now?
444
1505825
2848
25:08
Of course you can.
445
1508697
1151
25:09
You saw that they found SARS using their Chinese web crawler
446
1509872
4605
25:14
a full six weeks before they found it using their English web crawler.
447
1514501
4943
25:19
Well, they're only crawling in seven languages.
448
1519793
2389
25:22
These bad viruses really don't have any intention
449
1522206
2506
25:24
of showing up first in English or Spanish or French.
450
1524736
2458
25:27
(Laughter)
451
1527218
1999
25:29
So yes, I want to take GPHIN, I want to build on it.
452
1529241
4484
25:34
I want to add all the languages of the world that we possibly can.
453
1534312
3352
25:37
I want to make this open to everybody,
454
1537688
2288
25:40
so that the health officer in Nairobi or in Patna, Bihar
455
1540000
2976
25:43
will have as much access to it as the folks in Ottawa or in CDC.
456
1543000
4294
25:47
And I want to make it part of our culture
457
1547724
2404
25:50
that there is a community of people who are watching out
458
1550152
3587
25:53
for the worst nightmares of humanity,
459
1553763
2213
25:56
and that it's accessible to everyone.
460
1556000
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7