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How the pandemic will shape the near future

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    Chris Anderson. Welcome, Bill Gates.
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    Bill Gates: Thank you.
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    CA: All right. It's great
    to have you here, Bill.
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    You know, we had a TED conversation
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    about three months ago
    about this pandemic,
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    and back then I think fewer than --
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    I think that was the end of March --
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    Back then, fewer than
    a thousand people in the US had died,
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    and fewer than 20,000 worldwide.
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    I mean, the numbers now are,
    like, 128,000 dead in the US
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    and more than half a million worldwide.
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    in three months.
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    In three months.
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    What is your diagnosis of what is possible
    for the rest of this year?
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    You look at a lot of models.
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    What do you think best
    and worst case scenarios might be?
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    BG: Well, the range of scenarios, sadly,
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    is quite large, including that,
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    as we get into the fall,
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    we could have death rates
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    that rival the worst of what we had
    in the April time period.
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    If you get a lot of young people infected,
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    eventually they will infect
    old people again,
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    and so you'll get into the nursing homes,
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    the homeless shelters,
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    the places where we've had
    a lot of our deaths.
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    The innovation track,
    which probably we will touch on --
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    diagnostics, therapeutics, vaccines --
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    there's good progress there,
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    but nothing that would
    fundamentally alter the fact
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    that this fall in the United States
    could be quite bad,
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    and that's worse than
    I would have expected a month ago,
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    the degree to which we're back
    at high mobility,
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    not wearing masks,
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    and now the virus actually
    has gotten into a lot of cities
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    that it hadn't been in before
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    in a significant way,
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    so it's going to be a challenge.
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    There's no case where we get
    much below the current death rate,
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    which is about 500 deaths a day,
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    but there's a significant risk
    we'd go back up
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    to the even 2,000 a day
    that we had before,
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    because we don't have the distancing,
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    the behavior change,
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    to the degree that we had
    in April and May,
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    and we know this virus
    is somewhat seasonal,
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    so that the force of infection,
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    both through temperature, humidity,
    more time indoors,
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    will be worse as we get into the fall.
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    CA: So there are scenarios
    where in the US,
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    like, if you extrapolate
    those numbers forward,
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    we end up with, what,
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    more than a quarter of a million deaths,
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    perchance, even this year
    if we're not careful,
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    and worldwide I guess the death toll
    could by the end of the year
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    be well into the millions, with an s.
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    Is there evidence that the hotter
    temperatures of the summer
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    actually have been helping us?
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    BG: They're not absolutely sure,
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    but certainly the ?? model
    definitely wanted to use the season,
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    including temperature and humidity,
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    to try and explain why May
    wasn't worse than it was.
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    And so as we came out
    and the mobility numbers got higher,
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    the models expected more infections
    and deaths to come out of that,
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    and the model kept wanting to say,
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    "But I need to use this seasonality
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    to match why May wasn't worse,
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    why June wasn't worse than it was."
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    And we see in the Southern Hemisphere,
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    you know, Brazil,
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    which is the opposite season,
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    all of South America
    is having a huge epidemic.
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    South Africa is having
    a very fast-growing epidemic.
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    Fortunately, Australia and New Zealand,
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    the last countries
    in the Southern Hemisphere,
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    are at really tiny case counts,
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    and so although they have
    to keep knocking it down,
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    they're talking about, oh,
    we have 10 cases,
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    that's a big deal,
    let's go get rid of that.
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    So they're one of these amazing countries
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    that got the numbers so low
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    that test, quarantine and trace
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    is working to get them,
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    keep them at very near zero.
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    CA: Aided perhaps a bit
    by being easier to isolate
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    and by less density,
    less population density,
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    but nonetheless smart policies down there.
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    BG: Yeah. Everything is so exponential
    that a little bit of good work
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    goes a long ways.
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    It's not a linear game.
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    Contact tracing, if you have
    the number of cases we have in the US,
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    it's super-important to do,
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    but it won't get you back down to zero.
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    It'll help you be down,
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    but it's too overwhelming.
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    CA: OK, so in May and June in the US,
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    the numbers were actually slightly better
    than some of the models predicted,
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    and it's hypothesized that that might be
    partly because of the warmer weather.
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    Now we're seeing, really,
    would you describe it
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    as really quite alarming upticks
    in case rates in the US?
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    BG: That's right.
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    In, say, the New York area,
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    the cases continue to go down somewhat,
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    but in other parts of the country,
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    primarily the South right now,
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    you have increases
    that are offsetting that,
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    and you have testing
    positive rates in young people
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    that are actually higher
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    than what we saw even
    in some of the tougher areas,
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    and so clearly younger people
    have come out of mobility
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    more than older people
    have increased their mobility,
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    so the age structure
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    is right now very young, but
    because of multigenerational households,
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    people work in nursing care homes,
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    unfortunately that will work its way back,
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    both the time lag and the transmission
    back up into the elderly,
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    will start to push the death rate back up,
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    which it is down,
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    way down from 2,000
    to around 500 right now.
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    CA: And is that partly because
    there's a three-week lag
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    between case numbers and fatality numbers?
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    And also, perhaps, partly because
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    there have been
    some effective interventions
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    and we're actually seeing the possibility
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    that the overall fatality rate
    is actually falling a bit
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    now that we've gained
    some extra knowledge?
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    BG: Yeah, certainly
    your fatality rate is always lower
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    when you're not overloaded,
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    and so Italy when they were overloaded,
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    Spain, even New York at the start,
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    certainly China,
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    there you weren't even able
    to provide the basics,
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    the oxygen and things.
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    A study that our foundation
    funded in the UK
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    found the only thing
    other than remdesivir
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    that is a proven therapeutic,
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    which is the dexamethasone,
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    that for serious patients
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    is about a 20 percent death reduction,
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    and there's still quite
    a pipeline of those things.
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    You know, hydroxychloroquine
    never established positive data,
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    so that's pretty much done.
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    There's still a few trials ongoing,
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    but the list of things being tried,
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    including eventually
    ?? antibodies,
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    we will have some additional
    tools for the fall.
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    And so when you talk about death rates,
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    the good news is some
    innovation we already have
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    and we will have more
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    even in the fall.
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    We should start to have
    monoclonal antibodies,
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    which is the single therapeutic
    that I'm most excited about.
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    CA: I'll actually ask you to tell me
    a bit more about that in one sec,
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    but just putting the pieces
    together on death rates:
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    so in a well-functioning health system,
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    so take the US when places
    aren't overcrowded,
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    what do you think
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    the current fatality numbers
    are approximately going forward,
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    like as a percentage of total cases?
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    Are we below one percent, perhaps?
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    BG: If you found every case, yes,
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    you're well below one percent.
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    People argue, you know, 0.4, 0.5.
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    By the time you bring in
    the never symptomatics,
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    it probably is below 0.5,
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    and that's good news.
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    This disease could have been
    a five percent disease.
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    The transmission dynamics of this disease
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    are more difficult
    than even the experts predicted.
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    The amount of pre-symptomatic
    and never symptomatic spread,
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    and the fact that it's not coughing,
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    where you would kind of notice,
    hey, I'm coughing.
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    Most respiratory diseases make you cough.
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    This one, in its early stages,
    it's not coughing,
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    it's singing, laughing, talking,
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    actually still particularly
    for the super-spreaders,
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    people with very high viral loads,
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    causes that spread,
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    and that's pretty novel,
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    and so even experts have to say,
    wow, this caught us by surprise.
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    The amount of asymptomatic spread
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    and the fact that there's not
    a coughing element
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    is not a major piece like the flu or TB.
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    CA: Yeah, that is devilish cunning
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    by the virus.
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    I mean, how much is
    that non-symptomatic transmission
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    as a percentage of total transmission?
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    I've heard numbers it could be
    as much as half of all transmissions
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    are basically pre-symptomatic.
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    BG: Yeah, if you count pre-symptomatics,
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    then most of the studies show
    that's like at 40 percent,
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    and we also have never symptomatics.
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    The amount of virus you get
    in your upper respiratory area
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    is somewhat disconnected.
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    Some people will have a lot here
    and very little in their lungs,
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    and what you get in your lungs
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    causes the really bad symptoms,
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    and other organs,
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    but mostly the lungs,
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    and so that's when you seek treatment.
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    And so the worst case
    in terms of spreading
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    is somebody who's got a lot
    in the upper respiratory tract
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    but almost none in their lungs,
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    so they're not care-seeking.
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    CA: Right.
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    And so if you add in the never symptomatic
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    to the pre-symptomatic,
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    do you get above 50 percent
    of the transmission
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    is actually from non-symptomatic people?
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    BG: Yeah, transmission
    is harder to measure.
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    You know, we see certain
    hotspots and things,
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    but that's a huge question
    with the vaccine:
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    will it, besides avoiding
    you getting sick,
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    which is what the trial will test,
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    will it also stop you
    from being a transmitter?
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    CA: So that vaccine,
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    it's such an important question,
    let's come on to that,
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    but before we go there,
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    any other surprises
    in the last couple months
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    that we've learned about this virus
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    that really impact how
    we should respond to it?
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    BG: We're still not able to characterize
    who the super-spreaders are
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    in terms of what that profile is,
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    and we may never.
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    That may just be quite random.
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    If you could identify them,
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    they're responsible
    for the majority of transmission,
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    a few people who have
    very high viral loads.
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    But sadly, we haven't figured that out.
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    This mode of transmission,
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    if you're in a room and nobody talks,
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    there's way less transmission.
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    That's partly why,
    although planes can transmit,
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    it's less than you would expect
    just in terms of time proximity measures,
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    because unlike, say,
    a choir or a restaurant,
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    you're not exhaling in loud talking
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    quite as much as in
    other indoor environments.
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    CA: What do you think about the ethics
    of someone who would go on a plane
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    and refuse to wear a mask?
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    BG: If they own the plane,
    that would be fine.
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    If there's other people on the plane,
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    that would be endangering
    those other people.
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    CA: Early on in the pandemic,
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    the WHO did not advise
    that people wear masks.
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    They were worried about taking them away
    from frontline medical providers.
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    In retrospect, was that
    a terrible mistake that they made?
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    BG: Yes.
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    All the experts feel bad
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    that the value of masks,
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    which ties back somewhat
    to the asymptomatics,
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    if people were very symptomatic,
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    like in Ebola,
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    then you know it and you isolate,
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    and so you don't have
    a need for a mask-like thing.
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    The value of masks,
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    the fact that the medical masks
    was a different supply chain
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    than the normal masks,
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    the fact you could scale up
    the normal masks so well,
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    the fact that it would stop
    that pre-symptomatic,
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    never symptomatic transmission,
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    it's a mistake,
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    but it's not a conspiracy,
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    it's something that we now know more.
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    And even now, our error bars
    on the benefit of masks
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    are higher than we'd like to admit,
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    but it's a significant benefit.
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    CA: All right, I'm going to come in
    with some questions
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    from the community.
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    Let's pull them up there.
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    Jim Pitofsky: "Do you think reopening
    efforts in the US have been premature,
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    and if so how far should the US go
    to responsibly confront this pandemic?"
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    BG: Well, the question
    of how you make tradeoffs
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    between the benefits, say,
    of going to school
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    versus the risk of people getting sick
    because they go to school,
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    those are very tough questions
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    that I don't think any single person
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    can say, "I will tell you
    how to make all these tradeoffs."
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    The understanding of
    where you have transmission,
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    and the fact that young people
    do get infected
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    and are part of the multi-generational
    transmission chain,
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    we should get that out.
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    If you just look at the health aspect,
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    we have opened up too liberally.
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    Now, opening up in terms of mental health
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    and seeking normal health things
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    like vaccines and other care,
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    there are benefits.
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    I think some of our opening up
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    has created more risk than benefit.
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    Opening the bars up
    as quickly as they did,
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    is that critical for mental health?
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    Maybe not.
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    So I don't think we've been
    as tasteful about opening up
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    as I'm sure, as we study it,
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    that we'll realize some things
    we shouldn't have opened up as fast,
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    but then you have something like school,
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    where even sitting here today,
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    the exact plan, say,
    for inner city schools for the fall,
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    I wouldn't have a black-and-white view
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    on the relative tradeoffs involved there.
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    There are huge benefits
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    to letting those kids go to school,
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    and how do you weigh the risk?
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    If you're in a city
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    without many cases,
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    I would say probably the benefit is there.
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    Now that means that
    you could get surprised.
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    The cases could show up,
    and then you'd have to change that,
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    which is not easy.
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    But I think around the US
    there will be places
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    where that won't be a good tradeoff.
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    So almost any dimension and inequity,
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    this disease has made worse:
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    job type, internet connection,
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    ability of your school
    to do online learning.
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    White collar workers,
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    people are embarrassed to admit it,
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    some of them are more productive
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    and enjoying the flexibility
    that the at-home thing has created,
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    and that feels terrible
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    when you know lots of people
    are suffering in many ways,
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    including their kids not going to school.
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    CA: Indeed. Let's have the next question.
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    "For us in Rwanda,
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    early policy interventions
    have made the difference.
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    At this point, what policy interventions
    do you suggest for the US now?"
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    Bill, I dream of the day
    where you are appointed
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    the coronavirus czar
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    with authority to actually
    speak to the public.
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    What would you do?
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    BG: The innovation tools
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    are where I and the foundation
    probably has the most expertise.
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    Clearly some of the policies
    on opening up have been too generous,
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    but I think everybody
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    could engage in that.
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    We need leadership
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    in terms of admitting
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    that we've still got a huge problem here,
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    and not turning that
    into almost a political thing
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    of, oh, isn't it brilliant what we did.
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    No, it's not brilliant,
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    but there's many people,
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    including the experts,
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    where there's a lot
    they didn't understand,
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    and everybody wishes a week earlier
    whatever action they took,
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    they'd taken that a week earlier.
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    The innovation tools,
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    that's where the foundation's work
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    on antibodies, vaccines,
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    we have deep expertise,
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    and it's outside of the private sector,
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    and so we have kind of a neutral ability
    to work with all the governments
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    and the companies to pick.
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    Particularly when you're doing
    break-even products,
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    which one should get the resources.
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    There's no market signal for that.
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    Experts have to say, OK,
    this antibody deserves the manufacturing.
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    This vaccine deserves the manufacturing.
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    Because, we have very limited
    manufacturing for both of those things,
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    and it'll be cross-company,
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    which never happens in the normal case,
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    where one company invents it
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    and then you're using
    the manufacturing plants
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    of many companies
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    to get maximum scale of the best choice.
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    So I would be coordinating those things,
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    but we need a leader
    who keeps us up to date,
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    is realistic,
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    and shows us the right behavior,
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    as well as driving the innovation track.
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    CA: I mean, you have to yourself
    be a master diplomat
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    in how you talk about this stuff.
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    So I appreciate, almost,
    the discomfort here,
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    but you talk regularly with Anthony Fauci,
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    who is a wise voice on this
    by most people's opinion.
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    But to what extent is he just hamstrung?
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    He's not allowed to play the full role
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    that he could play in the circumstance.
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    BG: Dr. Fauci has emerged,
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    where he was allowed to have some airtime,
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    and even though he was stating
    things that are realistic,
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    his prestige has stuck.
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    He can speak out in that way.
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    Typically, the CDC would be
    the primary voice here.
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    It's not absolutely necessary,
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    but in previous health crises,
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    you let the experts inside the CDC
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    be that voice.
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    They're trained to do these things,
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    and so it is a bit unusual here
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    how much we've had to rely on Fauci
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    as opposed to the CDC.
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    It should be Fauci,
    who is a brilliant researcher,
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    so experienced, particularly in vaccines,
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    in some ways he has become,
    taking the broad advice
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    that is the epidemiology advice
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    and explaining it in the right way,
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    where he'll admit,
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    "OK, we may have a rebound here,
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    and this is why we need
    to behave that way."
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    But it's fantastic that his voice
    has been allowed to come through.
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    CA: Sometimes.
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    Let's have the next question.
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    Nina Gregory: "How are you
    and your foundation
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    addressing the ethical questions
    about which countries
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    get the vaccine first,
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    assuming you find one?"
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    And maybe, Bill, use this as a moment
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    to just talk about where
    the quest for the vaccine is
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    and what are just some of the key things
    we should all be thinking about
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    as we track the news on this.
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    BG: There's three vaccines that are,
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    if they work, are the earliest:
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    the Moderna, which unfortunately
    won't scale very easily,
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    so if that works, it'll be mostly
    a US-targeted thing;
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    then you have the AstraZeneca,
    which comes from Oxford;
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    and the Johnson & Johnson.
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    Those are the three early ones,
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    and we have animal data
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    that looks potentially good,
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    but not definitive,
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    particularly will it work in the elderly,
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    and we'll have human data
    over the next several months.
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    Those three will be gated by
    the safety and efficacy trial.
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    That is, we'll be able
    to manufacture those,
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    although not as much as we want.
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    We'll be able to manufacture those
    before the end of the year.
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    Whether the Phase 3 will succeed,
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    and whether it'll complete
    before the end of the year,
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    I wouldn't be that optimistic about.
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    Phase 3 is where you need
    to really look at all the safety profile
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    and efficacy,
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    but those will get started.
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    And then there's four or five vaccines
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    that use different approaches
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    that are maybe three
    or four months behind that:
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    Novavax, Sanofi, Merck.
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    And so we're funding factory capacity
    for a lot of these --
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    some complex negotiations
    are taking place right now on this --
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    to get factories that will be dedicated
    to the poorer countries,
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    what's called low- and middle-income.
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    And the very scalable constructs
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    that include AstraZeneca
    and Johnson & Johnson,
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    we'll focus on those,
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    the ones that are inexpensive
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    and you can build a single factory
    to make 600 million doses.
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    So a number of the vaccine constructs
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    are potential.
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    I don't see anything
    before the end of the year.
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    That's really the best case,
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    and it's down to a few constructs now,
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    which typically you have
    high failure rates.
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    CA: Bill, is the case
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    that you and your foundation
    weren't in the picture here
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    that market dynamics would likely
    lead to a situation
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    where as soon as a promising
    vaccine candidate emerged,
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    the richer countries
    would basically snap up,
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    gobble up all available initial supply --
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    it just takes a while
    to manufacture these --
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    and there would be nothing
    for the poorer countries,
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    but that what effectively you're doing,
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    by giving manufacturing guarantees
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    and capability to some
    of these candidates,
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    you're making it possible that
    at least some of the early vaccine units
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    will go to poorer countries?
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    Is that correct?
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    BG: Well, it's not just us, but yes,
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    we're in the central role there
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    along with a group we created called CEPI,
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    Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness,
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    and the European leaders agree with this.
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    Now we have the expertise
    to look at each of the constructs
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    and say, OK, where is there
    a factory in the world
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    that has capacity that can build that?
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    Which one should we put
    the early money into?
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    What should the milestones be
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    where we'll shift the money
    over to a different one?
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    Because the kind of private sector people
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    who really understand that stuff,
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    some of them work for us,
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    and we're a trusted party on these things,
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    we get to coordinate a lot,
    particularly the manufacturing piece.
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    Usually, you'd expect the US
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    to think of this as
    a global problem and be involved.
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    So far, no activity
    on that front has taken place.
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    I am talking to people in the Congress
    and the Administration
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    about when the next
    relief bill comes along
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    that maybe one percent of that
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    could go for the tools
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    to help the entire world.
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    And so it's possible,
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    but it's unfortunate,
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    and the vacuum here
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    the world is not that used to
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    and a lot of people are stepping in,
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    including our foundation,
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    to try and have a strategy,
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    including for the poorer countries
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    who will suffer a high percentage
    of the deaths and negative effects,
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    including their health systems
    being overwhelmed.
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    Most of the deaths will be
    in developing countries,
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    despite the huge deaths we've seen
    in Europe and the US.
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    CA: I mean, I wish I could be
    a fly on the wall and hearing
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    you and Melinda talk about this,
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    because of all of
    the ethical crimes, let's say,
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    executed by leaders
    who should know better,
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    I mean, it's one thing
    to not model mask-wearing,
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    but to not play a role
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    in helping the world when faced
    with a common enemy,
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    respond as one humanity
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    and instead catalyze a really unseemly
    scramble between nations
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    to fight for vaccines, for example.
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    That just seems that surely history
    is going to judge that harshly.
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    That is just sickening.
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    Isn't it? Am I missing something?
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    BG: Well, it's not quite
    as black and white as that.
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    The US has put more money out
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    to fund the basic research
    on these vaccines
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    than any country by far,
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    and that research is not restricted.
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    There's not, like, some royalty
    that says, "Hey, if you take our money,
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    you have to pay the US a royalty."
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    They do, to the degree they fund research,
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    it's for everybody.
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    To the degree they fund factories,
    it's just for the US.
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    The thing that makes this tough is that
    in every other global health problem,
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    the US totally leads smallpox eradication,
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    the US is totally the leader
    on polio eradication
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    with key partners -- CDC, WHO,
    Rotary, UNICEF, our foundation.
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    So the world, and on HIV,
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    what under President Bush's leadership,
    but it was very bipartisan,
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    this thing called PEPFAR was unbelievable.
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    That has saved tens of millions of lives.
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    And so it's that the world
    always expected the US
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    to at least be at the head of the table,
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    financially, strategy, OK, how do you
    get these factories for the world,
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    even if it's just to avoid the infection
    coming back to the US
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    or to have the global economy working,
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    which is good for US jobs
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    to have demand outside the US.
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    And so the world is kind of,
    there's all this uncertainty
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    about which thing will work,
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    and there's, OK, who is in charge here?
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    And so the worst thing,
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    the withdrawal from WHO,
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    that is a difficulty
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    that hopefully will
    get remedied at some point,
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    because we need that coordination
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    through WHO.
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    CA: Let's take another question.
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    Ali Kashani: "Are there any
    particularly successful models
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    of handling the pandemic
    that you have seen around the world?"
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    BG: Well, it's fascinating that,
    besides early action,
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    there are definitely things where
    you take people who have tested positive
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    and you monitor their ??,
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    which is a oxygen saturation
    level in their blood,
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    which is a very cheap detector,
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    and then you know to get them
    to the hospitals fairly early.
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    Weirdly, patients don't know
    things are about to get severe.
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    It's an interesting physiological reason
    but I won't get into.
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    And so Germany has
    a quite a low case fatality rate
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    that they've done through
    that type of monitoring.
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    And then, of course,
    once you get into facilities,
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    we've learned that the ventilator
    actually, although extremely well-meaning,
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    was actually overused
    and used in the wrong mode
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    in those early days.
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    So the health, the doctors
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    are way smarter about treatment today.
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    Most of that I would say is global.
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    Using this ??
    as an early indicator,
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    that'll probably catch on broadly,
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    but Germany was a pioneer there.
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    And now, of course, dexamethasone,
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    fortunately, it's cheap, it's oral,
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    we can ramp up manufacture.
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    That'll go global as well.
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    CA: Bill, I want to ask you
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    something about
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    what it's been like for you personally
    through this whole process.
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    Because, weirdly, even though
    your passion and good intent on this topic
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    seems completely bloody obvious to anyone
    who has spent a moment with you,
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    there are these crazy
    conspiracy theories out there about you.
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    I just checked in
    with a company called Zignal
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    that monitors social media spaces.
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    They say that, to date,
    I think on Facebook alone,
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    more than four million posts
    have taken place
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    that associate you with some kind
    of conspiracy theory around the virus.
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    I read that there was a poll
    that more than 40 percent of Republicans
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    believe that the vaccine
    that you would roll out
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    would somehow plant a microchip
    in people to track their location.
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    I mean, I can't even believe
    that poll number.
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    And then some people
    are taking this seriously enough,
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    and some of them have even been
    recirculated on Fox News and so forth,
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    some people are taking this
    seriously enough
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    to make really quite horrible
    threats and so forth.
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    You seem to do a good job
    sort of shrugging this off,
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    but really, like, who else
    has ever been in this position?
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    How are you managing this?
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    What on earth world are we in
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    that this kind of misinformation
    can be out there?
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    What can we do to help correct it?
Title:
How the pandemic will shape the near future
Speaker:
Bill Gates
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
43:07

English subtitles

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