1 00:00:05,504 --> 00:00:07,398 When I was a kid, 2 00:00:07,398 --> 00:00:10,959 the disaster we worried about most was a nuclear war. 3 00:00:11,819 --> 00:00:15,085 That's why we had a barrel like this down in our basement, 4 00:00:15,085 --> 00:00:17,656 filled with cans of food and water. 5 00:00:18,256 --> 00:00:19,901 When the nuclear attack came, 6 00:00:19,901 --> 00:00:24,637 we were supposed to go downstairs, hunker down, and eat out of that barrel. 7 00:00:25,877 --> 00:00:29,597 Today the greatest risk of global catastrophe 8 00:00:29,597 --> 00:00:32,457 doesn't look like this. 9 00:00:32,457 --> 00:00:35,238 Instead, it looks like this. 10 00:00:36,438 --> 00:00:41,929 If anything kills over 10 million people in the next few decades, 11 00:00:41,929 --> 00:00:45,314 it's most likely to be a highly infectious virus 12 00:00:45,314 --> 00:00:47,792 rather than a war. 13 00:00:47,792 --> 00:00:51,679 Not missiles, but microbes. 14 00:00:51,679 --> 00:00:53,878 Now, part of the reason for this is that 15 00:00:53,878 --> 00:00:58,081 we've invested a huge amount in nuclear deterrents. 16 00:00:58,081 --> 00:01:03,179 But we've actually invested very little in a system to stop an epidemic. 17 00:01:04,129 --> 00:01:07,093 We're not ready for the next epidemic. 18 00:01:08,023 --> 00:01:09,758 Let's look at Ebola. 19 00:01:09,758 --> 00:01:13,615 I'm sure all of you read about it in the newspaper, 20 00:01:13,615 --> 00:01:15,221 lots of tough challenges. 21 00:01:15,221 --> 00:01:18,876 I followed it carefully through the case analysis tools 22 00:01:18,876 --> 00:01:23,721 we use to track polio eradication. 23 00:01:23,721 --> 00:01:25,573 And as you look at what went on, 24 00:01:25,573 --> 00:01:30,081 the problem wasn't that there was a system that didn't work well enough, 25 00:01:30,081 --> 00:01:33,649 the problem was that we didn't have a system at all. 26 00:01:34,589 --> 00:01:39,028 In fact, there's some pretty obvious key missing pieces. 27 00:01:39,028 --> 00:01:43,940 We didn't have a group of epidemiologists ready to go, who would have gone, 28 00:01:43,940 --> 00:01:47,696 seen what the disease was, seen how far it had spread. 29 00:01:47,696 --> 00:01:50,452 The case reports came in on paper. 30 00:01:50,452 --> 00:01:52,808 It was very delayed before they were put online 31 00:01:52,808 --> 00:01:54,782 and they were extremely inaccurate. 32 00:01:55,492 --> 00:01:57,858 We didn't have a medical team ready to go. 33 00:01:57,858 --> 00:02:00,453 We didn't have a way of preparing people. 34 00:02:00,453 --> 00:02:05,784 Now, Médecins Sans Frontières did a great job orchestrating volunteers. 35 00:02:05,784 --> 00:02:08,880 But even so, we were far slower than we should have been 36 00:02:08,880 --> 00:02:12,022 getting the thousands of workers into these countries. 37 00:02:12,022 --> 00:02:19,007 And a large epidemic would require us to have hundreds of thousands of workers. 38 00:02:20,752 --> 00:02:25,155 There was no one there to look at treatment approaches. 39 00:02:25,155 --> 00:02:26,946 No one to look at the diagnostics. 40 00:02:26,946 --> 00:02:30,243 No one to figure out what tools should be used. 41 00:02:30,243 --> 00:02:33,723 As an example, we could have taken the blood of survivors, 42 00:02:33,723 --> 00:02:39,158 processed it, and put that plasma back in people to protect them. 43 00:02:39,158 --> 00:02:41,764 But that was never tried. 44 00:02:41,764 --> 00:02:43,520 So there was a lot that was missing. 45 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:47,415 And these things are really a global failure. 46 00:02:48,305 --> 00:02:53,873 The WHO is funded to monitor epidemics, but not to do these things I talked about. 47 00:02:55,049 --> 00:02:57,842 Now, in the movies it's quite different. 48 00:02:57,842 --> 00:03:02,674 There's a group of handsome epidemiologists ready to go, 49 00:03:02,674 --> 00:03:08,446 they move in, they save the day, but that's just pure Hollywood. 50 00:03:10,177 --> 00:03:13,887 The failure to prepare could allow the next epidemic 51 00:03:13,887 --> 00:03:17,695 to be dramatically more devastating than Ebola 52 00:03:18,735 --> 00:03:23,531 Let's look at the progression of Ebola over this year. 53 00:03:24,311 --> 00:03:27,149 About 10,000 people died, 54 00:03:27,149 --> 00:03:31,846 and nearly all were in the three West African countries. 55 00:03:31,846 --> 00:03:34,433 There's three reasons why it didn't spread more. 56 00:03:34,433 --> 00:03:38,874 The first is that there was a lot of heroic work by the health workers. 57 00:03:38,874 --> 00:03:42,136 They found the people and they prevented more infections. 58 00:03:42,136 --> 00:03:44,621 The second is the nature of the virus. 59 00:03:44,621 --> 00:03:47,697 Ebola does not spread through the air. 60 00:03:47,697 --> 00:03:49,810 And by the time you're contagious, 61 00:03:49,810 --> 00:03:52,550 most people are so sick that they're bedridden. 62 00:03:54,220 --> 00:03:58,411 Third, it didn't get into many urban areas. 63 00:03:58,411 --> 00:04:00,115 And that was just luck. 64 00:04:00,115 --> 00:04:02,355 If it had gotten into a lot more urban areas, 65 00:04:02,355 --> 00:04:05,877 the case numbers would have been much larger. 66 00:04:05,877 --> 00:04:09,466 So next time, we might not be so lucky. 67 00:04:09,466 --> 00:04:14,530 You can have a virus where people feel well enough while they're infectious 68 00:04:14,530 --> 00:04:17,842 that they get on a plane or they go to a market. 69 00:04:17,842 --> 00:04:20,846 The source of the virus could be a natural epidemic like Ebola, 70 00:04:20,846 --> 00:04:22,826 or it could be bioterrorism. 71 00:04:22,826 --> 00:04:27,474 So there are things that would literally make things a thousand times worse. 72 00:04:27,474 --> 00:04:33,475 In fact, let's look at a model of a virus spread through the air, 73 00:04:33,475 --> 00:04:37,070 like the Spanish Flu back in 1918. 74 00:04:37,630 --> 00:04:39,560 So here's what would happen: 75 00:04:39,560 --> 00:04:43,558 It would spread throughout the world very, very quickly. 76 00:04:43,558 --> 00:04:48,683 And you can see over 30 million people died from that epidemic. 77 00:04:48,683 --> 00:04:50,496 So this is a serious problem. 78 00:04:50,496 --> 00:04:52,257 We should be concerned. 79 00:04:52,257 --> 00:04:56,692 But in fact, we can build a really good response system. 80 00:04:56,692 --> 00:05:01,836 We have the benefits of all the science and technology that we talk about here. 81 00:05:01,836 --> 00:05:02,883 We've got cell phones 82 00:05:02,883 --> 00:05:06,140 to get information from the public and get information out to them. 83 00:05:06,140 --> 00:05:10,319 We have satellite maps where we can see where people are and where they're moving. 84 00:05:10,319 --> 00:05:12,627 We have advances in biology 85 00:05:12,627 --> 00:05:16,453 that should dramatically change the turnaround time to look at a pathogen 86 00:05:16,453 --> 00:05:21,322 and be able to make drugs and vaccines that fit for that pathogen. 87 00:05:21,322 --> 00:05:22,888 So we can have tools, 88 00:05:22,888 --> 00:05:27,500 but those tools need to be put into an overall global health system. 89 00:05:27,500 --> 00:05:29,793 And we need preparedness. 90 00:05:29,793 --> 00:05:32,257 The best lessons, I think, on how to get prepared 91 00:05:32,257 --> 00:05:34,758 are again, what we do for war. 92 00:05:34,758 --> 00:05:39,005 For soldiers, we have full-time, waiting to go. 93 00:05:39,005 --> 00:05:42,316 We have reserves that can scale us up to large numbers. 94 00:05:42,316 --> 00:05:46,005 NATO has a mobile unit that can deploy very rapidly. 95 00:05:46,005 --> 00:05:49,455 NATO does a lot of war games to check, are people well trained? 96 00:05:49,455 --> 00:05:51,883 Do they understand about fuel and logistics 97 00:05:51,883 --> 00:05:54,241 and the same radio frequencies? 98 00:05:54,241 --> 00:05:56,779 So they are absolutely ready to go. 99 00:05:56,779 --> 00:06:01,134 So those are the kinds of things we need to deal with an epidemic. 100 00:06:01,134 --> 00:06:03,301 What are the key pieces? 101 00:06:03,301 --> 00:06:08,591 First, we need strong health systems in poor countries. 102 00:06:08,591 --> 00:06:11,778 That's where mothers can give birth safely, 103 00:06:11,778 --> 00:06:13,295 kids can get all their vaccines. 104 00:06:13,295 --> 00:06:17,634 But, also where we'll see the outbreak very early on. 105 00:06:18,154 --> 00:06:19,935 We need a medical reserve corps: 106 00:06:19,935 --> 00:06:22,501 lots of people who've got the training and background 107 00:06:22,501 --> 00:06:25,853 who are ready to go, with the expertise. 108 00:06:25,853 --> 00:06:30,266 And then we need to pair those medical people with the military. 109 00:06:30,266 --> 00:06:34,417 taking advantage of the military's ability to move fast, do logistics 110 00:06:34,417 --> 00:06:36,220 and secure areas. 111 00:06:36,220 --> 00:06:39,129 We need to do simulations, 112 00:06:39,129 --> 00:06:43,927 germ games, not war games, so that we see where the holes are. 113 00:06:43,927 --> 00:06:46,723 The last time a germ game was done in the United States 114 00:06:46,723 --> 00:06:50,443 was back in 2001, and it didn't go so well. 115 00:06:50,453 --> 00:06:55,490 So far the score is germs: 1, people: 0. 116 00:06:55,490 --> 00:07:01,609 Finally, we need lots of advanced R&D in areas of vaccines and diagnostics. 117 00:07:01,609 --> 00:07:05,246 There are some big breakthroughs, like the Adeno-associated virus, 118 00:07:05,246 --> 00:07:09,229 that could work very, very quickly. 119 00:07:09,229 --> 00:07:12,599 Now I don't have an exact budget for what this would cost, 120 00:07:12,599 --> 00:07:17,095 but I'm quite sure it's very modest compared to the potential harm. 121 00:07:17,095 --> 00:07:21,740 The World Bank estimates that if we have a worldwide flu epidemic, 122 00:07:21,740 --> 00:07:25,465 global wealth will go down by over three trillion dollars 123 00:07:25,465 --> 00:07:29,332 and we'd have millions and millions of deaths. 124 00:07:29,332 --> 00:07:32,317 These investments offer significant benefits 125 00:07:32,317 --> 00:07:34,518 beyond just being ready for the epidemic. 126 00:07:34,518 --> 00:07:36,982 The primary healthcare, the R&D, 127 00:07:36,982 --> 00:07:39,812 those things would reduce global health equity 128 00:07:39,812 --> 00:07:43,502 and make the world more just as well as more safe. 129 00:07:43,502 --> 00:07:46,864 So I think this should absolutely be a priority. 130 00:07:47,514 --> 00:07:48,980 There's no need to panic. 131 00:07:48,980 --> 00:07:53,469 We don't have to hoard cans of spaghetti or go down into the basement. 132 00:07:53,469 --> 00:07:57,309 But we need to get going, because time is not on our side. 133 00:07:57,309 --> 00:08:03,524 In fact, if there's one positive thing that can come out of the Ebola epidemic, 134 00:08:03,524 --> 00:08:09,330 it's that it can serve as an early warning, a wake-up call, to get ready. 135 00:08:09,330 --> 00:08:14,978 If we start now, we can be ready for the next epidemic. 136 00:08:14,978 --> 00:08:16,574 Thank you. 137 00:08:16,574 --> 00:08:19,868 (Applause)