#77 – Marc Lipsitch on whether we're winning or losing against COVID-19

#77 – Marc Lipsitch on whether we're winning or losing against COVID-19

In March Professor Marc Lipsitch — Director of Harvard's Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics — abruptly found himself a global celebrity, his social media following growing 40-fold and journalists knocking down his door, as everyone turned to him for information they could trust.

Here he lays out where the fight against COVID-19 stands today, why he's open to deliberately giving people COVID-19 to speed up vaccine development, and how we could do better next time.

As Marc tells us, island nations like Taiwan and New Zealand are successfully suppressing SARS-COV-2. But everyone else is struggling.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

Even Singapore, with plenty of warning and one of the best test and trace systems in the world, lost control of the virus in mid-April after successfully holding back the tide for 2 months.

This doesn't bode well for how the US or Europe will cope as they ease their lockdowns. It also suggests it would have been exceedingly hard for China to stop the virus before it spread overseas.

But sadly, there's no easy way out.

The original estimates of COVID-19's infection fatality rate, of 0.5-1%, have turned out to be basically right. And the latest serology surveys indicate only 5-10% of people in countries like the US, UK and Spain have been infected so far, leaving us far short of herd immunity. To get there, even these worst affected countries would need to endure something like ten times the number of deaths they have so far.

Marc has one good piece of news: research suggests that most of those who get infected do indeed develop immunity, for a while at least.

To escape the COVID-19 trap sooner rather than later, Marc recommends we go hard on all the familiar options — vaccines, antivirals, and mass testing — but also open our minds to creative options we've so far left on the shelf.

Despite the importance of his work, even now the training and grant programs that produced the community of experts Marc is a part of, are shrinking. We look at a new article he's written about how to instead build and improve the field of epidemiology, so humanity can respond faster and smarter next time we face a disease that could kill millions and cost tens of trillions of dollars.

We also cover:

• How listeners might contribute as future contagious disease experts, or donors to current projects
• How we can learn from cross-country comparisons
• Modelling that has gone wrong in an instructive way
• What governments should stop doing
• How people can figure out who to trust, and who has been most on the mark this time
• Why Marc supports infecting people with COVID-19 to speed up the development of a vaccines
• How we can ensure there's population-level surveillance early during the next pandemic
• Whether people from other fields trying to help with COVID-19 has done more good than harm
• Whether it's experts in diseases, or experts in forecasting, who produce better disease forecasts

Chapters:

  • Rob’s intro (00:00:00)
  • The interview begins (00:01:45)
  • Things Rob wishes he knew about COVID-19 (00:05:23)
  • Cross-country comparisons (00:10:53)
  • Any government activities we should stop? (00:21:24)
  • Lessons from COVID-19 (00:33:31)
  • Global catastrophic biological risks (00:37:58)
  • Human challenge trials (00:43:12)
  • Disease surveillance (00:50:07)
  • Who should we trust? (00:58:12)
  • Epidemiology as a field (01:13:05)
  • Careers (01:31:28)


Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Zakee Ulhaq.

Episoder(324)

#78 – Danny Hernandez on forecasting and the drivers of AI progress

#78 – Danny Hernandez on forecasting and the drivers of AI progress

Companies use about 300,000 times more computation training the best AI systems today than they did in 2012 and algorithmic innovations have also made them 25 times more efficient at the same tasks.Th...

22 Mai 20202h 11min

Article: Ways people trying to do good accidentally make things worse, and how to avoid them

Article: Ways people trying to do good accidentally make things worse, and how to avoid them

Today’s release is the second experiment in making audio versions of our articles. The first was a narration of Greg Lewis’ terrific problem profile on ‘Reducing global catastrophic biological risks...

12 Mai 202026min

#76 – Tara Kirk Sell on misinformation, who's done well and badly, & what to reopen first

#76 – Tara Kirk Sell on misinformation, who's done well and badly, & what to reopen first

Amid a rising COVID-19 death toll, and looming economic disaster, we’ve been looking for good news — and one thing we're especially thankful for is the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security (CHS). ...

8 Mai 20201h 53min

#75 – Michelle Hutchinson on what people most often ask 80,000 Hours

#75 – Michelle Hutchinson on what people most often ask 80,000 Hours

Since it was founded, 80,000 Hours has done one-on-one calls to supplement our online content and offer more personalised advice. We try to help people get clear on their most plausible paths, the key...

28 Apr 20202h 13min

#74 – Dr Greg Lewis on COVID-19 & catastrophic biological risks

#74 – Dr Greg Lewis on COVID-19 & catastrophic biological risks

Our lives currently revolve around the global emergency of COVID-19; you’re probably reading this while confined to your house, as the death toll from the worst pandemic since 1918 continues to rise. ...

17 Apr 20202h 37min

Article: Reducing global catastrophic biological risks

Article: Reducing global catastrophic biological risks

In a few days we'll be putting out a conversation with Dr Greg Lewis, who studies how to prevent global catastrophic biological risks at Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute. Greg also wrote a new ...

15 Apr 20201h 4min

Emergency episode: Rob & Howie on the menace of COVID-19, and what both governments & individuals might do to help

Emergency episode: Rob & Howie on the menace of COVID-19, and what both governments & individuals might do to help

From home isolation Rob and Howie just recorded an episode on: 1. How many could die in the crisis, and the risk to your health personally. 2. What individuals might be able to do help tackle the coro...

19 Mar 20201h 52min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
foreldreradet
rss-sunn-okonomi
jakt-og-fiskepodden
hverdagspsyken
sinnsyn
merry-quizmas
gravid-uke-for-uke
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-kunsten-a-leve
smart-forklart
takk-og-lov-med-anine-kierulf
fryktlos
rss-impressions-2
hagespiren-podcast
rss-kull