Bill Gates The next outbreak Were not ready TED

When I was a kid,

the disaster we worried about most
was a nuclear war.

That’s why we had a barrel like this
down in our basement,

filled with cans of food and water.

When the nuclear attack came,

we were supposed to go downstairs,
hunker down, and eat out of that barrel.

Today the greatest risk
of global catastrophe

doesn’t look like this.

Instead, it looks like this.

If anything kills over 10 million people
in the next few decades,

it’s most likely to be
a highly infectious virus

rather than a war.

Not missiles, but microbes.

Now, part of the reason for this is that

we’ve invested a huge amount
in nuclear deterrents.

But we’ve actually invested very little
in a system to stop an epidemic.

We’re not ready for the next epidemic.

Let’s look at Ebola.

I’m sure all of you read about it
in the newspaper,

lots of tough challenges.

I followed it carefully
through the case analysis tools

we use to track polio eradication.

And as you look at what went on,

the problem wasn’t that there was a system
that didn’t work well enough,

the problem was that we
didn’t have a system at all.

In fact, there’s some pretty obvious
key missing pieces.

We didn’t have a group of epidemiologists
ready to go, who would have gone,

seen what the disease was,
seen how far it had spread.

The case reports came in on paper.

It was very delayed
before they were put online

and they were extremely inaccurate.

We didn’t have a medical team ready to go.

We didn’t have a way of preparing people.

Now, Médecins Sans Frontières
did a great job orchestrating volunteers.

But even so, we were far slower
than we should have been

getting the thousands of workers
into these countries.

And a large epidemic would require us
to have hundreds of thousands of workers.

There was no one there
to look at treatment approaches.

No one to look at the diagnostics.

No one to figure out
what tools should be used.

As an example, we could have
taken the blood of survivors,

processed it, and put that plasma
back in people to protect them.

But that was never tried.

So there was a lot that was missing.

And these things
are really a global failure.

The WHO is funded to monitor epidemics,
but not to do these things I talked about.

Now, in the movies it’s quite different.

There’s a group of handsome
epidemiologists ready to go,

they move in, they save the day,
but that’s just pure Hollywood.

The failure to prepare
could allow the next epidemic

to be dramatically
more devastating than Ebola

Let’s look at the progression
of Ebola over this year.

About 10,000 people died,

and nearly all were in the three
West African countries.

There’s three reasons why
it didn’t spread more.

The first is that there was a lot
of heroic work by the health workers.

They found the people and they
prevented more infections.

The second is the nature of the virus.

Ebola does not spread through the air.

And by the time you’re contagious,

most people are so sick
that they’re bedridden.

Third, it didn’t get
into many urban areas.

And that was just luck.

If it had gotten into a lot
more urban areas,

the case numbers
would have been much larger.

So next time, we might not be so lucky.

You can have a virus where people
feel well enough while they’re infectious

that they get on a plane
or they go to a market.

The source of the virus could be
a natural epidemic like Ebola,

or it could be bioterrorism.

So there are things that would literally
make things a thousand times worse.

In fact, let’s look at a model
of a virus spread through the air,

like the Spanish Flu back in 1918.

So here’s what would happen:

It would spread throughout the world
very, very quickly.

And you can see over 30 million people
died from that epidemic.

So this is a serious problem.

We should be concerned.

But in fact, we can build
a really good response system.

We have the benefits of all the science
and technology that we talk about here.

We’ve got cell phones

to get information from the public
and get information out to them.

We have satellite maps where we can see
where people are and where they’re moving.

We have advances in biology

that should dramatically change
the turnaround time to look at a pathogen

and be able to make drugs and vaccines
that fit for that pathogen.

So we can have tools,

but those tools need to be put
into an overall global health system.

And we need preparedness.

The best lessons, I think,
on how to get prepared

are again, what we do for war.

For soldiers, we have full-time,
waiting to go.

We have reserves that can scale
us up to large numbers.

NATO has a mobile unit
that can deploy very rapidly.

NATO does a lot of war games
to check, are people well trained?

Do they understand
about fuel and logistics

and the same radio frequencies?

So they are absolutely ready to go.

So those are the kinds of things
we need to deal with an epidemic.

What are the key pieces?

First, we need strong health systems
in poor countries.

That’s where mothers
can give birth safely,

kids can get all their vaccines.

But, also where we’ll see
the outbreak very early on.

We need a medical reserve corps:

lots of people who’ve got
the training and background

who are ready to go, with the expertise.

And then we need to pair those
medical people with the military.

taking advantage of the military’s ability
to move fast, do logistics

and secure areas.

We need to do simulations,

germ games, not war games,
so that we see where the holes are.

The last time a germ game
was done in the United States

was back in 2001,
and it didn’t go so well.

So far the score is germs: 1, people: 0.

Finally, we need lots of advanced R&D
in areas of vaccines and diagnostics.

There are some big breakthroughs,
like the Adeno-associated virus,

that could work very, very quickly.

Now I don’t have an exact budget
for what this would cost,

but I’m quite sure it’s very modest
compared to the potential harm.

The World Bank estimates that
if we have a worldwide flu epidemic,

global wealth will go down
by over three trillion dollars

and we’d have millions
and millions of deaths.

These investments
offer significant benefits

beyond just being ready for the epidemic.

The primary healthcare, the R&D,

those things would reduce
global health equity

and make the world more just
as well as more safe.

So I think this should absolutely
be a priority.

There’s no need to panic.

We don’t have to hoard cans of spaghetti
or go down into the basement.

But we need to get going,
because time is not on our side.

In fact, if there’s one positive thing
that can come out of the Ebola epidemic,

it’s that it can serve as an early
warning, a wake-up call, to get ready.

If we start now, we can be ready
for the next epidemic.

Thank you.

(Applause)

当我还是个孩子的时候,

我们最担心的灾难
是核战争。

这就是为什么我们在地下室有一个像这样的桶

里面装满了食物和水罐头。

当核攻击来临时,

我们应该下楼,
蹲下来,从那个桶里吃东西。

今天
,全球灾难的最大风险

不是这样的。

相反,它看起来像这样。

如果有什么在未来几十年内导致超过 1000 万人死亡

那么它很可能是
一种传染性很强的病毒,

而不是一场战争。

不是导弹,而是微生物。

现在,造成这种情况的部分原因是

我们
在核威慑方面投入了大量资金。

但我们实际上
在阻止流行病的系统上投入很少。

我们还没有为下一次流行病做好准备。

让我们看看埃博拉病毒。

我相信你们所有人都
在报纸上读到过,

很多艰难的挑战。


通过我们用来追踪脊髓灰质炎根除情况的案例分析工具仔细跟踪了它

当你看到发生的事情时

,问题不在于有一个系统
运行得不够好

,问题在于我们
根本没有一个系统。

事实上,有一些非常明显的
关键缺失部分。

我们没有一群流行病学家
准备好去,他们会去,

看看疾病是什么,
看看它传播了多远。

病例报告以纸质形式出现。

它们在上线之前非常延迟

,而且非常不准确。

我们没有准备好出发的医疗队。

我们没有办法让人们做好准备。

现在,无国界医生组织
在协调志愿者方面做得非常出色。

但即便如此,我们

让成千上万的工人
进入这些国家的速度远远慢于应有的速度。

一场大流行病将需要
我们拥有数十万工人。

那里没有
人看治疗方法。

没有人看诊断。

没有人
知道应该使用什么工具。

例如,我们可以
采集幸存者的血液,对其进行

处理,然后将血浆
放回人体以保护他们。

但这从未尝试过。

所以有很多东西丢失了。

这些
事情确实是全球性的失败。

世卫组织有资金用于监测流行病,
但不是为了做我所说的这些事情。

现在,在电影中,情况完全不同。

有一群英俊的
流行病学家准备出发,

他们搬进来,他们挽救了局面,
但这只是纯粹的好莱坞。

未能做好准备
可能会使下一次流行病

比埃博拉病毒更具破坏性

让我们来看看
埃博拉病毒在今年的进展情况。

大约有 10,000 人死亡

,几乎所有人都在三个
西非国家。

它没有传播更多的原因有三个。

首先
是卫生工作者做了很多英勇的工作。

他们找到了这些人,并
阻止了更多的感染。

二是病毒的性质。

埃博拉病毒不会通过空气传播。

当你被传染时,

大多数人都病得很重
,卧床不起。

第三,它没有
进入许多城市地区。

那只是运气。

如果它进入
更多的城市地区

,病例数
会大得多。

所以下一次,我们可能就没那么幸运了。

你可能感染了一种病毒,
当人们被传染

上飞机
或去市场时,他们感觉很好。

病毒的来源可能
是埃博拉病毒等自然流行病,

也可能是生物恐怖主义。

所以有些事情实际上
会让事情变得更糟一千倍。

事实上,让我们看
一个病毒通过空气传播的模型,

比如 1918 年的西班牙流感。

所以这就是会发生的事情:

它会
非常非常迅速地传播到世界各地。

你可以看到超过 3000 万人
死于这种流行病。

所以这是一个严重的问题。

我们应该担心。

但事实上,我们可以建立
一个非常好的响应系统。

我们拥有
我们在这里谈论的所有科学和技术的好处。

我们有手机

可以从公众
那里获取信息并将信息传递给他们。

我们有卫星地图,可以看到
人们在哪里以及他们在哪里移动。

我们在生物学方面取得了进步,

这应该会极大地改变
研究病原体的周转时间,

并能够制造
出适合该病原体的药物和疫苗。

所以我们可以拥有工具,

但这些工具需要
纳入整个全球卫生系统。

我们需要做好准备。

我认为,关于如何做好准备的最好的教训

是,我们为战争所做的一切。

对于士兵,我们有专职,
等着走。

我们拥有可以扩大规模的
储备。

北约有
一个可以非常迅速地部署的机动部队。

北约做了很多战争游戏
来检查,人们训练有素吗?

他们
了解燃料和物流

以及相同的无线电频率吗?

所以他们绝对准备好了。

所以这些是
我们应对流行病所需要的东西。

关键部分是什么?

首先,我们需要
在贫穷国家建立强大的卫生系统。

那是母亲
可以安全分娩的地方,

孩子们可以接种所有疫苗。

但是,我们也会
很早就看到爆发。

我们需要一支医疗后备队:

许多受过
训练和背景的

人准备好出发,拥有专业知识。

然后我们需要将这些
医务人员与军队配对。

利用军队
快速行动、进行后勤

和安全区域的能力。

我们需要做模拟,

细菌游戏,而不是战争游戏,
这样我们才能看到漏洞在哪里。

上一次在美国进行细菌游戏

是在 2001 年
,但进展并不顺利。

到目前为止,得分是细菌:1,人:0。

最后,我们需要
在疫苗和诊断学领域进行大量先进的研发。

有一些重大突破,
比如腺相关病毒

,可以非常非常迅速地发挥作用。

现在我没有确切的预算
来计算这将花费多少,

但我很确定
与潜在的伤害相比,它是非常适度的。

世界银行估计,
如果我们在全球范围内爆发流感,

全球财富将
减少超过 3 万亿美元

,我们将有
数百万人死亡。

这些投资

除了为流行病做好准备外,还提供了显着的好处。

初级卫生保健、研发,

这些东西会降低
全球健康公平

,让世界变得
更加公正和安全。

所以我认为这绝对
应该是一个优先事项。

没有必要恐慌。

我们不必囤积意大利面罐头
或进入地下室。

但我们需要继续前进,
因为时间不在我们这边。

事实上,如果
说埃博拉疫情能带来一件积极的事情,

那就是它可以作为一个
预警,一个警钟,让我们做好准备。

如果我们现在就开始,我们就可以为
下一次流行病做好准备。

谢谢你。

(掌声)