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Disease X: The 100 Days Mission to End Pandemics [Pehme köide]

(Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations), Foreword by
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 204 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x20 mm, kaal: 295 g, 1 Index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2024
  • Kirjastus: Canbury
  • ISBN-10: 1912454971
  • ISBN-13: 9781912454976
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 204 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x156x20 mm, kaal: 295 g, 1 Index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2024
  • Kirjastus: Canbury
  • ISBN-10: 1912454971
  • ISBN-13: 9781912454976
What if the next global pandemic isnt a replay of COVID-19, but something faster, deadlier, and harder to stop? In 2018, the World Health Organization added a chilling new entry to its list of priority epidemic threats: Disease X a placeholder for the unknown pathogen that could trigger a serious international outbreak.





In Disease X, science journalist and CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations) insider Kate Kelland takes you behind the scenes of pandemic preparedness, global health security and vaccine innovation. With rare access to the people building the worlds defences, Kelland shows how we can spot a new virus early, respond at pandemic speed, and deliver safe, effective, globally accessible vaccines in as little as 100 days.





This is gripping pandemic nonfiction that reads with the urgency of a medical thriller, but its grounded in evidence, history, and the hard lessons of the COVID-19 pandemic: exponential spread, R0, variants, overwhelmed hospitals, lockdowns, and the staggering human and economic costs.





Inside youll explore:











Why emerging infectious diseases and zoonotic spillover (from bats, birds, primates and other wildlife) make future epidemics more likely: SARS, MERS, Ebola, Zika, Nipah, Marburg, Lassa, bird flu and swine flu









How pandemic response fails when leaders wait and see, and how it succeeds when decisionmakers act fast through the fog of war









The 100 Days Mission: a bold roadmap to compress vaccine R&D from genetic sequencing to clinical trials, manufacturing scaleup and rapid rollout









The technologies powering nextgeneration vaccines and therapeutics: mRNA, viral vectors, plugandplay platforms, rapid testing, and global genomic surveillance









Why speed requires risk: funding multiple candidates at risk, accepting failures, and building a portfoliobecause luck is not a strategy









The essentials of outbreak control: early warning systems, data sharing, publicprivate partnerships, supply chains, equitable access, and protecting low and middleincome countries











Youll also meet the real-world pandemic worriers, virus-watchers, scientists and policy insiders who helped launch fast vaccine programmes and the global push for a prototype vaccine library work designed to shorten the time from pathogen discovery to protection.





Structured as a missionready playbook (Prepare to be Scared, Move Fast, Take Risks, Share, Listen, Fail, Spend Money, and more), Disease X lays out what must change now before the next Public Health Emergency of International Concern becomes a onceagaintoolate pandemic. It even closes with a vivid nearfuture scenario in which the world faces a new threatand proves that pandemics can be prevented.





From the first reports of mysterious pneumonia in Wuhan to Davos boardrooms and vaccine labs, and to the WHOs emergency debates under the International Health Regulations, Kelland maps the decisions that shape outcomes: when to sound the alarm, when to restrict travel and gatherings, when to deploy diagnostics, when to share sequences, and when to pour money into vaccine manufacturing, coldchain logistics and global delivery.





If youre looking for a clear, compelling pandemic preparedness book that connects the science (immunology, vaccinology, epidemiology) with the politics (health security is national security, global governance, G7/G20 commitments) and the practical realities (regulation, scale, supply chains, equity), this is the mustread guide to the next Disease X. Get your copy today and understand how 100 days could save millions of lives.





Perfect for readers interested in infectious disease, outbreak preparedness, pandemic planning, public health policy, vaccine science, and anyone asking: what will the next pandemic be, and how do we stop it before it starts?





Buy the book and ready yourself for the next Disease X

Arvustused

DISEASE X: CAN THE NEXT PANDEMIC VACCINE BE DEVELOPED IN 100 DAYS?







Editorial Team, Vaccines Today





March 6th, 2023















Disease X. Its the placeholder name given to a hypothetical new human disease with the potential to trigger a pandemic. The concept was developed by the World Health Organization in 2018 as a way to plan and prepare for viral threats. A new form of influenza, a novel coronavirus, a mutated measles-like virus there was no way of knowing for sure where the threat would come from, but the response would be similar.









Now, three years after a real pandemic, caused by SARS-CoV-2, a new book looks at what went well, and what went wrong, in the global response. Kate Kelland, Chief Scientific Writer at the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and previously an award-winning journalist at Reuters, has interviewed scientists and decision-makers for DISEASE X The 100 Days Mission to End Pandemics.





The result is a fascinating and informed exploration of global health security, and a broadly encouraging assessment of how to prevent pandemics.





Carry on reading: https://www.vaccinestoday.eu/stories/disease-x-can-the-next-pandemic-vaccine- be-developed-in-100-days/ 'Covid-19 will not be the last pandemic to cause havoc. Disease X sets out how a mystery pathogen of the future could be contained before it goes global, but only if lessons are learned from SARS-CoV-2 and other global disease threats. An engaging, accessible and ultimately optimistic account of how nations, institutions and the scientific community responded to Covid, and how they could work together in future.' Fergus Walsh, BBC Medical Editor 





'As Kelland argues cogently, fear of the next outbreak should not paralyse us but instead galvanise us into making sure the terrible toll of Covid-19 is not repeated. Just as we do not wait for a formal declaration of war before building up military capabilities, we must be prepared to invest in rapid surveillance, financing, vaccines, treatments and manufacturing capacity ahead of time. Disease X is a valuable policy roadmap in a world custom-built for pandemics.' Anjana Ahuja, co-author with Jeremy Farrar of Spike: The Virus Vs The People





'Disease X delivers a sobering message. It also offers hope that when the next deadly virus with pandemic potential emerges not if the world will be much better equipped to respond. With access to key players on the frontlines, Disease X takes us inside the effort to prevent future outbreaks from exploding into global disasters. People remember wars. They forget about pandemics. Three years after the Covid crisis erupted, were desperate to move on. But this important book outlines why it will be vital to keep pandemic threats at the top of our priority list for decades to come.' James Paton, former Health Correspondent for Bloomberg News













'Disease X. Its the placeholder name given to a hypothetical new human disease with the potential to trigger a pandemic. The concept was developed by the World Health Organization in 2018 as a way to plan and prepare for viral threats. A new form of influenza, a novel coronavirus, a mutated measles-like virus there was no way of knowing for sure where the threat would come from, but the response would be similar. Now, three years after a real pandemic, caused by SARS-CoV-2, a new book looks at what went well, and what went wrong, in the global response. Kate Kelland, Chief Scientific Writer at the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and previously an award-winning journalist at Reuters, has interviewed scientists and decision-makers for DISEASE X The 100 Days Mission to End Pandemics. The result is a fascinating and informed exploration of global health security, and a broadly encouraging assessment of how to prevent pandemics.' Vaccines Today





 

Foreword. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair calls for world
leaders to properly prepare for the next pandemic. Mentions Covid-19, United
Nations, military spending

Introduction: Meet Disease X

Prepare to be Scared

Prepare to Move Fast

Prepare to Take Risks

Prepare to Share

Prepare to Listen

Prepare to Fail

Prepare to Spend Money

Prepare for the Next One...

2027: A Pandemic is Thwarted

Postscript

Resources and Further Reading

Acknowledgements

End Notes

Index
Kate Kelland is an award-winning global health correspondent formerly at Reuters. She is now chief scientific writer at the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations in London. During 30 years in journalism, she set the agenda in global health and science coverage. In 2017, she won the London Foreign Press Association Science Story of the Year award for her investigative reporting on the International Agency for Research on Cancer. In 2016, she won the Medical Journalists Associations Feature of the Year award for a piece on the critical challenge facing the WHO to heal itself. She was UK winner of the European Health Prize for Journalists in 2011, 2012 and 2013.





Tony Blair is Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change. He was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1997 to 2007 and leader of the Labour Party between 1994 and 2007. He led the Labour Party to three consecutive general election victories, in 1997, 2001 and 2005, becoming the longest-serving prime minister in modern times after Margaret Thatcher. The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change aims to equip political leaders around the world to build prosperous, open and inclusive societies.