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Oct 10, 2020
10/20
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BBCNEWS
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but zika is a similar sort of infectious disease process.e know quite a lot about other coronaviruses. there are four seasonal coronaviruses circulating at the moment and we can, i think, it's a reasonable expectation that this virus can and will and maybe already has settled to that level. 0k. dr swaminathan? so it's true that the virus has spread globally and it's it's present in most countries. but there are a handful of countries that managed to contain it very early on have brought it down to an extremely low level, if at all. china's a good example where there are occasional clusters which they're able to then handle and contain very quickly. now, what happens and whether it becomes an endemic infection or not, i think depends on what we do and what actions we take, what countries do over the next several months and the availability, the wide availability of a vaccine. so it is possible that with the natural course of infection and the measures, the strong public health measures that countries are taking with a good vaccine, that we wi
but zika is a similar sort of infectious disease process.e know quite a lot about other coronaviruses. there are four seasonal coronaviruses circulating at the moment and we can, i think, it's a reasonable expectation that this virus can and will and maybe already has settled to that level. 0k. dr swaminathan? so it's true that the virus has spread globally and it's it's present in most countries. but there are a handful of countries that managed to contain it very early on have brought it down...
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Oct 9, 2020
10/20
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BBCNEWS
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and if that is the case, how do we apply lessons from other novel diseases like hiv and zika to adaptbit of a compound question there. i think basically what you are asking is that, is there evidence that covid—i9 is kind of settling down down in our communities? professor gupta, is their evidence? yes, there is. in many settings, we have seen it peak and come down, many african countries in particular, we see that in many states of the us and parts of the world where we have not entered into this business of locking things down. we can see the natural process unfold. we have to, and it is absolutely right that we have to take lessons from other diseases, not hiv because it is very different, but zika is a similar form of infectious disease process. and also very fortunately, we know quite a lot about other coronaviruses. there are four seasonal coronaviruses circulating at the moment. we can...i think it is a reasonable expectation that this virus can and will and maybe already has to that level of endomicity. dr swaminathan. so it is true that the virus has spread globally and is pr
and if that is the case, how do we apply lessons from other novel diseases like hiv and zika to adaptbit of a compound question there. i think basically what you are asking is that, is there evidence that covid—i9 is kind of settling down down in our communities? professor gupta, is their evidence? yes, there is. in many settings, we have seen it peak and come down, many african countries in particular, we see that in many states of the us and parts of the world where we have not entered into...
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Oct 18, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN
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following decade, he advised presidents of both parties on all pandemics our world has seen from sars to zika and ebola, to ensure science drove effective policy. now, in the covid area, he continues his servants and commitment to deliver the best information for the policymakers and the public. in a 2005 essay, dr. fauci revealed three guiding principles of life, of his life. to seek and learn every day, to strive for excellence, and to serve humankind. we are profoundly grateful that he has followed all three of these principles throughout his illustrious public service career. our world is better for it and healthier for it. please join me in welcoming dr. anthony fauci back to john hopkins university. dr. fauci. dr. fauci: thank you very much. it is a pleasure to be here with you today and i'm looking forward to our discussion. this is an extraordinarily important topic. this is a historic pandemic, the likes of which we have not seen in our own civilization for 102 years, since the very historic and memorable 1918 spanish flu. i look forward to the dialogue we will have in discussing var
following decade, he advised presidents of both parties on all pandemics our world has seen from sars to zika and ebola, to ensure science drove effective policy. now, in the covid area, he continues his servants and commitment to deliver the best information for the policymakers and the public. in a 2005 essay, dr. fauci revealed three guiding principles of life, of his life. to seek and learn every day, to strive for excellence, and to serve humankind. we are profoundly grateful that he has...
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Oct 16, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN
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you led in the response to hiv, aids, and emerging diseases including ebola and zika.rives you to continue this work and do you see the federal sponsor involved in any way? dr. fauci: the thing that drives commitment to this whole concept that the john hopkins school of public health stands for, namely public health of not only our nation but the world. i am a physician but also a scientist. when i got involved as the director of the institute, i had been an aids researcher before that, fundamentally a chief of a laboratory at the nih, doing clinical research on hiv. when i became the director of the national institute of and infectious diseases. it became so clear to me that there were so many problems throughout the world that could be addressed both by science, science application, and good public health measures. i became totally committed to that. when you say what drives me, what is the driving force, it is the realization not only of the normative the problem that the fact we can do something about it. it is not an unsolvable series of problems. it is something
you led in the response to hiv, aids, and emerging diseases including ebola and zika.rives you to continue this work and do you see the federal sponsor involved in any way? dr. fauci: the thing that drives commitment to this whole concept that the john hopkins school of public health stands for, namely public health of not only our nation but the world. i am a physician but also a scientist. when i got involved as the director of the institute, i had been an aids researcher before that,...
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Oct 21, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN
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vaccines to get some of the world's biggest infectious disease threats -- hiv, malaria, dengue fever, zika virus. you don't have a vaccine for any of them. despite the efforts of scientists putting hard work and a lot of money into those disease efforts, those control efforts, we don't have a vaccine. i remember when the hiv pandemic started. i was a medical student at the time. the word was, hang in there, within a year we will have a vaccine. that has been a long time. that was in the 1980's. so while we should be optimistic and excited about all the work going on around vaccine, there is no guarantee we are going to have one. each week -- if we even have a vaccine, vaccines vary in terms of how effective they are. 95%asles vaccine is about effective. it is one of the best we have out there. other vaccine, while they reduce your risk, like a flu vaccine, that may only be 30%, 50% effective. it varies by year. the fda this time has set a threshold of 50%, so any vaccine that would be licensed has to reduce your risk by at least half. ,ay a vaccine is 70% effective and 70% of the public ge
vaccines to get some of the world's biggest infectious disease threats -- hiv, malaria, dengue fever, zika virus. you don't have a vaccine for any of them. despite the efforts of scientists putting hard work and a lot of money into those disease efforts, those control efforts, we don't have a vaccine. i remember when the hiv pandemic started. i was a medical student at the time. the word was, hang in there, within a year we will have a vaccine. that has been a long time. that was in the 1980's....
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Oct 5, 2020
10/20
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KQED
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eye 89
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it's experience with previous outbreaks includi zika and ebola >>.hink the experience ofga sedealing with the other diseases has been key to this crisis. it'been reused and re-apted for covid. >> there have only been 15 thousand confirmed cases and about 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and rapid testing is thene corners of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been efed up and results come within eight hours privette senegal has seen some small outbreaks. around 60 of his colleagues had it back in april. >> i tell them my temperature was not particularly high, but i smell. my sense of taste a i was just scared because my colleagues had tested too. >> global index by forazgn policy magine get the country the high st possiblere for its communication strategy privette weather is on the reets, through music, or in the countries mosques, the messaging is clear. africaes countike senegal have successfully avoided the at the beginning of the pandemic and has only haabout a million cases. it peaked iny j and the african center
it's experience with previous outbreaks includi zika and ebola >>.hink the experience ofga sedealing with the other diseases has been key to this crisis. it'been reused and re-apted for covid. >> there have only been 15 thousand confirmed cases and about 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and rapid testing is thene corners of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been efed up and results come within eight hours privette senegal has seen some small...
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Oct 17, 2020
10/20
by
FBC
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eye 230
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maria: understood -- >> -- patients on this platform through other means we ebola, h user e v, zika, have a high degree of confidence in the safety of this, but we want to make sure we're thorough for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where people might actually have an adverse reaction, i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine the way you were quite confident just six months ago of having a vaccine out in the market within the next year? >> yeah. so, maria, with a 60,000-patient study, unexpect add verse events are something -- adverse events should be expected to some degree. i think the best way to answer that is we have not altered our investment plans in terms of expanding our manufacturing capacity. we're still on the timeline for first quarter next year for potential approval, and we're going to let the science dictate how we proceed. maria: understood. let's talk about the third quarter. you reported earnings, posting a double beat on the top and bottom line. joe, what d
maria: understood -- >> -- patients on this platform through other means we ebola, h user e v, zika, have a high degree of confidence in the safety of this, but we want to make sure we're thorough for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where people might actually have an adverse reaction, i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine the way you were quite confident just six months ago of...
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Oct 9, 2020
10/20
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> kamala harris using the vice presidential debate to the double down on claims she with the zika coronavirus vaccine if the president says she should. >> the trump administration approved the vaccine before or after the election showed americans take it and would you take it? >> if anthony fauci, the doctors, tell us we should take i will be first in line to take it absolutely but if donald from tells us i am not taking it. jillian: doctor jeanette joins us, thanks for being here. is that language harmful? >> yes, i believe it is harmful. i believe it is irresponsible and negligent because it may instill unnecessary fear in americans. we have to understand vaccines have been proven and shown they are generally safe and they save lives and prevent thousands of deaths every year. polio, measles, hepatitis, meningitis, all these diseases have been minimized if not eradicated by the fda and cdc's approval of the vaccine. remember vaccines undergo rigorous trials and testing, to check for safety, efficacy and the scientists and doctors who develop these vaccines with the pharmaceutica
. >> kamala harris using the vice presidential debate to the double down on claims she with the zika coronavirus vaccine if the president says she should. >> the trump administration approved the vaccine before or after the election showed americans take it and would you take it? >> if anthony fauci, the doctors, tell us we should take i will be first in line to take it absolutely but if donald from tells us i am not taking it. jillian: doctor jeanette joins us, thanks for...
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Oct 23, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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he has overseen response to hiv, aids, ebola, zika and tuberculosis.national institute of allergy and infectious diseases since 1984 when ronald reagan was president, and republicans and democrats alike with the exception of trump love the guy. >> i think dr. fauci, probably never heard of him, he is a very fine research, top doctor at national institute of health, working hard, doing something about research on this disease of aids. >> three decades ago, a mysterious playing took lives around the world. before the malady had a name, it had a fierce opponent in dr. anthony fauci for determined and aggressive efforts to help others live longer and healthier lifs. proud to give the presidential medal of freedom to dr. anthony fauci. >> thank you to dr. tony fauci, nancy sullivan, incredible scientists at nih who work long days, late nights, to develop a vaccine. all of you represent what is best about america and what's possible when we lead. >> anthony fauci doesn't serve a party, he serves the nation's health. president trump has repeatedly demonstrate
he has overseen response to hiv, aids, ebola, zika and tuberculosis.national institute of allergy and infectious diseases since 1984 when ronald reagan was president, and republicans and democrats alike with the exception of trump love the guy. >> i think dr. fauci, probably never heard of him, he is a very fine research, top doctor at national institute of health, working hard, doing something about research on this disease of aids. >> three decades ago, a mysterious playing took...
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Oct 23, 2020
10/20
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KPIX
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. >>> health officials warning about mosquitoes that can spread zika virus.ightings are rising across some california counties. mosquitoes have been spotted from shasta to stan slaw and are most active during the day. once they establish themselves in an area it's very difficult to get rid of them. >> this is a virus that's spread by mosquitoes, mosquitoes have been infected by birds. >> they cause different symptoms such as fever, headache, fatigue, joint pain. >> officials hope the species will die down with colder temperatures on the way. today they plan going door to door in targeted areas setting traps and spraying to kill the mosquitoes. >>> the pandemic hits retailers hard. the latest changes. >>> the dow is up about 40 points. our cbs money watch reporter diane king hall breaks down the numbers after the break. >>> kpix5 has a new app that gives easy 24/7 access. you need to delete the old app and it must be nice to play by a different set of rules. in california, we're the only state where wealthy trust fund heirs get their own tax loophole. these ta
. >>> health officials warning about mosquitoes that can spread zika virus.ightings are rising across some california counties. mosquitoes have been spotted from shasta to stan slaw and are most active during the day. once they establish themselves in an area it's very difficult to get rid of them. >> this is a virus that's spread by mosquitoes, mosquitoes have been infected by birds. >> they cause different symptoms such as fever, headache, fatigue, joint pain. >>...
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Oct 13, 2020
10/20
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 53
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we tested 100,000 people on this platform for ebola, zika, and hiv without any serious health consequences very well tolerated. we are confident we just have to let the process play out and hopefully, the public is reassured that we are following the highest scientific, medical, and ethical standards that we do for all our drugs. that is true for johnson & johnson and i believe it is true for our pharmaceutical counterparts. >> we saw that with astrazeneca, issues. to assess some but it hasn't yet been approved by the fda to continue but it can continue in other countries. help us understand the procedure globally as you test the vaccine in many countries, as to what stops and moves forward, how quickly that can happen. >> i won't speak specifically on astrazeneca. from our perspective, the details are being finalized about the patient. it is a 60,000 person study, the largest of any vaccine trial being currently conducted. it is probably not uncommon to illnesses thated occur. that is what has happened. so we will let the board do their study, do their diligence and we will proceed accord
we tested 100,000 people on this platform for ebola, zika, and hiv without any serious health consequences very well tolerated. we are confident we just have to let the process play out and hopefully, the public is reassured that we are following the highest scientific, medical, and ethical standards that we do for all our drugs. that is true for johnson & johnson and i believe it is true for our pharmaceutical counterparts. >> we saw that with astrazeneca, issues. to assess some but...
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Oct 19, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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every public health emergency that i have dealt with in the past in chicago, whether it was ebola, zikaeasles epidemics, the cdc was often the leading voice giving us that clear, consistent and transparent information. and dr. fauci has been doing that, and we need that to continue. >> in your new piece for scientific american, you explain that the fda and the cdc, for that matter, have a last line of defense when it comes to approval of a vaccine, but you acknowledge there are some scenarios that could be problematic. what are you most concerned about? >> i think, you know, when we think back about the success of our immunization programs throughout the nation, there's many vaccines that children get routinely, and that system is in place to ensure that vaccines are safe and effective. and these advisory panels that advise the fda and the cdc are independent physicians who are experts in infectious diseases, in immunology and pediatrics, adult medicine, and what they do is they make recommendations based on the science and the evidence around vaccines and then they make those recommend
every public health emergency that i have dealt with in the past in chicago, whether it was ebola, zikaeasles epidemics, the cdc was often the leading voice giving us that clear, consistent and transparent information. and dr. fauci has been doing that, and we need that to continue. >> in your new piece for scientific american, you explain that the fda and the cdc, for that matter, have a last line of defense when it comes to approval of a vaccine, but you acknowledge there are some...
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Oct 5, 2020
10/20
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CNNW
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hiv/aids pandemic and we had a whole bunch of things like the anthrax attacks and pandemic flu and zika now we have this unprecedented historic outbreak of covid-19. the issue that's a bit different here now is one that i've commented on, even on your show a few times in the recent past, is that we're living in such a very divisive society right now, not only in the united states, but even globally that's very charged politically and you got to keep your eye on the ball of doing things that are purely on the basis of science and evidence and make sure you stay on that path, because otherwise things don't work out right, and that's one of the things that as scientists and public health officials we've always got to rely on the science and the evidence to guide us in our decisions. that has been very intense through this outbreak. you always have a degree of that when you have outbreaks as we've been in the past but nothing to the intensity that we're experiencing now, with covid-19. >> you talked about the fact that even after receiving this award, in just minutes you'll do your day job
hiv/aids pandemic and we had a whole bunch of things like the anthrax attacks and pandemic flu and zika now we have this unprecedented historic outbreak of covid-19. the issue that's a bit different here now is one that i've commented on, even on your show a few times in the recent past, is that we're living in such a very divisive society right now, not only in the united states, but even globally that's very charged politically and you got to keep your eye on the ball of doing things that are...
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Oct 18, 2020
10/20
by
FBC
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eye 31
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maria: understood -- >> -- patients on this platform through other means we ebola, h user e v, zika, this, but we want to make sure we're thorough for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where people might actually have an adverse reaction, i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine the way you were quite confident just six months ago of having a vaccine out in the market within the next year? >> yeah. so, maria, with a 60,000-patient study, unexpect add verse events are something -- adverse events should be expected to some degree. i think the best way to answer that is we have not altered our investment plans in terms of expanding our manufacturing capacity. we're still on the timeline for first quarter next year for potential approval, and we're going to let the science dictate how we proceed. maria: understood. let's talk about the third quarter. you reported earnings, posting a double beat on the top and bottom line. joe, what drove the business in the last three months? tell u
maria: understood -- >> -- patients on this platform through other means we ebola, h user e v, zika, this, but we want to make sure we're thorough for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where people might actually have an adverse reaction, i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine the way you were quite confident just six months ago of having a vaccine out in the market within the next...
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Oct 7, 2020
10/20
by
KQED
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eye 72
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from 2009 to 2017, during the h1n1, ebola and zika outbreaks. and, graham brookie is director and managing editor of the atlantic council's digital forensic research lab. and we welcome both of you to the "newshour". dr. tom tom, to you first, we have just -- dr. tom frieden, we heard one gentleman say he believes the pandemic had been overblown, another voter said he didn't think it was that serious, and yet another saying she believed if she got it she thought she would be asymptomatic. if you could speak to these voters, what would you say to them? >> i think we have to move bass these open-shut dichotomies. the fact is, for most people who get the virus, it's going to be mild or even asymptomatic, but, because so many people get it, because it's so infectious, it's very deadly for us as a society, as a community, and that's something that rail emphasizes that we're all connected. the more we recognize that even you don't feel sick at all, you might give it to someone who gets it and someone who dies from it. that's why there have been well o
from 2009 to 2017, during the h1n1, ebola and zika outbreaks. and, graham brookie is director and managing editor of the atlantic council's digital forensic research lab. and we welcome both of you to the "newshour". dr. tom tom, to you first, we have just -- dr. tom frieden, we heard one gentleman say he believes the pandemic had been overblown, another voter said he didn't think it was that serious, and yet another saying she believed if she got it she thought she would be...
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210
Oct 5, 2020
10/20
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BBCNEWS
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eye 210
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senegal‘s experience of previous outbreaks, including zika, dengue fever and ebola has been crucial.ccess, as the structure, the ecosystem for the disease has been reused and rear re— adapted to covid—19. been reused and rear re— adapted to covid-19. there have only been 15,000 confirmed cases here and around 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and infection rates are decreasing. rapid testing is the cornerstone of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been beefed up, and results come within eight hours. senegal has seen some small outbreaks. every him caught the virus along with 16 of his colleagues back in april —— ibrahim. initially the emergency call centre thought he had malaria. translation: they thought i wasn't sick. i told him my temperature wasn't particularly high, but i had lost my sense of taste and smell. they thought i was just scared because my colleagues had tested positive. raising awareness of the disease has united musicians and policymakers. the global index by foreign policy magazine gave the country the highest possible score for its
senegal‘s experience of previous outbreaks, including zika, dengue fever and ebola has been crucial.ccess, as the structure, the ecosystem for the disease has been reused and rear re— adapted to covid—19. been reused and rear re— adapted to covid-19. there have only been 15,000 confirmed cases here and around 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and infection rates are decreasing. rapid testing is the cornerstone of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been...
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447
Oct 19, 2020
10/20
by
KPIX
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eye 447
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. >> lapook: in 2016, during an outbreak of the zika virus, dr. around the vaccine research center he helped create, where for 20 years he has led a team of scientists developing vaccines for emerging viruses. a full four years before covid- 19 caused worldwide devastation, dr. fauci told us his greatest fear. >> fauci: an influenza-like respiratory-borne virus that's easily transmittable to which the population of the world has very little if any immunity against and that has a high degree of morbidity and mortality. something similar to the very tragic pandemic flu of 1918. >> lapook: not only did dr. fauci foresee this kind of pandemic, scientists at the n.i.h. have spent years preparing for it. in january, before a single case of covid-19 was confirmed in the u.s., chinese scientists posted the genetic sequence of the novel coronavirus. based on their prior work on other coronaviruses, n.i.h. researchers edited that code so it could be used to make a vaccine. they sent the modifications to the biotech company moderna, which was able to manufac
. >> lapook: in 2016, during an outbreak of the zika virus, dr. around the vaccine research center he helped create, where for 20 years he has led a team of scientists developing vaccines for emerging viruses. a full four years before covid- 19 caused worldwide devastation, dr. fauci told us his greatest fear. >> fauci: an influenza-like respiratory-borne virus that's easily transmittable to which the population of the world has very little if any immunity against and that has a...
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90
Oct 21, 2020
10/20
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 90
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capabilities against every possible kind of pandemic, because other kinds of disease, let's say it had been zikae been different and, actually, if you look at what we did in terms of imposing the lockdown and then creating the economic programmes to support people through it, actually, i think we should be really proud of the speed at which those were devised and implemented and how quickly the public service responded. i think there is a genuine question about whether we could have been better prepared in the first place and communal, that is obviously a very legitimate challenge. now it's time for a look at the weather with carol kirkwood. hello, again. if you are just stepping out, make sure you take your brolly with you. if you live in the south or south—east, make sure it is a sturdy one because you have gusty winds here as well. what is happening as we have the remnants of storm barbara, named by the spanish met service. it is bringing rain across southern england, south wales and into the south—east, pulling north—eastward through the day. move north of that, there is a lot of cloud, this
capabilities against every possible kind of pandemic, because other kinds of disease, let's say it had been zikae been different and, actually, if you look at what we did in terms of imposing the lockdown and then creating the economic programmes to support people through it, actually, i think we should be really proud of the speed at which those were devised and implemented and how quickly the public service responded. i think there is a genuine question about whether we could have been better...
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78
Oct 5, 2020
10/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 78
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senegal‘s experience of previous outbreaks including zika, dengue fever and ebola has been crucial.as been reused and re—adapted to covid—19. there have only been 15,000 confirmed cases here, and around 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and infection rates are decreasing. rapid testing is the cornerstone of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been beefed up and results come within eight hours. senegal has seen some small outbreaks. ibrahima caught the virus along with 60 of his colleagues back in april. initially, the emergency call centre thought he had malaria. translation: they thought i wasn't sick. i told them my temperature wasn't particularly high but i had lost my sense of taste and smell. they thought i was just scared because my colleagues had tested positive. raising awareness of the disease has united musicians and policymakers. a global index by foreign policy magazine gave the country the highest possible score for its communication strategy. whether it is on the streets, through music or in the country's mosques, the messaging is clear.
senegal‘s experience of previous outbreaks including zika, dengue fever and ebola has been crucial.as been reused and re—adapted to covid—19. there have only been 15,000 confirmed cases here, and around 300 deaths. just 26 patients are on ventilators and infection rates are decreasing. rapid testing is the cornerstone of the country's containment strategy. lab capacity has been beefed up and results come within eight hours. senegal has seen some small outbreaks. ibrahima caught the virus...
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48
Oct 13, 2020
10/20
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 48
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significant confidence going into the trial, as you recall, with people on the -- for ebola,bolo, f zikaand others, and we have to make sure we are following the highest scientific and ethical standards for all our drugs. that is certainly true for all of our drugs, and i believe it is true for all of our pharmaceutical counterparts. ofyes, astrazeneca, one their studies had to be halted while they assessed some patient issues, but it still has not been approved by the fda. it can continue in other countries. i would like you to help us understand the process globally as to what stocks, what moves forward, how quickly that can happen. >> yes, i will not speak specifically on the astrazeneca, but from our perspective, the details are still being finalized. it is a 60,000 person study, which is the largest of any currently being conducted. it is probably not uncommon to expect unexpected illnesses that occur, and that is what has happened here, so we will let the board to their study, do their due diligence, and then we will proceed accordingly. we have been in contact with the fda as well
significant confidence going into the trial, as you recall, with people on the -- for ebola,bolo, f zikaand others, and we have to make sure we are following the highest scientific and ethical standards for all our drugs. that is certainly true for all of our drugs, and i believe it is true for all of our pharmaceutical counterparts. ofyes, astrazeneca, one their studies had to be halted while they assessed some patient issues, but it still has not been approved by the fda. it can continue in...
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Oct 3, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN
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eye 32
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if limiting zika -- limited impedingited staffing your work? and a specific callout, do trouble recruiting staff with the specialized skills needed to reduce biological severity -- security threats and i open that up to the panelists? thank you, congresswoman. it is an age-old issue, employing the right staff. i would say from a cwnd perspective, we have a talented team. professional's from career civilians -- of professionals from career civilians to government contractors. it would be hard to speak across the department, but we are right sized. forre always on the lookout talent, so we will continue to do that and continue, if we can find talent, to bring them in the doors. i'll defer to my other colleagues. operate a highly technical organization. hours recruitment -- our recruitment and retention strategy is healthy but we continue to look for additional talent as necessary but so far, rates are going steady so in a chem by a defense we operate as well as our rnd organization -- r and d, it is very sound. bureau,half of the oes outstanding
if limiting zika -- limited impedingited staffing your work? and a specific callout, do trouble recruiting staff with the specialized skills needed to reduce biological severity -- security threats and i open that up to the panelists? thank you, congresswoman. it is an age-old issue, employing the right staff. i would say from a cwnd perspective, we have a talented team. professional's from career civilians -- of professionals from career civilians to government contractors. it would be hard to...
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288
Oct 29, 2020
10/20
by
KSTS
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eye 288
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África durante mi parcial crianza en kenia luego los brote de fiebre en venezu a venezuela, ningÚn zika y cosas simples que estÁn en nuestro control >>> ahora tenemos que hacer una pausa y cuando regresemos un policÍa se une para darnos su recomendaciÓn de seguridad como celebrar el halloween atentos a peligros y evitando accidentes >>> asÍ es y tambiÉn van a estar con nosotros unos niÑos que se sacan sus ocurrencias bajo la manga nos van a explicar cÓmo piensan que se originÓ la noche brujas una cápsula al día... ¡manchas menos visibles en tu piel cada día! nuevo neutrogena® rapid tone repair 20% pura vitamina c. para una piel más radiante en una semana y manchas menos visibles en cuatro. neutrogena® (voz) cinnamon toast crunch. ¡cuadritos cargados con cinna-dust! sobre crianza la mejor forma de cuidar a tu bebé, es como tú lo haces. eso inspiró a nuestro pañal perfecto, sin parabenos ni ingredientes tóxicos. huggies special delivery sin parabenos ni y merece el mejor cuidado una historia... la nueva fórmula de dove body wash... actúa con tu piel y la cuida por más tiempo. para que tu
África durante mi parcial crianza en kenia luego los brote de fiebre en venezu a venezuela, ningÚn zika y cosas simples que estÁn en nuestro control >>> ahora tenemos que hacer una pausa y cuando regresemos un policÍa se une para darnos su recomendaciÓn de seguridad como celebrar el halloween atentos a peligros y evitando accidentes >>> asÍ es y tambiÉn van a estar con nosotros unos niÑos que se sacan sus ocurrencias bajo la manga nos van a explicar cÓmo piensan que...
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138
Oct 28, 2020
10/20
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KSTS
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sido fabulosos asÍ que muchas gracias >>> les deseamos mucho Éxito emily un abrazo grande me encanta zikaÉ linda la visita que le hizo su mamÁ esta recibiendo todo el amor que ha sembrado con cada una de sus presentaciones y el Éxito el esta brindando su paÍs >>> seÑores el tema el dÍa de hoy tiene que ver con ninel conde y larry ramos para eso nos vamos a enlazar con calina porque dicen que hay asuntos legales que podrÍan afectar a ninel si se casan el dÍa de hoy o cuando se casen >>> activamente esto podrÍa tener que ver con si es cierto o no que podrÍa estar aprovechando a ninel conde para obtener la nacionalidad platicamos con un abogado y el doctor no explicÓ quÉ podrÍa suceder >>> si un ciudadano tiene problema en estados unidos y secas en mÉxico puede haber varios actores lo principal que puedan detectar la verdadera intenciÓn de matrimonio que ten este ciudadano porque pudiera ser fraudulento porque recordemos que se le acusa de r fraude un delito patrimonial, hablamos de un delito financiero y de dinero en este caso podrÍa ser embargado por ser una conciliaciÓn para llegar a un a
sido fabulosos asÍ que muchas gracias >>> les deseamos mucho Éxito emily un abrazo grande me encanta zikaÉ linda la visita que le hizo su mamÁ esta recibiendo todo el amor que ha sembrado con cada una de sus presentaciones y el Éxito el esta brindando su paÍs >>> seÑores el tema el dÍa de hoy tiene que ver con ninel conde y larry ramos para eso nos vamos a enlazar con calina porque dicen que hay asuntos legales que podrÍan afectar a ninel si se casan el dÍa de hoy o...
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530
Oct 19, 2020
10/20
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KDTV
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resulta que despuÉs de nueve meses de dar a luz primer hijo la modelo pÚblica esta foto que titula " zikaá si su cuerpo. seguimos con mucho mÁs, al volver hay polÉmica porque los reyesde holanda se fueron de vacaciones y tuvieron que regresar debido al monto de crÍticas que les dieron. siempre te he amado, sven-jannin. nunca... ¿qué? ¿acaba de morir sven-rod? si ¿pueden repetirlo? no problema siempre te he amado, sven-jannin. aaay! ...me lo perdí otra vez. alexa, retrocede diez segundos. siempre te he amado, sven-jannin. nunca... cheez-it! ¿me convidas?o 100% real y horneadas. ¡hey! ¡ahhhh! no te preocupes, no fue falta. para momentos que cuentan, cuenta con cheez-it. tattoo studio gel pencil, resistente a nueva york. de maybelline new york. no se corre. resistente al sudor. a prueba de agua. dura hasta 36 horas. tattoo studio gel pencil. y en delineador líquido. solo de maybelline new york. extrañamos esos mcon nuestra familia,. la libertad de compartir con nuestra comunidad. queremos que los niños puedan regresar a la escuela y tener estabilidad en nuestros empleos. con responsabilidad
resulta que despuÉs de nueve meses de dar a luz primer hijo la modelo pÚblica esta foto que titula " zikaá si su cuerpo. seguimos con mucho mÁs, al volver hay polÉmica porque los reyesde holanda se fueron de vacaciones y tuvieron que regresar debido al monto de crÍticas que les dieron. siempre te he amado, sven-jannin. nunca... ¿qué? ¿acaba de morir sven-rod? si ¿pueden repetirlo? no problema siempre te he amado, sven-jannin. aaay! ...me lo perdí otra vez. alexa, retrocede diez...
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73
Oct 13, 2020
10/20
by
FBC
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again, we've had 100,000 patients on this platform through other means with ebola, hiv, zika, and sonfidence in the safety of this but we want to make sure we're thorough in our analysis for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where some people might actually have an adverse reaction. i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine, the way you were quite of confident just six months ago of having a vaccine out in the market within the next year? >> yeah, so maria, with a 60,000 patient study, unexpected adverse events having that should be expected to some degree. i think the best way to answer that is we have not altered our investment plans in terms of expanding our manufacturing capacity. we are still on the timeline for first quarter next year for potential approval and we're going to let the science dictate how we proceed. maria: understood. let's talk about the third quarter. you reported earnings, posting a double beat on the top and bottom line. joe, what drove the business in t
again, we've had 100,000 patients on this platform through other means with ebola, hiv, zika, and sonfidence in the safety of this but we want to make sure we're thorough in our analysis for this unexpected event. maria: understood. you have to make allowances for the situation where some people might actually have an adverse reaction. i get that. but does this in any way suggest that you are having less confidence in a vaccine, the way you were quite of confident just six months ago of having...
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53
Oct 21, 2020
10/20
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CSPAN
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vaccines to get some of the world's biggest infectious disease threats -- hiv, malaria, dengue fever, zika. you don't have a vaccine for any of them. despite the efforts of scientists putting hard work and a lot of money into those disease efforts, those control efforts, we don't have a vaccine. i remember when the hiv pandemic started. i was a medical student at the time. the word was, hang in there, within a year we will have a vaccine. that has been a long time. that was in the 1980's. so while we should be optimistic and excited about all the work going on around vaccine, there is no guarantee we are going to have one. each week -- if we even have a vaccine, vaccines vary in terms of how effective they are. 95%asles vaccine is about effective. it is one of the best we have out there. other vaccine, while they reduce your risk, like a flu vaccine, that may only be 30%, 50% effective. it varies by year. the fda this time has set a threshold of 50%, so any vaccine that would be licensed has to reduce your risk by at least half. ,ay a vaccine is 70% effective and 70% of the public gets it.
vaccines to get some of the world's biggest infectious disease threats -- hiv, malaria, dengue fever, zika. you don't have a vaccine for any of them. despite the efforts of scientists putting hard work and a lot of money into those disease efforts, those control efforts, we don't have a vaccine. i remember when the hiv pandemic started. i was a medical student at the time. the word was, hang in there, within a year we will have a vaccine. that has been a long time. that was in the 1980's. so...