80,000 Hours Podcast

When the first person with COVID-19 went to see a doctor in Wuhan, nobody could tell that it wasn’t a familiar disease like the flu — that we were dealing with something new.

How much death and destruction could we have avoided if we'd had a hero who could? That's what the last Assistant Secretary of Defense Andy Weber asked on the show back in March.

Today’s guest Pardis Sabeti is a professor at Harvard, fought Ebola on the ground in Africa during the 2014 outbreak, runs her own lab, co-founded a company that produces next-level testing, and is even the lead singer of a rock band. If anyone is going to be that hero in the next pandemic — it just might be her.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

She is a co-author of the SENTINEL proposal, a practical system for detecting new diseases quickly, using an escalating series of three novel diagnostic techniques.

The first method, called SHERLOCK, uses CRISPR gene editing to detect familiar viruses in a simple, inexpensive filter paper test, using non-invasive samples.

If SHERLOCK draws a blank, we escalate to the second step, CARMEN, an advanced version of SHERLOCK that uses microfluidics and CRISPR to simultaneously detect hundreds of viruses and viral strains. More expensive, but far more comprehensive.

If neither SHERLOCK nor CARMEN detects a known pathogen, it's time to pull out the big gun: metagenomic sequencing. More expensive still, but sequencing all the DNA in a patient sample lets you identify and track every virus — known and unknown — in a sample.

If Pardis and her team succeeds, our future pandemic potential patient zero may:

1. Go to the hospital with flu-like symptoms, and immediately be tested using SHERLOCK — which will come back negative
2. Take the CARMEN test for a much broader range of illnesses — which will also come back negative
3. Their sample will be sent for metagenomic sequencing, which will reveal that they're carrying a new virus we'll have to contend with
4. At all levels, information will be recorded in a cloud-based data system that shares data in real time; the hospital will be alerted and told to quarantine the patient
5. The world will be able to react weeks — or even months — faster, potentially saving millions of lives

It's a wonderful vision, and one humanity is ready to test out. But there are all sorts of practical questions, such as:

• How do you scale these technologies, including to remote and rural areas?
• Will doctors everywhere be able to operate them?
• Who will pay for it?
• How do you maintain the public’s trust and protect against misuse of sequencing data?
• How do you avoid drowning in the data the system produces?

In this conversation Pardis and Rob address all those questions, as well as:

• Pardis’ history with trying to control emerging contagious diseases
• The potential of mRNA vaccines
• Other emerging technologies
• How to best educate people about pandemics
• The pros and cons of gain-of-function research
• Turning mistakes into exercises you can learn from
• Overcoming enormous life challenges
• Why it’s so important to work with people you can laugh with
• And much more

Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Sofia Davis-Fogel.

Show Notes

When the first person with COVID-19 went to see a doctor in Wuhan, nobody could tell that it wasn’t a familiar disease like the flu — that we were dealing with something new.

How much death and destruction could we have avoided if we'd had a hero who could? That's what the last Assistant Secretary of Defense Andy Weber asked on the show back in March.

Today’s guest Pardis Sabeti is a professor at Harvard, fought Ebola on the ground in Africa during the 2014 outbreak, runs her own lab, co-founded a company that produces next-level testing, and is even the lead singer of a rock band. If anyone is going to be that hero in the next pandemic — it just might be her.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

She is a co-author of the SENTINEL proposal, a practical system for detecting new diseases quickly, using an escalating series of three novel diagnostic techniques.

The first method, called SHERLOCK, uses CRISPR gene editing to detect familiar viruses in a simple, inexpensive filter paper test, using non-invasive samples.

If SHERLOCK draws a blank, we escalate to the second step, CARMEN, an advanced version of SHERLOCK that uses microfluidics and CRISPR to simultaneously detect hundreds of viruses and viral strains. More expensive, but far more comprehensive.

If neither SHERLOCK nor CARMEN detects a known pathogen, it's time to pull out the big gun: metagenomic sequencing. More expensive still, but sequencing all the DNA in a patient sample lets you identify and track every virus — known and unknown — in a sample.

If Pardis and her team succeeds, our future pandemic potential patient zero may:

1. Go to the hospital with flu-like symptoms, and immediately be tested using SHERLOCK — which will come back negative
2. Take the CARMEN test for a much broader range of illnesses — which will also come back negative
3. Their sample will be sent for metagenomic sequencing, which will reveal that they're carrying a new virus we'll have to contend with
4. At all levels, information will be recorded in a cloud-based data system that shares data in real time; the hospital will be alerted and told to quarantine the patient
5. The world will be able to react weeks — or even months — faster, potentially saving millions of lives

It's a wonderful vision, and one humanity is ready to test out. But there are all sorts of practical questions, such as:

• How do you scale these technologies, including to remote and rural areas?
• Will doctors everywhere be able to operate them?
• Who will pay for it?
• How do you maintain the public’s trust and protect against misuse of sequencing data?
• How do you avoid drowning in the data the system produces?

In this conversation Pardis and Rob address all those questions, as well as:

• Pardis’ history with trying to control emerging contagious diseases
• The potential of mRNA vaccines
• Other emerging technologies
• How to best educate people about pandemics
• The pros and cons of gain-of-function research
• Turning mistakes into exercises you can learn from
• Overcoming enormous life challenges
• Why it’s so important to work with people you can laugh with
• And much more

Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Sofia Davis-Fogel.

What is 80,000 Hours Podcast?

Unusually in-depth conversations about the world's most pressing problems and what you can do to solve them.

Subscribe by searching for '80000 Hours' wherever you get podcasts.

Produced by Keiran Harris. Hosted by Rob Wiblin and Luisa Rodriguez.