Are we doing enough to prevent future pandemics?
The scientific community's response to the COVID-19 pandemic has shown the importance of real-time data. To predict, detect, and prevent future diseases we need a step-change in surveilla...
Jeremy Farrar is Director of the Wellcome Trust – the world’s second largest independent charitable foundation that exists to improve human health through research. Jeremy is a clinician scientist who before joining Wellcome in 2013 was, for eighteen years, Director of the Clinical Research Unit at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Viet Nam, where his research interests were in global health with a focus on emerging infectious diseases. He was named 12th in the Fortune list of 50 World’s Greatest Leaders in 2015 and was awarded the Memorial Medal and Ho Chi Minh City Medal from the Government of Viet Nam. In 2018 he was recognised as the President Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Humanitarian of the Year. Jeremy was knighted in the Queen’s 2019 New Year Honours for services to global health and awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon by the Government of Japan in recognition of contribution to global health. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences UK, European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO), the National Academies USA and a Fellow of The Royal Society.
The scientific community's response to the COVID-19 pandemic has shown the importance of real-time data. To predict, detect, and prevent future diseases we need a step-change in surveilla...
Resistance to antibiotics is a leading threat to human health worldwide. The solution is to channel funding into antibiotic innovation - here's how
Women comprise the majority of frontline healthcare workers globally, meaning that female representation is vital in responding to the coronavirus pandemic.
As recent research by Wellcome Trust shows, Africans trust vaccines more than most of the rest of the world - but trust in healthcare institutions and practitioners generally is low acros...
By using vaccines to prevent outbreaks of disease we can reduce the use of antibiotics, and lessen the chances of microbial resistance to the drugs.
Some 70 per cent of medically important antibiotics in the US are given not to people but to animals. We are taking unacceptable risks.