Anticipate to mitigate
Brooks emphasised the urgent need to be proactive and to not be always responding in crisis mode. “We wait for the outbreak,” he said, “rush to deal with it and hope it won’t happen again. And we think we are doing the best we can. This is not working.” “There is no sense of us being proactive. We could be doing a lot more. We are running out of time.” He emphasised the need to document, assess, monitor and act – the DAMA model. “Scientists are good at assessing and monitoring but they then hand over the implementation to policy makers,” he continued. “We have not been effective at convincing them to invest in truly proactive measures.” “We need to create citizen scientists who can report changes in their immediate environment. We need to tap into young people – their drive, enthusiasm, creativity and anger. It’s the younger generation that will have to live through this.” He also emphasised the need to use all the technology at our disposal including machine learning, genomics and satellite surveillance. “We need to find viruses in the environment, do phylogenetic triage and match them to known pathogens and reservoirs. Then we constantly monitor.” “We know Corona originated in bats. The recombinant genetic variant probably passed into other mammals and eventually into humans. The ability to predict and monitor this stepping stones dynamic is vitally important.” “This is more than just a plea for more science funding,” he added. “This is a public policy not a science project.” “COVID-19 will reappear in coming seasons, it will become established,” he explained. “However, resistance will increase over time and this will help with subsequent outbreaks. We should be looking now for new reservoir hosts and taking active measures to ensure it doesn’t happen again.” He also pointed to the urgency to monitor other pandemics which are playing out below the spotlight. “Other pandemics are already happening more rapidly than we think,” he said. “They don’t all make the headlines. For example, African Swine Fever, which could eventually destroy the pork industry, and rust fungus in wheat which could lead to the extinction of wheat farming – wheat is currently about 25% of human carbohydrate intake. No one is talking about these.” “Crop diseases are under-appreciated and under-funded. Rich countries don’t consider the links with public health, they see them as part of the cost of doing business.” “Crises like the one we are in are never just one thing,” he continued. “They are a string of events, interconnected, but with no specific plan. If we are not paying attention to the consequences of these seemingly unrelated events, it blows up in our faces.” “Right now everything is triage. But the more co-operation, the more we will save. We have to co-operate with our neighbours even if we don’t like them. Pathogens don’t care if we like each other. However, if we find out how to co-operate proactively to fight this pandemic we can use this in other areas that require similar global co-operation.” “This all goes against the economically driven neoliberal agenda – but we can’t keep doing the same thing if it’s not working,” he concluded. Brooks is co-author of a 2019 book, The Stockholm Paradigm: Climate Change and Emerging Disease, much of which was written at STIAS. The full webinar is available at https://bluejeans.com/s/aMGUv/.