Hardback : £26.67
Coming in 2022 from the Sunday Times bestselling author of How to Avoid a Climate Disaster
Before Bill Gates became an expert on climate science, he was known as one of the few who studied pandemics - how they start, how they spread, how they can be controlled. He warned us years ago in a now-famous TED Talk of their arrival in our future. The future, of course, is now, and now is when we have to plan against a next one.
HOW TO PREVENT THE NEXT PANDEMIC is a clear and upbeat plan of what every country, every government leader, and every individual can do in order to help prevent another pandemic, grounded in Bill's firsthand experience with the Gates Foundation's commitment to fighting Covid-19.
Coming in 2022 from the Sunday Times bestselling author of How to Avoid a Climate Disaster
Before Bill Gates became an expert on climate science, he was known as one of the few who studied pandemics - how they start, how they spread, how they can be controlled. He warned us years ago in a now-famous TED Talk of their arrival in our future. The future, of course, is now, and now is when we have to plan against a next one.
HOW TO PREVENT THE NEXT PANDEMIC is a clear and upbeat plan of what every country, every government leader, and every individual can do in order to help prevent another pandemic, grounded in Bill's firsthand experience with the Gates Foundation's commitment to fighting Covid-19.
Bill Gates is a technologist, business leader, and philanthropist. In 1975, he cofounded Microsoft with his childhood friend Paul Allen. Today, he is cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he has spent more than twenty years working on global health and development issues, including pandemic prevention, disease eradication, and problems concerning water, sanitation, and hygiene. He has three children.
Every expert's door opens to Gates and he is a fiendish researcher
... formidably informative ... One of his most intruiging insights
was that there is a rough correlation between how much people trust
their governments and a country's success in fighting the pandemic
... he comes up with four recommendations - make better tools to
deal with infectious diseases; develop his pandemic fire brigade;
help pooer countries to develop disease surveillance; and
strengthen primary health care systems, especially in low and
middle-income countries. Who could argue?
*Sunday Times*
In 2015, the American technologist and philanthropist Bill Gates
warned that humanity wasn't ready for a pandemic. Seven years on,
as the world emerges (hopefully) from a pandemic for which it
wasn't ready, he thinks we have it within our power to make sure
this one was the last. There will be more disease outbreaks, but we
now possess the tools and the knowledge to prevent them from
becoming global catastrophes. Gates's optimism is refreshing after
the gloom of the last two years. ... The roadmap he lays out sounds
feasible. It involves strengthening disease surveillance and
strengthening primary healthcare systems around the world ...
Gates's proposals are wise, and his goals should be our goals.
*Laura Spinney*
In this concise and lucid book, global health activist Gates
reflects on the current COVID-19 pandemic, considers future ones,
and renders several sensible recommendations for prevention . . .
Passionate but never preachy, Gates delivers an expert,
well-reasoned, and robust appeal for the world to unite in averting
upcoming pandemics.
*Booklist*
Gates is good at guiding readers through his blueprint for the
technological, economic and regulatory fixes to stop the next
pathogen from causing global havoc, never assuming too much
knowledge. ... His book is punctuated with powerful examples from
personal experience. ... How to Prevent the Next Pandemic ...
couldn't be more timely, with thousands still dying daily. As he
writes, "once covid is no longer an acute threat, don't forget
about what it has done".
*New Scientist*
if this book stimulates even a little limit-pushing of the sort Mr
Gates suggests, it will have served its purpose well.
*Economist*
His last book was about climate change, that other issue which,
along with pandemics, he considers "existential" for mankind. ...
Now, with the same can-do, roll-up-the-sleeves attitude, he lays
out, step by step, the system that needs to be put in place to
prevent another - potentially far more deadly - pandemic.
*Sunday Telegraph*
Gates delivers a thoughtful exploration of how lessons learned from
Covid-19 can inform future global public health policies. In
accessible prose, he spells out steps for preventing future
pandemics, among them creating a global task force dedicated to
doing so . . . Gates is realistic about what he's up against . . .
but he does a good job of making [the task force's] $1 billion
price tag seem reasonable.
*Publishers Weekly*
In How to Prevent the Next Pandemic he applies his technocratic
approach to preparing the world for future public health
emergencies. That means building early warning systems that could
identify novel illnesses when they first start to circulate in
human populations; developing better treatment and vaccine
technologies that can quickly tackle brand new pathogens; and
optimising processes and building manufacturing facilities that
could quickly mass-produce things like medicines and rapid tests in
times of emergency. At the heart of Gates's plan is a new
institution he calls Germ (Global Epidemic Response and
Mobilisation), composed of a few thousand experts - from
epidemiologists to vaccinologists to diplomats - who would be on
standby in case of a global threat. In between emergencies, this
group would go around the world to strengthen pandemic-prevention
infrastructure and encourage governments to keep spending on things
like disease-monitoring and scientific research. None of the ideas
in the book are radical; indeed, scientists have been arguing for
some version of all them for several decades. But, given who is
making the recommendations, people with the power to make change
might finally listen.
*Guardian Books of the Year*
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