Future Pandemics May Be Worse Than COVID-19!

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  • The world will experience another pandemic.
  • It could be even more severe than the coronavirus according to author Richard Preston.
  • As time goes forward the world is going to see more of them.
  • Preston is the author of the 1994 book, ‘The Hot Zone: The Terrifying True Story of the Origins of the Ebola Virus’.
  • He noted that the new coronavirus is the third recent example of a coronavirus that affects humans.
  • World vulnerable to future pandemics because of large urban populations and airline travel.

According to an article published in CNBC and authored by Kevin Stankiewicz, the world will experience another pandemic, and it could be even more severe than the coronavirus.

According to author Richard Preston,We hear some people saying, ‘Well this is a once-in-a-100-year event.’ It is absolutely not, Preston said on Squawk Box. I think a worst-case scenario could be worse than coronavirus.

Author of ‘The Hot Zone’

Preston is the author of the 1994 book, The Hot Zone: The Terrifying True Story of the Origins of the Ebola Virus. It was the basis of 2019 TV miniseries from the National Geographic Channel.

He noted that the new coronavirus is the third recent example of a coronavirus that typically infects animals evolving to also make humans sick— the 2002-2003 SARS epidemic and the 2012 MERS outbreak.

It is part of a pattern of emerging viruses. Viruses coming out of the world’s ecosystems and finding their way into the human species and then, as we now see, can do incredible damage, Preston said.

World vulnerable to future pandemics

There are now more than 1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, across the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. More than 54,000 people have died.

Preston said that we don’t know when the next pandemic may arrive. We don’t know what it will be, maybe another coronavirus. Maybe something else, he said.

But he argued the world is particularly vulnerable to future pandemics because of large urban populations and airline travel.

These are two things really facilitating these outbreaks, he contended. I think that as time goes forward we’re going to see more of them and they’re going to balloon faster.

Attributed to a large population and frequent travel

More than half the world’s population lives in urban areas, Preston noted. He argued people living close together allows for a virus to spread more easily.

Beyond just living in close quarters, people can now quickly travel across the world by airplane, he said.

Think human population basically being thrown into some kind of gigantic blender and being stirred up by airline travel, said Preston. If a virus gets anywhere it’s quickly going to get mixed into the human population all around the planet.

However, Preston said the outbreak presents the world with an opportunity to get focused on the real situation of the human species.

Series of platforms required to find vaccines

Preston said countries, starting with the U.S., should developa series of platforms to rapidly develop antivirals and vaccines. In addition, he said the world needs to develop surge manufacturing capabilities, so when a vaccine is developed — both for COVID-19 and future viruses — it can be deployed at the necessary scale.

Viruses such as the coronavirus “are clearly a threat, but we can do things to deal with it,” Preston said.

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Source: CNBCNews