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The Pandemic People: Sir Jeremy Farrar

Series
The Oxford Colloquy
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Sir Andrew Pollard talks to Sir Jeremy Farrar, Chief Scientist at the World Health Organisation and previously the director of The Wellcome Trust in the UK.
Andrew Pollard's guest on this podcast is Sir Jeremy Farrar, who serves as the Chief Scientist at the World Health Organisation and held the position of director at the Wellcome Trust in the UK from 2013 to 2023.

Sir Farrar is a clinician-scientist who served for two terms at the Wellcome Trust. Besides overseeing a significant increase in the Trust's endowment and annual spending, he played a key role in the race to develop COVID-19 vaccines. Before joining Wellcome in 2013, Sir Farrar spent 17 years as the director of a clinical research unit at a hospital for tropical diseases in Vietnam, particularly focusing on emerging infectious diseases.

Jeremy discusses his early career training in Neurology and then his Ph.D. researching the immune disorder Myasthenia Gravis at Oxford University. This work led him to study infectious diseases primarily in Vietnam in the mid-1990s. A key transformative moment for Sir Farrar was the Nipah virus outbreak in Malaysia from September 1998 to May 1999. This outbreak resulted in 105 deaths and the near collapse of the key local pig-farming industry.

They then discuss the regional SARS-1 (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) coronavirus outbreak of 2003 and the lessons learned from that outbreak. They also examine the impact of the H5N1 virus that followed shortly after SARS-CoV1. They talk through the risks posed in the future by a non-human influenza virus crossing the species barrier from birds, poultry, or animals and what needs to be done to monitor this risk in the future and what it means for future vaccine research.

In 2013, Sir Jeremy Farrar became the head of the Wellcome Trust in the UK. The Wellcome Trust, established in 1936 to fund research to improve human and animal health, is the largest funder of non-governmental funding for scientific research in the UK and one of the largest research providers globally. Sir Farrar talks about his task of steering this growth period for the Wellcome Trust and discusses the role of science communication and policy.

Turning to the events of 2020, Sir Farrar discloses how he initially was alerted to the pandemic outbreak in Wuhan by international colleagues and then the steps he took as an independent scientist to alert the scientific community and advise the UK government. The Wellcome Trust acted as a pivotal funder in 2020; it instigated and funded important vaccine and medical research work in the early period to underpin Covid-19 medical trials and studies.

Andrew Pollard and Jeremy Farrar finish their conversation by looking at the lessons learned from the pandemic and what needs to be done globally within science and wider society to prepare for any future infectious disease outbreak.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford Colloquy
People
Andrew Pollard
Jeremy Farrar
Keywords
Covid-19
vaccines
SARS-1
infectious diseases
SARS-CoV-2
clinical trials
coronaviruses
Department: Department of Paediatrics
Date Added: 04/03/2024
Duration: 00:34:09

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A Good Science Read: The Story of Penicillin

Series
A Good Science Read
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Professor Matthew Freeman and Professor Frances Ashcroft discuss 'The Mould in Dr Florey's Coat' by Eric Lax
This book tells the true story of the penicillin miracle – penicillin being the mould in Dr Florey’s coat. When most people are asked who discovered penicillin they invariably answer Alexander Fleming. But he was merely one of the people involved and arguably not even the most important. This book sets the record straight and tells the story of how it was 3 Oxford scientists, Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and Norman Heatley who isolated penicillin and turned it into a life-saving drug. It is a remarkable story, very well told, about a scientific breakthrough conducted on a shoestring budget in the middle of the second world war, that has benefitted all humanity.
Matthew Freeman is Professor of Pathology at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of both Lincoln College Oxford and the Royal Society of London. He is also Head of the Dunn School of Pathology which plays a very special part in the story the book tells about the discovery of penicillin.
Website: https://www.path.ox.ac.uk/research-group/matthew-freeman/

Episode Information

Series
A Good Science Read
People
Frances Ashcroft
Matthew Freeman
Keywords
penicillin
Florey
pathology
mould
Department: Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG)
Date Added: 04/03/2024
Duration: 00:39:37

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Ilan Pappe

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Maurice Obstfeld

No podcasts episodes were found for this contributor.

The International Monetary Fund

Series
Global Shocks
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How does the global financial system cope with a turbulent world?
In this episode of Global Shocks, Jan Eijking is joined by Maurice Obstfeld, former Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Maurice Obstfeld is a Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and Professor of Economics Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. From 2015 through 2018, he served as Economic Counsellor and Director of Research at the International Monetary Fund. In 2014 and 2015, he was a Member of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers. A leading macroeconomist, he has published widely on the international financial system and its resilience to crises and shocks.

Episode Information

Series
Global Shocks
People
Jan Eijking
Maurice Obstfeld
Keywords
finance
global
system
economy
international monetary fund
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 28/02/2024
Duration: 00:33:12

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Is a Binational State Possible After 7 October?

Series
Middle East Centre
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In this podcast, Oxford Emeritus Professor Avi Shlaim compares notes with Exeter University Professor Ilan Pappé on the prospects for a binational state in the aftermath of the events of 7 October and the Gaza War.

Episode Information

Series
Middle East Centre
People
Ilan Pappe
Avi Shlaim
Keywords
Gaza
Israel
Department: Middle East Centre
Date Added: 28/02/2024
Duration: 00:58:21

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Beware - Understanding Evidence in Global Health

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
Embed
Caesar asks the questions of Proochista and they discuss the importance of, and limitations to, using evidence in global health decision making and the need to be aware of all the factors that influence global health, not just data.
Professor Proochista Ariana is the Course Director for the MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine, IHTM at the University of Oxford. Proochista holds a Master’s in International Health from Harvard University and a Doctorate in International Development from University of Oxford, as well as a Post Graduate Diploma in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, also from Oxford. Her research empirically examines the relationship between processes of development and health in resource limited and transition contexts, appreciating the multidimensionality of both.

Professor Caesar Atuire is a philosopher and health ethicist from Ghana. He is the Ethics Lead for the MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine, IHTM at the University of Oxford. Caesar is also an Associate Professor of Applied Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy and Classics at the University of Ghana and an affiliate Instructor at the University of Washington’s Department of Bioethics and Humanities. Caesar’s interests and research in bioethics are conceptual and empirical. He is currently leading a team of highly qualified colleagues from across the globe on a Wellcome Discovery Award to explore conceptualizations of solidarity and to design a solidarity index for ranking global health funders.

Episode Information

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
People
Proochista Ariana
Caesar Atuire
Keywords
evidence based global health
global health
international health and tropical medicine
University of Oxford
centre for tropical medicine and global health
nuffield department of medicine
Department: Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health
Date Added: 27/02/2024
Duration: 00:10:22

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Breaking Down Barriers in Global Health

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
Embed
Proochista and Caesar discuss the barriers preventing equity in global health and how knowledge and expertise need to be redefined in order for global health decision making to be properly inclusive.
Professor Proochista Ariana is the Course Director for the MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine, IHTM at the University of Oxford. Proochista holds a Master’s in International Health from Harvard University and a Doctorate in International Development from University of Oxford, as well as a Post Graduate Diploma in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, also from Oxford. Her research empirically examines the relationship between processes of development and health in resource limited and transition contexts, appreciating the multidimensionality of both.

Professor Caesar Atuire is a philosopher and health ethicist from Ghana. He is the Ethics Lead for the MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine, IHTM at the University of Oxford. Caesar is also an Associate Professor of Applied Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy and Classics at the University of Ghana and an affiliate Instructor at the University of Washington’s Department of Bioethics and Humanities. Caesar’s interests and research in bioethics are conceptual and empirical. He is currently leading a team of highly qualified colleagues from across the globe on a Wellcome Discovery Award to explore conceptualizations of solidarity and to design a solidarity index for ranking global health funders.

Episode Information

Series
Unpacking the Fundamentals of Global Health: Towards a New Generation of Leadership
People
Proochista Ariana
Caesar Atuire
Keywords
barriers in global health
global health
international health and tropical medicine
University of Oxford
centre for tropical medicine and global health
nuffield department of medicine
Department: Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health
Date Added: 27/02/2024
Duration: 00:12:25

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A Good Science Read

Series
A Good Science Read
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Professor Frances Ashcroft gives a short introduction to this exciting new series

Episode Information

Series
A Good Science Read
People
Frances Ashcroft
Keywords
science
books
reading
Department: Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG)
Date Added: 27/02/2024
Duration: 00:00:54

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Michael Diamond

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