Medical Xpress September 28, 2024
Allen Cheng, The Conversation

Before the COVID pandemic, the World Health Organization (WHO) had made a list of priority infectious diseases. These were felt to pose a threat to international public health, but where research was still needed to improve their surveillance and diagnosis. In 2018, “disease X” was included, which signified that a pathogen previously not on our radar could cause a pandemic.

While it’s one thing to acknowledge the limits to our knowledge of the microbial soup we live in, more recent attention has focused on how we might systematically approach future risks.

Former US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld famously talked about “known knowns” (things we know we know), “known unknowns” (things we know we don’t know), and “unknown unknowns”...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Healthcare System, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Public Health / COVID
Trump Administration Halts Certain Public Health Agencies’ Activities
This is what might happen if the US withdraws from the WHO
5 long COVID study findings to know
Opinion: Allowing ICE in hospitals is a public health catastrophe in the making
How Donald Trump Is Reshaping Global Health

Share This Article