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Michael Mina: Rapid COVID Testing | Lex Fridman Podcast #235


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The following is a conversation with Michael Mina, his second time on the podcast.
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He's a professor at Harvard doing research on infectious disease and immunology. In my view,
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the most powerful, doable, and obvious solution to COVID 19 from the very beginning is rapid
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at home testing. This is what Michael has been talking about and writing about since the beginning
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of the pandemic. The accuracy of these tests is high for the task of detecting contagiousness,
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which is what matters. Hundreds of millions can be manufactured quickly and relatively cheaply.
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Privacy and individual freedoms are preserved. I believe that if you give people the power of
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information, information about whether they are contagious or not, they will do the right thing
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at scale, all while respecting their freedom and minimizing the destructive effects of the pandemic
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on our health and our economy. The solution was obvious in May of 2020. It was obvious when Michael
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and I spoke the first time a year ago, and it is obvious today. We talk about why it has not yet
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been done and how we can still do it. This is the Lex Friedman podcast. To support it, please check
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out our sponsors in the description. And now here's my conversation with Michael Mina.
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We spoke a year ago about rapid at home testing, and I think you think it should have been,
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still should be a big part of the solution to COVID. So let's recap. Where do things stand
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today in terms of rapid at home testing? Well, it's certainly something that you're right,
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I do think we should have them today. We've now had almost 20 months of living in anxiety,
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uncertainty, being afraid for our health, for our family's health, for our friends, you know,
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shutdowns, economic instability, everything has been uncertain because of this virus.
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And then there's this little test, and it's the first time for many people that they're using it
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and they're feeling empowered. They're feeling like they can control their little slice
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of this pandemic. So as these tests have come out and more and more and more Americans have
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had an opportunity to go and buy them from, you know, CVS or Walgreens or wherever they're at,
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I think that it's really shifting the tenor of the discussion. For a long time, all of 2020,
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it was like, I often felt like it was me and a few other people against the world, you know,
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these tests should be public health tools, these tests are infectiousness indicators,
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they shouldn't be compared to PCR, you know, all of these different things. And we could,
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of course, go through and recap what the benefits and the metrics are that we should be looking at.
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But the point is, last year and most of this year was about educating scientists, educating
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public health leaders, educating physicians to get them to understand that there is a different
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reason to test in a pandemic than purely diagnostics and transmission blockade and
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severing transmission chains is a big one. So now, I think we're at a point where people
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are now understanding and they're understanding because they are feeling it, they're holding it
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and they're doing it and they're seeing, they're feeling the delight of seeing a negative
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and saying, I feel more comfortable. It's not perfect, but it's pretty darn close to perfect
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to allowing me to go and see my mom without mistakenly infecting her, you know, or whatever
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the story might be. And now that that's happening, I think all of a sudden we're seeing a massive
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change politically for these tests. Biden just came out the COVID 19 action plan the other day
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and one of the main pillars of it was testing and in particular, bringing rapid tests,
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scaling them up. So on that front, I think finally there is success. People are actually understanding
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and, you know, I haven't stopped beating this drum for far too long and I like hate rapid tests now.
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So maybe it's good to step back. Would you say most Americans have not taken a rapid at home test?
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Absolutely. Most have definitely not taken a rapid test. So like many of them probably don't know.
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They kind of probably say testing, they have like memories of testing, like PCR testing,
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they have to go into somewhere and they have to like a swab deep in their nose and that's
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the experience. So maybe when, if you have to travel like Canada or something like that,
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you have to get tested, that kind of stuff. So what are rapid at home tests?
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Yeah. So the rapid at home tests are, I like to call them paper strip tests. They're simple tests
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that, I wish I brought some today, but I didn't. They're simple tests that you swab. At the moment,
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most of them use a swab that you just swab the front of your nose. So it's not one of the deep
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swabs that goes into your brain. And so it's not very uncomfortable. It's just like picking your
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nose, if you will, and you put that swab into a little tube and the tube has some liquid in it.
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And then you put a few drops of that liquid onto a paper strip or you drop the paper strip
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into the tube, just like one of those indicators for the pool. And if you, just like a pregnancy
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test, then if you get two lines, you're positive, one line, you're negative. It's super simple. It
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takes 30 seconds, once you know how to do it, of hands on time. And you wait around 10 minutes,
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and then you read the result. They are extraordinarily effective to answer one
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question, am I infectious? And that is the public health question that we need to answer and
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consistently ask during this pandemic. Are you infectious? Am I infectious? Because it's only
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when we know that we're infectious that we can be empowered to not mistakenly infect others.
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The PCR test is a little different. And we can go into the pros and cons, but one of the major
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differences is that a PCR test gets a lot of... A lot of people talking about the PCR test say it's
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much more sensitive. And at an analytical level, it is. It can detect one molecule instead of
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100,000. But for public health, we don't want a test that can detect one molecule. In fact,
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that has created a net negative for public health. We just want to know, am I infectious?
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And to know that question, to know if I'm infectious, I only need a test that is going
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to be positive if I have a high viral load, like a million. And the virus grows so fast,
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it will grow from zero to a billion in a day. So you don't really need, even on the front end of an
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infection, you don't need better sensitivity. If the trade off is that you don't get the result
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for one, two or three days, you absolutely want a rapid result that can tell you, yes,
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you're infectious, you're transmitting to others right now. And I'm going to give you the result
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right now. So it is a much more effective tool because it's fast, because it's accessible. We
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can use them in the home. And there's some issues with using them at home. We can talk a little bit
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about what those issues are, like reporting and how do you use everything on the honor system if
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you have a test that you're taking at home and you use it to go to work. But they can be accessible.
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PCR has to go into a lab. It takes a lot of time for somebody to get a PCR test. They either have
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to go online and order it. It takes the next day for it to come back. They swab themselves,
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they ship it out the next day, and then they get a result two days later. That's four days minimum
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for the most part. And at that point, you're not even infectious, even if you did happen to be
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infectious when you first ordered the test. So it's really the speed of these tests and the
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accessibility and distribution of them that makes them so immensely powerful.
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So you have this like amazing graphic you tweeted. It's exactly what you're saying,
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which is rapid antigen test answers the question, am I currently infectious? And you have, I think,
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a comparison of seven different tests based on the viral load. And based on the viral load across
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these different tests, you look at the likelihood of infectiousness. So what does this graphic show?
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We can overlay that for people. I think it's just really nice and really clear.
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Yeah. So what that's showing is that we can never ask what's the sensitivity of a test and just let
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that be the answer. That's what the FDA does currently. And that question doesn't mean
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anything. We have to say, what is the sensitivity of the test to detect what? And so we can have
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different viral loads. For example, you can have a viral load of one or you can have a viral load
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of a trillion. And a PCR test will tell you that you are positive regardless of whether it's one
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or a trillion. Now, so we can't ask the question, how sensitive is a rapid test compared to PCR?
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Because that covers the whole gamut. What we really want to say is, how sensitive is the rapid test
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to detect me if I am infectious? And that gets to about 97% or so sensitive. If the question is,
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how likely is it to detect me if I'm a super spreader? That's a really important one to be
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able to detect. They're all about 100% sensitive. So if you have extraordinarily high viral loads
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to the point where you might be a super spreader, these simple rapid tests will essentially always
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catch you and tell you you're positive. And then as you go down the line, if you're no longer
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infectious at all, then these rapid tests might have a 0% sensitivity compared to PCR.
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But that's actually a good thing. The FDA and others look at it as though it's a bad thing
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because they average it all together and say, oh, this is only a 40% sensitive test compared to PCR.
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But that's not the right way to look at it. You want to say, well, out of all of the samples,
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how many of them were not transmissible? How many were mid, moderate, high, extremely high,
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super spreader? And you should at the very least create a weighted average based on
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transmissibility potential. We don't do that. And that's why nobody in America has these tests,
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because that's why they're very rare. Because we have slowed down their authorization because of
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that misunderstanding that they don't have to be 80% or 90% sensitive compared to any time PCR
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positivity. They need to be 80% or 90% or more if you're infectious. And for that question,
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they're like 95% up to 100% sensitive when you're most infectious.
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So when you have a lot of virion particles in you, that's what it means when you say viral load,
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that means you're going to be very infectious. The more you have, the more infectious you are.
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And this test is basically very good at detecting when you're very infectious.
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Why don't we have rapid at home tests? You said there's a bit of confusion. FDA is involved.
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You've talked about, you continue to talk about that these at home tests are classified as,
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I guess, medical devices. And so because of that, FDA is looking at them differently
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than they probably should be looked at. So what's the problem here? Can you sort of explain
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what does it mean to be a medical device? Why is that an issue? Where is the FDA messing up?
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So when we declare something as a medical device and we evaluate as a medical device,
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then it makes sense that the comparison, if you're trying to get a new one onto the market,
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that the comparison would be against a gold standard medical device for that purpose.
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So PCR is currently the gold standard, or at least in the eyes of the FDA,
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the PCR test is the gold standard medical device. And that's because it's so sensitive.
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As a physician, I have one patient in front of me at a time. And that patient comes to me and I
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don't have to care about the 99.9999% of people in the world who are not in front of me. I only
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care about that one patient. And so when I get a sample from that patient and that patient's saying,
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Doc, I don't feel well. I haven't been feeling well for the last few weeks. Do you think this
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is COVID? Well, for that question, I want to have the absolute best sensitivity test,
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regardless of what it means for transmissibility, because my patient isn't sitting in my office
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saying, Doc, do you think I'm infectious? They're saying, Doc, do you think I have recently been or
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am infected? And these are totally different things. One is medicine. And if the patient's
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infected, the time isn't of the essence because they're sitting there in my office. I can say,
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look, I'm sorry you're not feeling well. Let's get a PCR test on you. We'll be able to tell
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you if you have any evidence that there has been recently an infection inside of you.
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And you'll get the results in a couple of days. And it might be expensive. And so insurance is
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going to pay for it. And you're just one person. And so I don't really care how many resources it
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takes to get you this answer. On the other hand, there's public health testing. And public health
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testing has to account for all of the people you're not seeing as well as the person you're
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testing at the moment. So accessibility becomes a central theme. Frequency of tests, it has to
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account for all the days that you're not sitting there in front of your doctor's office getting a
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test as well as the one you are. So it has to say how frequently. What if you're infected tomorrow,
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but you're at the doctor's office today getting a negative COVID test? That PCR test at the doctor's
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office today is going to do nothing to let you know that you get exposed and infected tomorrow.
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The only way to know that is to be testing yourself frequently.
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And the reason it matters is that these tests can be accessible if we are okay with saying
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the real purpose of a public health test is to answer the question, am I infectious?
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The reason we want to answer that is if you're infectious, that's when you isolate. We actually
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don't want to isolate PCR positive individuals who are no longer infectious. That's bad public
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health practice. If I haven't been infectious for three weeks, I don't want to have somebody tell
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me that I need to go and isolate for 10 days just because I happen to use a PCR test today,
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three weeks after I was infectious. And furthermore, I definitely don't want the public
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health agency to come and round up all the people I was with last night and say, you guys have to
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quarantine for 14 days because you were with Michael who wasn't infectious yesterday.
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It's nonsensical to do that. And it's a huge disincentive to actually get tested. That's
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exactly right. Huge disincentive to get tested. People, if it's too sensitive, especially with
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flights, things like that, we shouldn't be stopping people from taking a flight if they haven't been
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infectious for 60 days. And to be clear, people are only infectious for somewhere between three
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and seven days, but can be positive on a PCR test for 30 to 70 days. So, I mean, it's potentially
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a tenfold difference in terms of how long you're PCR positive versus how long you're infectious.
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So, we don't want to be taking people during those 30 to 70 days and saying you need to isolate just
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because you go and get a swab, or you can't go on your trip just because you had COVID last month.
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That's not good use of a test. So, the reason we don't have these tools right now is because
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when we evaluate a rapid test as a medical device, the FDA says, well, this has to achieve
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the properties that we expect from a medical device, which again, doesn't have to take time
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into account, doesn't really have to take cost or resources or scalability or access into account.
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It only takes sensitivity and specificity to catch molecules. And so, just by definition, I mean, it
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is a mathematical fact, you know, that if you have a perfect public health test for COVID, which means
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that it would be 100% sensitive and 100% specific for contagious people or for the infectious stage
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of an infection, then it literally can't, it is an impossibility for that test to achieve an 80%
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sensitivity at a population level against a medical device, which is what the FDA asks for.
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And that's because you're only infectious for maybe 20%. So, theoretically, it should only have
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a 20% sensitivity against the PCR while still being a perfect medical, a perfect public health
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test. And the test is answering the question, am I infectious? That's what you're testing for,
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not for the exact counting of the virion particles in your system. That's exactly right. Okay. So,
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why are we still here? So, have you had conversations with folks? You said that there's a
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bunch of leaders that are kind of starting to wake up to this idea, but why is this taking this so
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long? Why don't we still have hundreds of millions of at home tests? The reason it's taking long,
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the reason it's taking long, I think, is because every agency and government is generally deferential
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to the FDA. And in this context, I would argue that government hasn't been particularly creative.
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So, for example, last year, when Trump was still president, I would, or in the transition,
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and I recall talking to the White House a number of times and saying,
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here's a plan to give us our lives back. I think that was actually the title of the Atlantic
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article. And this plan can stop shutdowns, it can stop outbreaks, it can allow society to keep
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running and could have prevented the outbreaks of last winter and fall and saved hundreds of
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thousands of lives. So, when I bring that to the White House or to the government, the federal
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government, whoever it might be, and I say, here's a plan, this would work. They say, what I get back
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is, this sounds really interesting, Michael. It looks like it checks out. But there's one problem,
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we don't have the test, there's no scale. And that's kind of where it all dropped. It's like
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this defeatist attitude of like, don't have the test, so we can't act on it. But now it's really
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changing. Well, and so that's really where things have been. And so nobody's paid attention. It's
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always been this like esoteric thing that, yeah, maybe one day we'll get around to it, but really
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it's not that important. And the pandemic's going away. But this was like 100% predictable, everything
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that's happening today. We predicted it last year. It's not, this isn't like rocket science or
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anything. The variants and all those kinds of things. So the FDA, we can start to understand
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why, but also like one question I want to ask, is it possible to go around the FDA?
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Yeah. So why has the FDA not changed? And why has nobody tried to push the FDA to change?
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I think what the real reason is the FDA has one job around these tests and it is to authorize
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them as medical devices. They haven't been charged with doing anything else. So in their eyes,
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they're doing exactly what they're supposed to do. They're evaluating these tests as medical
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devices and they're telling company after company after company, sorry, you don't make the cut.
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And the only way to make the cut is really to kind of skew your clinical trials to favor
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the rapid test being positive, which isn't really good practice. We shouldn't be trying to
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skew clinical trials. But that's kind of what's happened. It's been forced upon the companies to
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do that. And so I think the FDA truly believes from the bottom of their heart that they are
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doing the right thing here. And I would argue that to an extent they are. I've been pretty
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hard on the FDA, but maybe the issue is a higher level issue. Like the in vitro diagnostics
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division is they get applications and they evaluate them and the applications are for
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medical claims. That's however, because there's been a misunderstanding of these tests and
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the companies only know to apply for these as medical claims because there's nothing else in
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this country to apply for except the medical claim. So we don't have a public health pathway
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to evaluate a test and authorize a test. It doesn't exist. We have defunded and devalued
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public health for so long that we literally don't have a language for it. We don't have laws,
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a language, words. Is it called a public health test? Is it called something else?
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I call it a public health test because I'm trying to create a new definition here,
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but that's why nobody's acted because everyone says, well, there's no other pathway. So the FDA
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in vitro medical diagnostics division is the only pathway. So what I am trying to do is to say, look,
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the FDA very clearly states that they do not authorize or review public health tools
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and they don't authorize or review public health tests for COVID. So what I want the president of
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the United States to do is to utilize executive powers and take an executive action that can
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simply state like one line. One line could potentially change all of this. And it's a pretty
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obvious and simple line. And it is that any tools used for public health testing during this public
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health emergency will be designated as public health tools. Like it's obvious, like it's public
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health emergency. It's a tool used for public health that should be designated as a public health
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tool. If we can do that, if we can get that language out there so that that's the president's
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decision, then all of a sudden the FDA is off the hook. They're not trying to cram a square peg
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through a round hole. They can say, look, the antigen tests are not on us anymore. At least if
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they're going to be used for public health, like when you test a thousand people at a time or test
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a school classroom if they've been exposed, this is public health. And so then the CDC could take
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it over. The CDC could say, okay, what are the metrics we are interested in? And they could say,
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00:23:30.080
we're interested in a test that can catch you if you're infectious. So you want high viral load
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00:23:34.160
detection. That's fast, that's scalable. And hey, if your test has been used in Europe for months
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00:23:40.880
and has performed extremely well, then we'll give you a certificate by right immediately. And that
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00:23:47.920
could actually get hundreds of millions of additional tests into the United States tomorrow.
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00:23:54.480
So you need some kind of classification from an FDA or from somebody to call it a public health
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00:23:59.200
tool in order for it to be manufactured. Is it possible to just go around all of this and just
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00:24:04.400
for somebody to manufacture at scale tests? Well, if you did that and you just called them,
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00:24:11.920
you put a claim on them that called them public health tools, the FDA has a very
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00:24:19.120
weird view of this and they will tell you that it's illegal, that it's a crime.
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00:24:24.800
Is there a way to say like Elon Musk did with the flamethrower, it's not a flamethrower?
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00:24:29.520
Yeah. Believe me, I've tried to think of all the different approaches. There's major
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00:24:38.480
inconsistencies here. So it's not like we don't have a precedent for a public health test even
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00:24:42.720
during this pandemic. There is a very strong precedent. Pooled testing, we have companies
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00:24:50.000
like Ginkgo based out here in Cambridge that are working with 100 different labs around the country.
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00:24:57.920
So that might mean like not a ton of quality control over those labs. I don't want to say
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00:25:04.480
that they don't, I'm just saying the reality is if you're working with that many labs,
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00:25:07.840
it's hard to say, they're running pooled testing of millions and millions and millions of kids.
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00:25:15.040
So here you have a company that's testing in each pool five to 25 kids at a time,
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00:25:22.880
millions of kids in a pretty distributed way across the country in all these different labs
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00:25:28.480
and the FDA doesn't care at all. You don't need an EUA. It doesn't need a regulatory authority.
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00:25:33.520
It's collection on site. It's getting shipped to a lab. There's no oversight of it. So why does
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00:25:40.720
that have no oversight but a rapid test for the exact same purpose? You're just giving people
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00:25:47.280
immediate results instead of two day delayed pooled PCR results. So it's a much more effective tool.
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00:25:53.680
Why is the rapid test used for the same purpose, not designated as a public health tool, but
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00:25:58.960
requiring FDA authorization? It's a ridiculous reason and it's because the FDA says that if
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00:26:07.520
a test, and this is actually CMS that says this and the FDA adopts it, if a test alters your
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00:26:17.120
behavior, if you get a single result and it's going to alter your behavior, then that is a
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00:26:22.400
medical device. But the thing that I find ridiculous is like, okay, but you can give a
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00:26:29.520
pooled test that alters 25 people's behavior at once and that's not falling, like that's more
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00:26:35.680
risky. One person turns positive in the pool and 25 people have to be quarantined.
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00:26:42.720
And how do they evaluate the accuracy? So for people who don't know, pooled test
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00:26:47.040
is you're testing a small fraction of the people. And if one of them is positive,
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00:26:54.240
then you basically say, we have to retest everybody in the pool.
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00:26:57.680
Yeah. So you take, let's say you have a school and each classroom you might have 20 kids each swab
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00:27:03.760
their nose in a classroom and all those swabs go into a single tube. And then you rinse that tube
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00:27:09.440
out with some saline and you run a PCR test on that tube of 25 samples, 20 samples. And so if
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00:27:16.240
that tube turns positive in the PCR test, then all 20 or 25 of those students are now having
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00:27:23.840
to quarantine. And if there's no positive, then all 20 or 25 students are interpreting that their
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00:27:31.280
result is negative. So it really is ridiculous decision by the FDA to say that if the test itself
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00:27:40.080
only tests one sample at a time, it's medicine because it will tell you one person at a time,
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00:27:44.960
if you're positive or if you're negative. But if you do it as a pool and you tell 25 people that
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00:27:51.600
your pool was negative, then that's somehow different. That's public health, not medicine.
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00:27:58.240
There's no logic there. Was it just personalities and
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00:28:00.880
accidents of history or something like that? For example, you talk about the public health
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00:28:06.240
tools and CDC, you look at masks. So masks were decided to somehow be an effective tool
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00:28:12.880
to help with the pandemic. So I'm sure the evidence that was used there was probably not
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00:28:20.080
as strong as the evidence supporting antigen rapid tests. I was very much reading a lot of research
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00:28:26.000
on masks. It's tricky. It's really tricky to show how well they stop the transmission of a virus,
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00:28:31.920
especially when you don't fully understand how the virus is transmitted or the viral load required,
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00:28:36.720
all that kind of stuff. But then the CDC pretty quickly decided masks or whatever,
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00:28:41.440
there's some oscillations back and forth, but then they quickly decided, everybody decided
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00:28:47.360
masks is a good tool. So masks being decided a good tool and then rapid antigen tests,
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00:28:53.760
not a good tool. Is that just like certain personalities who didn't speak up in a meeting
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00:28:58.880
or who did speak up in a meeting? Is this just like a weird roll of the dice or is there a
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00:29:03.120
better explanation? I think it's somewhat of a roll of the dice, but I also think it's that testing.
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00:29:09.760
So doctors don't pretend to really understand much about fluid dynamics and how well masks are
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00:29:20.960
working. That's way out of their realm. Doctors do believe that they understand all aspects of
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00:29:28.400
the tests. And so the greatest barriers to rapid tests being brought to market or being rolled out
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00:29:39.680
heavily and supported as public health tools, the greatest barriers came from physicians saying,
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00:29:47.600
hell no, we can't use a test that's not as sensitive as a PCR.
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00:29:51.120
And look at what happens if you use this antigen test and not a PCR test. You get people who are
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00:29:58.800
showing a positive on a PCR and negative on an antigen. And they just assume that that was a
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00:30:05.520
false negative on the antigen. For public health, I would call it a false positive on the PCR test.
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00:30:12.000
But this type of thinking literally does not exist in medicine. And I think the biggest problem here
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00:30:18.960
is that we placed physicians in decision making power. When this pandemic hit, everyone called up
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00:30:28.320
clinical laboratory folks and microbiologists and physicians to ask, well, what kind of test should
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00:30:34.640
we use, that kind of thing. And there is no training in medical school for this kind of
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00:30:40.960
public health work. You have to optimize on the right qualities of a test that have nothing to
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00:30:47.760
do with medicine. And then sometimes, if not frequently, they're actually at odds. And I'll
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00:30:54.000
give an example why the physicians, you could see why the physicians would have been against it from
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00:30:59.440
their perspective. And they say, if a physician is a TSA agent at the airport, you know, a TSA agent,
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00:31:08.720
their role at any given time, and the role they think that the instruments need to play is I want
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00:31:14.720
you to scan the bag as well as possible. This is the only bag that I'm interested in at the moment.
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00:31:20.640
And this is my lane, this is my bag. I want to make sure that my instrument's doing, I don't want
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00:31:26.560
the crappy instrument in my lane, I want to make sure that I'm doing everything I can. But what
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00:31:32.000
those TSA agents don't have to worry about is, well, how many other instruments are there in this
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00:31:36.720
airport? Is anyone getting through the lines here without going through security? The average TSA
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00:31:42.000
agent doesn't have to worry about that. They literally have one job to do, and it's pay
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00:31:45.600
attention to this lane. If there's a big gap in the security line and people are flowing through
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00:31:52.160
without going through security, that's not on the TSA agent. That's not a big systematic problem of
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00:31:56.800
that of the system. And we can't expect that TSA agent to have ever even thought about that. Like,
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00:32:04.480
that's not on them. They were trained to look at the bag. And that's kind of like physicians.
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00:32:09.760
That's kind of like physicians. And probably some physicians will hear this and feel like I'm
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00:32:15.280
insulting it. I don't mean to be likening the two professions or anything like that. But the point
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00:32:20.560
is that a physician has one duty. Do no harm to this patient. Time is an of the essence. Scale,
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00:32:28.960
how many tests can my hospital perform in a day? How many tests can my county or country perform
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00:32:35.440
in a day? That's not a physician's training to think like that at all. And so what has happened
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00:32:42.720
is doctors got on board early and said, oh, hell no. We've seen these antigen tests before. They're
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00:32:47.680
not particularly sensitive compared to PCR. And early in the pandemic, there was like pissing
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00:32:52.560
matches between labs who had the most sensitive PCR. And it just distracted everything. I was
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00:33:00.720
trying to say pretty early, like, we don't need sensitivity. We just need frequency. We just need
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00:33:06.560
scale. We need to think differently because our only goal if we're doing frequent routine testing
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00:33:12.000
of asymptomatic people is not medicine. It's to say, do you need to isolate now? And if you have
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00:33:17.360
a PCR test that's taking three days to return and you're like, if I was currently spreading virus
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00:33:23.200
before I walked in here and you handed me, this actually happened to me today when I walked into
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00:33:27.920
Harvard. Today was my first day back into Harvard since February of 2020. I go in, I scan my badge
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00:33:35.040
and they hand me a PCR tube and they say like, return this by noon or something before your work
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00:33:42.560
day is done. And I'm looking at it. I'm like, what is this going to do? Like, what if I'm super
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00:33:48.480
spreader right now? You're giving me free reign to walk around and infect everyone in the school
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00:33:52.960
and you're going to give me my result to tell me I did that in two days from now? It doesn't really
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00:33:58.960
make sense. So who is supposed to be, so it's understandable that doctors kind of feel that way,
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00:34:04.720
just like you said, do no harm. Who's supposed to care about public health? Is it the FDA? Is there
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00:34:12.960
some other organization yet to be created? Is it like, just like with the military, the reason we
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00:34:19.040
have civilian leadership when you talk about war, is it the president that's supposed to do like
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00:34:25.520
override FDA, override doctors, override and basically politicians in representing the people
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00:34:32.080
in the state of emergency make big public health decisions? Like who is supposed to do it? Besides
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00:34:37.920
you on Twitter. It's like most people really thinking about solutions to COVID will mention
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00:34:45.360
you or will mention this idea of rapid at home testing. And it's, you watch that happening,
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00:34:53.440
this discussion that this is an obvious part of the solution and the solution is not happening.
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00:34:57.920
So who is supposed to implement this idea? I think the CDC that it should start there.
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00:35:04.080
Override the FDA? Well, I don't even think it needs to override it. And that's why I think
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00:35:08.880
these should just be designated as a different tool so that the company is, it's not overriding.
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00:35:14.400
It's just saying, look, this isn't even, this isn't in your jurisdiction to the FDA. This is
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00:35:19.200
just a public health tool. But the problem is the centers for Medicaid, Medicare services
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00:35:25.280
designates any tool, just like FDA, they designate these as medical devices purely because they could
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00:35:31.200
change somebody's behavior based on the result of one test. So to change that at this point,
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00:35:37.360
unless you can get CMS buy in, you know, we don't have, there is no designation as a public health
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00:35:42.320
tool, but the president can just say, these are public health tools. These are not to be
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00:35:50.960
regulated as medical devices if their goal is not medicine, but public health.
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00:35:55.520
And if he does it, he does have the authority to do that as president and to say, I'm tasking the CDC
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00:36:03.440
to certify these tests or, or authorize them for use in the United States. And, you know,
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00:36:08.880
he has to say something like that. He can't come out and say, these are public health tools, have
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00:36:14.080
free reign, just, you know, any company start, start shipping them in the US because that would
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00:36:19.200
create pandemonium and we'd have a lot of bad tests. But there's a lot of really good tests
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00:36:25.120
out there. We just are taking like six to 12 months to run trials. They're failing because
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00:36:30.960
they can't keep up with PCR. And if the president were to do this, then the CDC could take it over
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00:36:37.920
and they could say, okay, it's on us. We're going to decide. The UK actually did this. They,
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00:36:44.320
early on, they said, okay, they laid out a very clear regimen. They said, this is how we are going
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00:36:49.680
to evaluate rapid antigen tests because they're public health tools. They did it in a, in a domain
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00:36:56.080
that was outside of their normal medical diagnostic regulatory agencies. And they, they literally just
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00:37:02.000
had a very fast screening to say, what are the best tests? They went through a huge number of
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00:37:08.720
different tests and they said, okay, these are the, this is the rank order of which tests are good,
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00:37:12.480
which are bad, which are scalable, which are not. And they were able to start deploying them in
link |
00:37:18.320
weeks, not years. So I think the CDC really needs to take charge. The problem is when it comes to
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00:37:24.080
like law, if everyone currently perceives this as like fully within the domain of the FDA and they've
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00:37:31.440
never heard of such enough public health test idea enabling, but the, but the FDA itself has created
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00:37:39.040
the idea by saying we don't regulate public health tools. So the word is out there. The FDA has said,
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00:37:45.360
we don't regulate them. So that gives the president an opportunity to say, okay, these are
link |
00:37:51.200
those, you know, these are public health tools by definition. And, and I do think that this is a kind
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00:37:57.440
of a crisis and it's a crisis of testing, but it's also a crisis of like, really, we're going to go
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00:38:02.480
through this whole pandemic and never figure this thing out. That's just really sad. You know, if we
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00:38:08.080
get through this and don't figure out how to evaluate a rapid test. So how do vaccines
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00:38:15.200
play with this? So one of the things that when people discuss solutions to COVID, there's a
link |
00:38:22.000
sense that once you have a vaccine COVID is solved. So how does that interplay? Like, why do we still
link |
00:38:29.680
need tests if we have vaccines? Yeah, I actually wrote an op ed in New York times or Wall Street
link |
00:38:36.880
Journal or something that was titled why we still need rapid tests with vaccines. And the real reason
link |
00:38:44.880
is because we have evaluated our vaccines based on their ability to stop disease. In fact, most of
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00:38:51.520
the trials didn't evaluate them based on their ability to stop transmission. They didn't even
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00:38:57.120
evaluate that at all, no less put it as one of the metrics for authorization. And with a virus like
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00:39:04.960
this, it would be a bit naive to think that it's really going to stop transmission well.
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00:39:12.240
I think a lot of excitement happened right after the first clinical trials. And I'm sure we were
link |
00:39:17.120
talking about it when I was last here, I would imagine given the timing. But those first clinical
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00:39:22.000
trials came out and everyone jumped for joy that these things were going to be the end to this
link |
00:39:27.440
pandemic. But we had really short sighted vision there by not recognizing two main features. One is
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00:39:35.680
that they might not stop transmission. Another, I guess three, another is that new variants might
link |
00:39:41.600
come around that will break through the vaccine protective immunity. And the third is that we were
link |
00:39:48.640
measuring the efficacy of these vaccines during the peak of their performance in the first few
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00:39:54.160
months after people got vaccinated. And that gives a skewed view of just how effective these are going
link |
00:39:59.200
to be long term. So what happened with the vaccines is that everyone got very comfortable,
link |
00:40:05.600
including the CDC saying, if you've been vaccinated, this is the end of the pandemic for
link |
00:40:10.880
you. And let's keep it up. But then Delta comes along and waning immunity comes along. And both
link |
00:40:17.280
of these things compound exactly as anticipated to get breakthrough cases. And unfortunately,
link |
00:40:24.880
what we're seeing now is the CDC and the administration went so all in on saying that
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00:40:30.720
breakthrough cases are rare, that transmission doesn't really happen if you're vaccinated
link |
00:40:35.360
without great data, especially with Delta, that once people started seeing breakthrough cases,
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00:40:41.600
they started interpreting that as a failure of the vaccine. The vaccines are still working to
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00:40:46.560
keep people out of the hospital for the most part, but they're not working to stop transmission.
link |
00:40:53.360
And if our goal is to stop transmission, which until we decide as a society that we have different
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00:41:00.560
goals, like we're okay with people getting ill and letting transmission go because we don't want
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00:41:06.560
to worry about it anymore. We're not there yet. So until we decide that we're not going to stop
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00:41:10.880
transmission, we need other avenues besides the vaccine because it's not doing it. It also means
link |
00:41:16.960
that herd immunity isn't going to happen. And unfortunately, as long as we keep letting spread
link |
00:41:21.840
happen in the context of vaccinated people, we're kind of giving this virus a bootcamp
link |
00:41:27.520
of exactly what it needs to do and mutate to get around our vaccine derived antibodies.
link |
00:41:33.840
And that makes me very nervous. So the more we can do to stop spread
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00:41:38.240
in the unvaccinated, in the elderly vaccinated, and in other people,
link |
00:41:43.200
the better. We just should be focusing on that. So in your eyes, the solution would look like this.
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00:41:49.360
You would make enough tests where every single person will get tested every single day?
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00:41:53.600
I think that that would be... I don't want to do that actually. I want to do a variation on that.
link |
00:42:00.240
I think what we should do is have a dynamical testing program. It doesn't have to be
link |
00:42:06.880
complicated. Every household has a box of tests in their cupboard. And if you haven't seen any
link |
00:42:14.080
cases in your community for a long time, stop testing. Do wastewater testing to see if there's
link |
00:42:19.680
any RNA coming back. If you start to see RNA in the wastewater that represents the virus,
link |
00:42:25.360
and you're still wanting to stop outbreaks, you say, hey, you know those tests that are in your
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00:42:30.160
cupboards, households in this county, why doesn't each household or each person in each household
link |
00:42:35.360
use one test per week? Can you start to just pause on that idea? That's really cool, the wastewater
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00:42:44.160
testing. That's the thing? So you can get a sense of how prevalent the virus is in a particular
link |
00:42:49.920
community by testing the wastewater? That's exactly right. And so the viral load associated,
link |
00:42:56.160
the viral load that you can find in the community represents the prevalence of the virus in the
link |
00:43:02.400
community, which is really quite nice. That's a nice way to paint like a map of the intensity
link |
00:43:08.800
of the virus. Okay, so when it goes above a certain level, you can start doing much higher
link |
00:43:17.600
frequency testing in each household. That's right. So I don't want people to be in testing purgatory,
link |
00:43:23.680
like that's not what I want. I just want us to get through this damn pandemic. And so we can
link |
00:43:29.280
monitor the wastewater or any other methods. We can monitor the hospitals and the clinics. And
link |
00:43:34.880
if somebody does come in with COVID like symptoms, and then a few other people come in,
link |
00:43:38.320
you realize, okay, we got spread happening in our community. Send out a text message,
link |
00:43:43.120
put it on the news, put in the newspaper, whatever you need to do, tell people, tell families,
link |
00:43:48.080
use your test. And if the cases get worse, because you're just doing it once a week,
link |
00:43:53.120
that's not going to stop transmission, but it's going to enable you to identify where outbreaks
link |
00:43:58.320
are happening. If you start to find outbreaks in pockets, then the rule is simply, okay,
link |
00:44:03.840
let's squash the outbreak real fast. So everyone in that area in certain zip code or whatever it
link |
00:44:08.400
might be, test every two days for seven days or every day for seven days, and you'll get rid of
link |
00:44:15.440
the outbreak. We can do that. And if you've now gone, again, a week or two with no cases
link |
00:44:23.120
identified, stop the testing again. That's the nice thing that everything changes when people
link |
00:44:28.960
have the tests in their home. It becomes dynamic. It can become easy. You send a text message,
link |
00:44:35.120
take your test today. If some people don't do it, that's fine. The only goal is to get R below one,
link |
00:44:41.280
and you stop the outbreak. People think it has to be near perfect. I always hear people say,
link |
00:44:48.080
oh, what if somebody doesn't use it? Or what if somebody lies? Well, you have 98% of people
link |
00:44:54.240
testing or even 50%. That's a whole lot better. And another big difference that people, I think,
link |
00:45:00.160
oftentimes have a problem wrapping their head around, especially to an extent physicians who
link |
00:45:07.360
are used to different kinds of metrics, is that all we have to do to completely stop an outbreak
link |
00:45:14.720
from spreading in a community is to get, for every 100 infected people, to get them to go on
link |
00:45:21.840
and infect 95. Most people would say, oh my God, that's a horrible program. You're still letting
link |
00:45:29.200
100 people go and infect 95 people. But for a virus like this, that's a massive public health
link |
00:45:36.400
win. If you can get 100 people to infect 90, most people, doctors, I would say, like a lot of people
link |
00:45:42.080
would say, that sounds like a failure, to be honest. But if you do that for multiple days in
link |
00:45:47.360
a row, then in a couple of weeks, you've gone from a big outbreak to a very, very small outbreak.
link |
00:45:53.360
And on the other hand, if you don't do that, if you allow 100 people to just infect 140 people,
link |
00:45:59.200
because you're not doing the testing, then instead of having 20 people at the end of
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00:46:03.680
those four weeks with the testing, you literally would have 600. Massive differences here.
link |
00:46:10.960
The only goal then is to get R below one, have 100 people infect less than 100, and you stop the
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00:46:16.080
outbreaks and everyone stays safe. From everything you've seen, how cheap can these things get?
link |
00:46:21.040
From like in the past year, in terms of the developments you've seen with the various test
link |
00:46:26.080
manufacturers, how cheap can it be to make a test, to manufacture a test? So there's the
link |
00:46:32.320
manufacturing process that could be 50 cents, maybe less. It's hard to really have eyeballs
link |
00:46:38.880
inside these companies in terms of where they're producing them in China and Taiwan, a number of
link |
00:46:43.600
other places. Some of them are produced here in the United States too, but 50 cents, say,
link |
00:46:49.360
was a very, very reasonable, generous number for how much it costs per test.
link |
00:46:54.800
You look at a place with high market competition that has actually authorized a lot of these tests
link |
00:46:59.280
like Germany. Germany has 60, 70 some odd different companies of high quality rapid tests
link |
00:47:04.640
authorized. You can go there and buy it for 80 cents, and they're still making a profit.
link |
00:47:10.080
And so it's extremely cheap. Market competition can drive these tests way down in terms of cost.
link |
00:47:19.040
I think one of the most important features of a rapid test program is what do you do with the
link |
00:47:25.680
result? Is it going to be used for you to gain entry to school or work? Is it going to be reported
link |
00:47:33.280
to the public health agencies? All of these, the primary mode should be just get people tests,
link |
00:47:38.880
but really if you're going to be using it for a workplace thing, like what Biden is now saying,
link |
00:47:42.560
vaccinate or test, which is going to lead to a crisis if we don't fix this soon because we're
link |
00:47:46.960
going to have massive demand for testing in the next couple of weeks. But when he says that,
link |
00:47:52.160
that's essentially saying, okay, companies need to make sure that their people are testing.
link |
00:47:56.880
So are you going to base it on the honor system? I would say you probably would not base
link |
00:48:02.960
testing on the honor system if it's like to take somebody who would otherwise be quarantined from
link |
00:48:08.800
work in school. And so you can go to school as long as your test is negative. So test to stay
link |
00:48:13.360
program is a big thing that I've been pushing for and others have. Businesses bringing people into
link |
00:48:19.040
work who need to test, they need to have verification, but they don't want to set up
link |
00:48:24.960
nursing stations in their lobbies or in the school parking lot or whatever. Everyone's tired of that.
link |
00:48:30.080
We need to bring the tests into the home, but that means we need the technology to enable it.
link |
00:48:34.800
And so I was at a conference recently. Do you know Mike Milken? Milken Institute. He's a very
link |
00:48:42.240
wealthy billionaire, but he's done a lot of philanthropy and he has a conference to raise
link |
00:48:46.720
money for prostate cancer research. I was at this conference recently, Francis Collins,
link |
00:48:52.480
a number of other people were there. And every morning we all had to test in the morning,
link |
00:48:58.640
which I thought was a great idea obviously before we walked into that conference. But you didn't
link |
00:49:05.040
have to test there and they didn't base it on the honor system. Every morning I scanned a QR code on
link |
00:49:11.200
the box and eMed, which is a service that provides test verification, popped up with a proctor right
link |
00:49:19.200
on my phone or on my computer and said, okay, let's go through your tests. And they watch you,
link |
00:49:25.440
they videotape you using the test. So it's all recorded. It's all a reportable type of test.
link |
00:49:30.960
And at the end of it, just from your home, you don't actually see the proctor,
link |
00:49:35.440
you know, but they're just verifying that you actually do it. They verify the test,
link |
00:49:39.520
they verify the test results with you. And at the end of it, you've then gotten
link |
00:49:45.360
from your couch or from your car, wherever you are, an actual verified laboratory report that
link |
00:49:51.200
can be considered proof that you yourself use the test and you yourself got a negative.
link |
00:49:56.640
So the tools are out here if we want to use them at scale. And in fact, the CDC uses eMed now to
link |
00:50:03.840
enable people to come back into the United States through an antigen test. So before you get on your
link |
00:50:08.880
flight, you're sitting in the airport in Heathrow or wherever you are, you can get on your computer,
link |
00:50:13.920
use your eMed test, and you get the negative and CDC will accept that, TSA will accept you to come
link |
00:50:19.760
back into the US with a rapid antigen test that you did without anyone else watching,
link |
00:50:24.240
except for this proctor on your phone. Super simple.
link |
00:50:27.840
How much private information is being collected? So like this, you know, people have in the United
link |
00:50:33.760
States, the American way, they have a hesitancy on the overreach of government in things like
link |
00:50:41.120
vaccine passports, like using any mechanism of verification that's controlled by government
link |
00:50:50.720
can lead to overreach by said government. So there's a concern of that. Do you see there a way
link |
00:50:58.160
of achieving testing that's verified but does not violate people's privacy or sense of freedom?
link |
00:51:06.000
Absolutely. I think so. The way that right now in the United States, they're requesting that
link |
00:51:13.760
these tests get, that the results get delivered to public health agencies. But I've long held that
link |
00:51:20.560
while that's ideal, it should never be the thing that holds up somebody being allowed to know their
link |
00:51:25.520
own status. But if you are going to work and you have to let your boss or your manager, whomever,
link |
00:51:32.960
know that you were negative that day, or if you're going to school, I think it's going to be hard to
link |
00:51:38.000
maintain complete privacy in that situation because they need to know your name. But sure, I mean,
link |
00:51:46.080
could you cut off the public health reporting? Yes, you could. But I worry, I mean, can you opt
link |
00:51:51.920
out? Maybe you could opt out. That should be a feature. I want to opt out of the public health
link |
00:51:56.560
reporting because for whatever reason, otherwise I'm not going to do the test. But that means that,
link |
00:52:03.520
okay, then you're not going to go to work. So right now there's this serious tension and
link |
00:52:08.000
I am very uncomfortable with the idea that we force anyone to do anything. But there is a tension
link |
00:52:14.960
between these two things for sure. And how do you balance that during a public health emergency?
link |
00:52:21.200
I think first and foremost, let people, everyone has a right to know their status.
link |
00:52:25.520
Right. The fact that we have made it hard for people
link |
00:52:28.720
to know their status on their terms, I think is a travesty. I mean, it's just so
link |
00:52:34.400
terrible that we have prioritized us knowing at the expense of you. Essentially what public health
link |
00:52:42.640
has long said during this pandemic is, if I'm public health, if I can't know, then you can't
link |
00:52:48.160
know your status. That's not the right way to look at public health. We need to engage the public.
link |
00:52:54.240
And if some of them don't want to participate in the public health part, but want to know
link |
00:52:58.240
their status, by default, they are participating in public health, whether they know it or not,
link |
00:53:03.200
because they're not going to go get their mom sick by mistake. At least most people wouldn't.
link |
00:53:07.520
And then also you can create systems where you can, individuals can form
link |
00:53:14.720
relationships based on their status without ever reporting it to a centralized place.
link |
00:53:21.280
So you can go to, I don't know, a local business owner might require that you show
link |
00:53:28.560
that you're negative, but that doesn't require reporting it. You can, like there might be
link |
00:53:35.280
basically like an ID that's only in possession, you are the only person in possession of that.
link |
00:53:42.160
So you literally show it, here's a test I took, it's negative and nobody else knows about that test.
link |
00:53:48.080
So that could very well be done, even through a company like eMed. I think, and I might be wrong
link |
00:53:53.840
here, I believe that they take the test result, and because they are considered a CLIA waived
link |
00:54:00.320
laboratory, like a digital laboratory, they report their results by law out to the public health
link |
00:54:07.360
agencies. But let's say there was something a little different. Let's say you were verifying
link |
00:54:11.360
an over the counter test, and it doesn't have to be a CLIA waive because it's over the counter,
link |
00:54:15.520
then you're not bound by CLIA rules. And you could create the same service, but that just doesn't
link |
00:54:21.920
report out to the public health agencies. It gives people the option to opt in or out of public
link |
00:54:27.120
health reporting. And I know that public health people get a little queasy when I talk about this,
link |
00:54:34.880
but as a public health person myself, I guess of course I would prefer that the data be available
link |
00:54:41.040
to evaluate to know where the cases are. But first and foremost, I want to make sure that the people
link |
00:54:45.920
using the test are going to use the test. And if that means that they're not reporting, and if
link |
00:54:52.960
that's the only way that they will use it is if it's not reported, then that's better than no test.
link |
00:54:58.240
Especially given that the central to the vaccine hesitancy is a distrust of authority and the
link |
00:55:05.280
distrust of government. So you're asking people to get tested and report their status
link |
00:55:17.120
to a centralized authority when they clearly do not trust that authority. It doesn't make any
link |
00:55:22.240
sense. It seems like a perfect solution to let people who are hesitant on the vaccine
link |
00:55:28.640
to get their own status and have full control of that information and opt in,
link |
00:55:33.760
provide that information if they wish to, but they have the full control of it and have the
link |
00:55:37.840
freedom to do that information what they want. I fully agree with that. I really do. I think
link |
00:55:43.040
we can have the verified services and we could have the privacy if you want it. If you need to
link |
00:55:48.640
go into a restaurant and there's a rule that you have to be a negative test, have it on your phone
link |
00:55:53.680
and only your phone. And it's okay. Like emails you the lab report, you have it. You can say,
link |
00:55:59.040
look, that's my name. I used it this morning. Negative. And in that case, you'd want something
link |
00:56:04.400
that just is there and is not going anywhere else. And I think that those services, I think they can
link |
00:56:10.560
exist. And it's a struggle because for those companies, they don't want to fall out of favor
link |
00:56:17.120
with the CDC or with the FDA. And so this is a big problem in our marketplace in general by having
link |
00:56:24.400
private companies who want to be the public health agents of this pandemic. We lose a lot of control
link |
00:56:33.680
because the companies ultimately have to do what's going to make them money so they survive and keep
link |
00:56:38.240
performing the service. It's really just such a hard problem. And this is why last time I was here,
link |
00:56:45.040
I'm guessing I was probably really pushing for the government to be producing these tests. I think I
link |
00:56:52.640
would have still been pushing for that. At this point, I've decided, okay, the government's clearly
link |
00:56:56.320
not going to do that. I've been thinking, I really want Elon Musk to produce the tests. I really am
link |
00:57:03.440
sort of serious that these tests are simple to make, but we've been using machines to make them
link |
00:57:09.280
that have been around for a long time. Scale is an issue right now, kind of. Really, it's the EUA
link |
00:57:15.520
process and getting the companies to be allowed to market in the US that's the issue. But let's
link |
00:57:19.680
just say scale is the issue. And one company wants to make 20 million tests a day. These aren't that
link |
00:57:26.240
hard. We should be able to do that. We just need a faster machine, a better machine, and a quicker
link |
00:57:31.360
one. And there's a few folks, like you mentioned, know how to solve that problem. I've had a lot of
link |
00:57:36.000
discussion with Tesla folks and know with people that used to work at Tesla, like Jim Keller,
link |
00:57:41.360
about how to make stuff much cheaper, much better. That's basically what Tesla is world class at.
link |
00:57:46.240
It's like, okay, does this thing have to cost $1,000? No, it can cost $10. And let's figure out
link |
00:57:53.440
how to manufacture it. Those folks are like the best in the world at doing that. Okay, but what
link |
00:58:00.320
about this Biden action plan? So it sounds like the guy agrees with you, vaccinate or test. So
link |
00:58:10.000
I think given that choice, a lot of people go test in America because there's like a division,
link |
00:58:15.920
it seems like. So is this just politics? Is this just words? Or do you think this is actually
link |
00:58:22.400
going to lead to something? And maybe can you explain what the action plan is?
link |
00:58:27.040
Sure. So there's a number of pillars to the action plan. The two that I've been most focused on,
link |
00:58:34.400
I mean, some of them are we want to get everyone vaccinated. We want to get everyone vaccinated.
link |
00:58:37.520
All these things. And one pillar is saying any company in the United States that has
link |
00:58:45.200
more than 100 employees is now required to ensure that any unvaccinated individuals in their workforce
link |
00:58:55.680
test weekly. Another pillar is that the president's going to reduce the cost of PCR tests.
link |
00:59:04.400
By 35%, which is pretty moderate reduction. And is going to reduce the cost of antigen tests
link |
00:59:14.080
and scale them up and make 280 million tests and put $2 billion into it.
link |
00:59:22.400
So those are the two that I found most intriguing for the kind of mission that I've been on, which
link |
00:59:26.320
is to just educate people around, hey, we have really, really powerful products that we can
link |
00:59:31.200
educate people around. Hey, we have really, really powerful public health tools we have yet to deploy.
link |
00:59:39.520
The issue at hand though, is that now that the president has said vaccinate or test,
link |
00:59:47.360
there's a problem inherent in that. It's essentially to coerce people around vaccinated
link |
00:59:52.400
to get vaccinated. Because vaccinate or test doesn't make sense when the vaccinated people
link |
00:59:56.320
can transmit the virus just fine. It should be vaccinate and test.
link |
01:00:00.000
Exactly. The problem that I have with that vaccinate or test idea is it's great if you
link |
01:00:05.440
want to use it as a coercive effort to get people vaccinated. I'm not going to wade into that
link |
01:00:12.160
argument. Do I agree with it or not? I'm just not going to even put my words under.
link |
01:00:17.840
I disagree with it. Let me say, I disagree. As opposed to doing great science communication,
link |
01:00:25.360
this weird, people talking down to the populace as if they're children trying to trick them.
link |
01:00:31.600
Here, have some candy. Everyone with common sense. Somebody told me I was having a conversation.
link |
01:00:40.240
If the government is going to give you money to take the vaccine,
link |
01:00:43.840
people that were already hesitant about the vaccine are not going to trust whatever the
link |
01:00:49.680
heck you're doing. Don't trick people into taking the vaccine. Be honest and communicate
link |
01:00:54.080
transparently everything that's known about the vaccine. Communicate the data. Inspire people with
link |
01:01:04.480
transparency and real communication of all the uncertainty around it and all the difficult
link |
01:01:10.320
decisions of risk and all those kinds of things. As opposed to trying to trick them like children
link |
01:01:16.320
into taking the vaccine anyway. Yes. Okay. Well, I didn't have to say that.
link |
01:01:22.480
So there we go. But you're saying it should not be like vaccinate or test. That tradeoff
link |
01:01:28.880
does not make sense. Exactly. By saying vaccinate or test is absolutely confusing
link |
01:01:35.920
because it implies for anyone who's thinking about it, it is implying. And I've seen this
link |
01:01:40.480
because I have business leaders call me, Fortune 500 business leaders who call me and say,
link |
01:01:44.960
what do I do? I have 8,000 employees. Where am I going to get my tests? And a lot of people are
link |
01:01:50.080
saying, they're calling this a pandemic of the unvaccinated. These types of divisive language
link |
01:01:58.240
doesn't help. This isn't a pandemic of the unvaccinated. This is a pandemic of a fucking
link |
01:02:02.480
virus. Don't ever put it on the unvaccinated who frankly are just scared. They don't know who to
link |
01:02:09.120
trust. And we haven't given them a lot of reason to trust public health, to be frank. So I agree.
link |
01:02:17.440
I mean, now that you've opened the door, I'll just say my piece. Absolutely, we need to be the most
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01:02:22.800
honest we can with all of this. This is confusing language to say vaccinate or test. We need to be
link |
01:02:30.400
very upfront and say, look, vaccines aren't stopping transmission very well. Unfortunately,
link |
01:02:37.840
this is the world we have. We have Delta. We're going to have new mutants. We have a vaccine that
link |
01:02:43.120
wanes somewhat over time. This is biology. I'm sorry. This is just what it is. And then we say,
link |
01:02:50.560
but the vaccines are really protective for your personal health. They're going to keep you out of
link |
01:02:55.280
the hospital. This is what you should care about as an individual. And as a population,
link |
01:03:01.280
we need to figure out, okay, we have to stop transmission if that's our goal.
link |
01:03:05.760
So we should use the tools that are going to stop transmission if that's our goal. And saying
link |
01:03:09.440
vaccinate or test, if our goal is to actually stop transmission, that's confusing because vaccines are
link |
01:03:15.120
not stopping it. There may be mildly lowering the risk of transmission. So I'm just not a fan of that
link |
01:03:22.880
language. I think we should be being very, very clear, like you said, and upfront about what are
link |
01:03:26.880
the limitations of the vaccine and of the test. And we should be very clear that it can only help.
link |
01:03:34.560
The American public in aggregate is extremely intelligent. They will figure out when you say
link |
01:03:41.920
that vaccine breakthrough cases are rare, and then they start seeing story after story of whole
link |
01:03:47.840
parties of people who are vaccinated have outbreaks. And everyone knows more people now
link |
01:03:52.480
who are having breakthrough cases than they knew who had regular cases before the vaccine.
link |
01:03:57.120
People start to wonder, hmm, well, this is weird. They say that the vaccines are working,
link |
01:04:02.160
breakthrough cases are rare. Maybe the whole vaccine program is failing entirely.
link |
01:04:06.240
And so it ends up shooting ourselves in the foot if we try to create false expectations,
link |
01:04:11.680
because we think it's going to be beneficial for one thing when it's not for the other.
link |
01:04:16.720
And so to get back to the action plan, vaccinate or test, I think, and the increase in rapid tests,
link |
01:04:25.920
I do think it was a bold move. I would say that it was the most prominent sort of display,
link |
01:04:33.600
encouraging display of the fact that rapid tests are indeed effective public health tools.
link |
01:04:40.720
My real concern now is that 280 million tests, that's like less than one per person per year
link |
01:04:46.880
in the United States. So that's not the way that he said and delivered it. And what most people
link |
01:04:52.480
think of when they hear the word 280 million, you don't usually put a lot of thought into,
link |
01:04:56.000
what does that number mean? It sounds a big number. Most people are now going to be expecting
link |
01:05:01.040
that these tests are actually going to be staying in stock on the shelves at CVS and Walgreens and
link |
01:05:06.320
Amazon or whatever. So that's crisis number one is like, now the expectation is set for having rapid
link |
01:05:13.120
tests, but they're not going to scale that well. We won't have them. And then there's vaccinate or
link |
01:05:18.160
test. And that's going to bring millions and millions of people who are not currently testing
link |
01:05:23.600
to have to start testing. So that's going to overwhelm our PCR labs. And it's going to create
link |
01:05:28.400
five day delays again with PCR, if not longer, because we'll have backlogs. And so the only real
link |
01:05:34.800
solution to this is to just scale up the tests that are actually scalable. And that's the simple
link |
01:05:39.920
rapid tests. And it's not even to scale them up through production and manufacturing here.
link |
01:05:44.560
It's to open the doors so that the companies that already exist here and can scale are allowed to do
link |
01:05:50.240
it and to bring in the international market. Some of the biggest diagnostic companies in the world
link |
01:05:56.160
are not selling their millions and millions and millions of tests in the billions of tests in the
link |
01:06:00.640
United States because they don't want to play the game that the FDA is currently requiring of them.
link |
01:06:07.840
So we have an opportunity and I am very encouraged that the president actually did put these into the
link |
01:06:12.640
action plan. And I do want to say for the record that I'm supportive of it in principle. But I
link |
01:06:18.880
think now we actually are in the time where it has been set and we have to deal with the crisis before
link |
01:06:25.840
it happens. Otherwise, there could be some real political points taken off. I do worry that the
link |
01:06:32.160
president, if he doesn't pull through with this and really make the tests available and we end
link |
01:06:36.080
up getting into this other test crisis this fall, there could be political consequences to that.
link |
01:06:41.360
And the reason is these rapid tests are so personal, they become emotional almost.
link |
01:06:46.480
They give people that empowerment that I was talking about earlier. And when people can't get
link |
01:06:51.360
that because the shelves are out of stock, they actually feel frustrated and then that converts
link |
01:06:57.360
into anger and blame. And so I do think that we have to be really smart about making a policy
link |
01:07:04.560
like this and then ensuring that we can carry through with what the average American is actually
link |
01:07:09.600
expecting. And speaking of politics, one of the great things about testing, maybe you can correct
link |
01:07:16.560
me, but from my sense, it's one of the only solutions to COVID that has not yet been politicized.
link |
01:07:23.440
So masks and vaccines, whether you like it or not, have been heavily politicized where there's
link |
01:07:30.640
literally a red blue split on the use of those or like proud use, effective use of those tools.
link |
01:07:42.000
And it seems like everybody I talked to about testing, everybody's on board, red or blue.
link |
01:07:47.680
They are, which is why I am particularly concerned about the vaccinate or test policy.
link |
01:07:53.840
Because all of a sudden we just politicized it. We just
link |
01:07:56.720
brought it with this thing that was fully bipartisan, really bipartisan. I mean, I've
link |
01:08:01.360
talked to the fully, the really right side of Congress and the super liberal side of Congress,
link |
01:08:08.080
the Senate, the same politicians, governors everywhere in this country have asked me for
link |
01:08:14.880
support around these rapid tests because it's just, you can have it reported or not. You can
link |
01:08:20.160
have it in the home, in the privacy of your own home or not, or you do it at school.
link |
01:08:24.240
And these tools are just so powerful to identify infectious people. They didn't have to be
link |
01:08:29.280
politicized. They still don't. I don't think that the action plan went so far that it's going to
link |
01:08:34.080
politicize them. But I do think already it's starting to conjure up emotion saying, well,
link |
01:08:39.360
now I have to get tested. The have to part, right. And that is where we go wrong. I have to get
link |
01:08:46.960
we go wrong. I have to get tested or vaccinated. Screw that. I am independent, whatever. And
link |
01:08:57.360
I do worry that this thing that was purely bipartisan, that we could have just scaled
link |
01:09:02.240
up months ago. People would have, we could have delivered it to every household. Didn't even have
link |
01:09:05.760
to ask people to request it. Just delivered packages to every home in America by now easily.
link |
01:09:12.160
And if we were smart about it, you know, we could have done it. The most unpleasant thing about
link |
01:09:17.600
COVID is the uncertainty. And that's what leads to fear on both the vaccine hesitant,
link |
01:09:24.560
is the uncertainty about the vaccine and people who have taken the vaccine, the uncertainty around
link |
01:09:32.080
like, am I in danger walking around? Can I go, can I walk down the hall? Like this fear of the world
link |
01:09:38.240
around you. And I think testing allows you to remove a lot of that uncertainty. Like you,
link |
01:09:45.040
you gain back confidence that you can operate in this world and not get infected and you become
link |
01:09:50.640
like a nicer person. I find myself every time I get tested, I become a nicer person to others
link |
01:09:56.560
because I know I'm not putting them in danger. I'm not putting people in danger.
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01:10:00.800
It's a, it's a heavy burden to carry to worry. Am I infectious? Like I was out last night,
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01:10:07.760
but I do want to go see my mom today, you know, like, am I infectious? I don't know. And this has
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01:10:12.320
created massive anxiety and I can't, I completely agree that it is, it's a relieving feeling and,
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01:10:22.160
and it's an amazing feeling to be in a room when, and I did this in the middle of the pandemic when
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01:10:27.520
everyone was supposed to be wearing a mask indoors and everyone rapid tests, you know, and I said,
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01:10:34.000
everyone should rapid test before you walk into this room. And it was a wonderful experiment
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01:10:40.640
because everyone was just so relaxed. You know, the other, the alternative is everyone, nobody
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01:10:46.960
tests and everyone wears a mask. You have a mask that maybe gives you 20% maybe protection during,
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01:10:54.800
if you're all in the same room together, if that, or you have a rapid test program where everyone
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01:10:59.920
rapid test before, and that gives you like 95% to a hundred percent protection, not a hundred
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01:11:04.960
percent, but close. And all of a sudden that allows everyone to take a big sigh and be like,
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01:11:10.560
wow, this is the first time I've seen people without masks indoors in a long time. And I feel
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01:11:15.520
pretty good. And restaurants, like restaurants are scary right now because you just don't know
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01:11:20.160
who might be infectious and nobody's masked. And like, wouldn't it be great to just go into
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01:11:27.520
a restaurant where you know that everyone just tested negative that day? It just really reduces
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01:11:32.800
anxiety. It makes individuals feel empowered. And I mean, at the end of the day, COVID and
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01:11:39.760
our response to COVID is a, it's truly an information problem. You know, why do we
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01:11:45.760
quarantine anyone? Why did we ever close anything down? We didn't close things down because everyone
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01:11:49.840
is positive. We closed things down because we didn't know if anyone was positive. We quarantine
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01:11:56.000
a whole classroom of kids, not because they're all positive, but because we don't know if one
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01:12:01.120
of them are positive. And so we just quarantine everyone when there's a positive in the case,
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01:12:05.760
in the, in the classroom, like one day, we'll then ask the whole classroom not to come to school for
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01:12:09.600
10 days. That's not a biological problem. That's an information problem. And the crazy thing is we
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01:12:17.600
have the tool to solve that information problem. It's literally our eyes on the virus. It's how
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01:12:23.520
we see this virus. And if everyone glowed green, when they were infectious, we would have never
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01:12:27.760
had to close down anyone, any society. And we would have never had the outbreaks because we
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01:12:31.760
would have been able to stay away from the green people, you know? And yeah, I like what you said,
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01:12:36.480
the quarantine is an information problem. That's absolutely right. What, is there something you
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01:12:40.560
can say to what people can do, like listening to this, individuals? Do you just complain like
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01:12:48.160
loudly? Like, why can't we do this? Can you speak with your money somehow? What, what can people do
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01:12:55.040
to help? God, it's, it's amazing to think you're asking me this question and this video will go
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01:13:01.680
out to, you know, the web and all the people that watch you. And last year in July, maybe
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01:13:08.880
something like that, June, I forget exactly when it was, I was on Twiv this week in virology.
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01:13:14.400
Shout out to Twiv. Those guys are awesome. They are awesome. I love, I love Twiv.
link |
01:13:19.120
And they asked me the exact same question towards the end. They said, this makes so much sense. You
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01:13:23.680
know, why wouldn't we do this? What can people do? And so I said, oh, you know, just send me an email,
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01:13:29.040
like write to me. I'm sure you could find my email somewhere online and get in touch and I will,
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01:13:35.120
you know, and we can try to figure out how to make something happen. Bad idea.
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01:13:41.280
Very smart.
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01:13:43.440
Way too many emails. I didn't, I feel bad because I didn't end up getting back to anyone because I
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01:13:47.280
just got inundated. But it did lead to the development of rapidtest.org where we did
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01:13:53.280
automate the process of writing letters to congressional members and elected representatives.
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01:13:59.440
So that helps. Fast forward to today. What can, what can people do? I honestly don't know. Like,
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01:14:07.760
what can the average person at this point do? We have tried everything. The FDA is immutable on
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01:14:13.360
this. They will not change and we shouldn't ask them to change because they have decided that this
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01:14:19.200
is how they regulate medical devices and they're going to stick to it. So what we need to do,
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01:14:23.440
what we need to do, and maybe this is something to do, is get, if you know people who have sway
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01:14:31.120
over politicians, lobbyists, whatever it might be, let people know to request that the president,
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01:14:37.520
literally the president of the United States, uses executive powers to just do a simple,
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01:14:45.360
something as simple as designating these powerful public health tools as public health tools.
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01:14:50.800
Allow the CDC and the NIH or whomever it must be or academic centers of excellence designated by
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01:14:58.080
the CDC to evaluate the tests in a very fast fashion with the appropriate metrics that these
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01:15:05.360
tests need to achieve for public health. And within two days we can have 10 new tests authorized.
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01:15:12.480
You know, this doesn't have to be a six to 12 month endeavor. This could be a two day
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01:15:16.400
endeavor. We actually did it. I judged the rapid test XPRIZE and it went great. We actually got
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01:15:22.880
incredible metrics about how well does each test work and no clinical trials, you know,
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01:15:28.880
just a couple days worth of work in the lab and boom. And if we actually systematize it,
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01:15:33.200
it would be an hour or so in the lab. You know, so simple. So I don't know. I mean,
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01:15:39.280
I don't know how to really impact change. Thankfully, you know, I have a platform and
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01:15:44.080
I've been able to start talking with people who are very close to the President and the White
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01:15:49.840
House. And I do think that some change is finally happening because the silver bullet of the vaccine
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01:15:57.360
has not panned out to be the silver bullet. So now we got to now I think we're moving from a country
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01:16:03.440
that was a vaccine only approach to finally recognizing at the highest levels that there's
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01:16:08.800
other tools. Do you think it's possible to reopen fully without solving the testing problem
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01:16:15.200
completely? Like, do you think this vaccine approach will get us to reopen fully? I do.
link |
01:16:22.320
Yeah, I think over time, though. I mean, if we a lot of people ask me, like, what's what's like
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01:16:29.440
happening? Like, what's the end game here? Like, where does this end? And it's actually not a
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01:16:36.800
mystery. The end game is we will grow out of this virus. And by that, I mean, you and I
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01:16:46.320
and most people who are watching this are adults, right? Adults don't like to get infected with a
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01:16:53.920
virus for the very first time as adults. Babies are OK with it. And so what we have to do to
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01:16:59.680
understand how we're getting out of this virus is to look at babies like at newborns and say, OK,
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01:17:06.400
how does a baby get out of their high risk time period? They get exposed. They get exposed multiple
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01:17:12.320
times or vaccinated, of course. And eventually they get exposed enough that they build up this
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01:17:18.320
nice cushion of immunity that's sufficiently diverse that they can battle whatever gets
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01:17:22.720
thrown at them because they've seen it all already. But one exposure doesn't do it. I mean,
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01:17:28.480
over the course of the first few years of life, kids get exposed to coronaviruses tons of times,
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01:17:33.600
lots of different viruses they get. So unfortunately, what's happening with us,
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01:17:37.600
why this is so bad for us, is that as we're adults, we don't regenerate tissue very well.
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01:17:43.040
We have like overabundant inflammatory response. We have all these problems that when we get an
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01:17:47.120
infection for the first time, it sucks. It harms us. It causes us problems. But over time, just
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01:17:53.120
like a baby, we're going to start building up our immunity through vaccines and exposures.
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01:17:58.320
And I hate to say it, but tons of people are getting exposed to Delta right now who don't
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01:18:03.280
know it. Tons. And if you're vaccinated, you don't know it, is my point there. And at the end of the
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01:18:12.400
day, this is actually, I do not want this to be misconstrued as like saying, go get infected.
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01:18:18.080
But the fact that people are getting infected will add to our level of protection later on.
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01:18:23.360
And so... Yeah, but the question is how long that whole process takes. I think, you know,
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01:18:28.480
my guess is probably by the end of next year, early 2023, we will probably start looking at
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01:18:34.640
this as though it is not a particularly dangerous virus for most people. The elderly though,
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01:18:39.200
it will still be, but that's because their immunity... Variants and stuff. And I've heard
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01:18:43.920
other people say the statement you just said a year ago about the spring, right? Well, that
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01:18:50.080
probably was not wise. Well, I mean, it's because the intuition is like, okay, now that there's a
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01:18:56.880
vaccine, you're either going to take the vaccine or get infected and then there'll be herd immunity
link |
01:19:01.680
over, like it'll be very quick. So, you know, that's the intuition, but it seems like that's not
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01:19:09.120
happening. It seems like we're in this constant state of fear mongering for different reasons.
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01:19:16.320
It's almost like the virus got deeply integrated, not into just our biology, but
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01:19:24.080
in the game of politics and in the fear mongering around the news because the virus now started
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01:19:31.920
being together with the vaccine and the masks and it started getting integrated into the division
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01:19:39.200
and that's so effective at monetizing social media, for example. And so it's like, all right,
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01:19:47.200
so how do you get out of that? Because you can always kind of present certain kinds of numbers
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01:19:52.480
about number of cases or how full hospitals are and start making claims about that we're still,
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01:20:01.280
this is as bad as it's ever been, those kinds of statements. And so I'm not sure exactly what the
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01:20:06.640
way out is except the same way out as it was originally, which is testing is information.
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01:20:13.440
Yeah.
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01:20:13.920
It's information.
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01:20:15.200
Yeah. And I think we can do that. We can keep outbreaks suppressed with testing because it's
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01:20:21.040
information. Like people keep thinking of tests as being medical things. They're not,
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01:20:24.160
they're information. It can allow us to control things. Just like we drive down a road and we
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01:20:31.760
look at the cars and we don't hit other cars because we have the information that they're
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01:20:35.360
in the lane next to us and they're moving over. That's just information.
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01:20:39.520
Like you said, glow green. The problem with the virus, you don't see. You're walking around
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01:20:45.280
and everybody is a potential infectious creature. And so if you see the world as a potential for
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01:20:54.960
infection, you're going to be terrified of that.
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01:20:56.880
That's exactly right. And that is what has happened. And that's why I've been pushing so
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01:21:01.360
hard for these tests because they can allow people, if you use them at a community level,
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01:21:06.880
you can have enough people know that they're positive, enough people are good people that
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01:21:10.160
they won't go out and infect others. And the other great thing about them is again,
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01:21:15.280
a 10 day isolation period, especially for a vaccinated person, but in either case,
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01:21:21.440
is also an information problem. We don't have to isolate for 10 days if we're infected. What if
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01:21:26.960
we're only infectious for two, especially if we're vaccinated? Why are we telling people the only
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01:21:31.520
reason the CDC ever and the WHO ever suggested a 10 day isolation or a 14 day quarantine is because
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01:21:38.240
we didn't know when people stopped being infectious. There's actually some people stay infectious for
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01:21:43.040
14 days. It's rare. But there's a lot of people who stay infectious for like four. And that's
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01:21:48.720
a whole nother week that we're asking people to isolate. People would probably be much more likely
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01:21:53.600
to comply if they only had to isolate as long as they wake up each morning and see two lines,
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01:21:58.800
because you're actually seeing it for your own two eyes. You're being empowered to make your
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01:22:02.880
own decision. You're not being told you need to isolate for 10 days and you're sitting there
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01:22:06.880
thinking, oh, I feel fine. I don't know. There's a lot of asymptomatic spread. But if you see the
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01:22:11.760
two lines every day, then you actually get to, you're doing a little experiment for yourself to
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01:22:18.000
prove to yourself, today I'm still infectious. Let's hope it's tomorrow. Come on immune system.
link |
01:22:23.200
You can do this. And then you get to day four and boom, you start being negative.
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01:22:28.160
That's a much more tolerable thing because you are being able to make that decision based on
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01:22:34.640
true data that is empowering you. And it really does change, changes everything,
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01:22:40.320
because it's all fear and empowerment and these are empowering devices.
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01:22:46.560
Well, I wanted to have this conversation with you because obviously it's a great solution.
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01:22:50.800
Let's keep talking about it. People who will listen to this should,
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01:22:55.120
I guess, pressure local politicians, federal, national politicians.
link |
01:23:01.200
Write articles with the title like, Dear POTUS, please designate these as public health tools.
link |
01:23:08.160
Or just start talking about it in the media. Talk about it on social media, anywhere.
link |
01:23:12.080
Testing is a public health good. Testing is a public health good. It should not be considered
link |
01:23:18.640
a medical device. I shouldn't have to pay to keep you safe. Testing should generally be free
link |
01:23:26.320
for that matter, subsidized by the government. These tools exist. We should all... And I think
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01:23:32.160
the more people that generate noise to just say, a public health test is a public health tool.
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01:23:40.160
Period. You can't even argue with it. That's just true.
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01:23:43.600
Yeah. I think if you talk about it enough, then certain people that have even a bigger platform,
link |
01:23:49.600
like Elon Musk, Sunder Prachai, those folks that have power to really do large scale manufacturing,
link |
01:23:58.640
also influence governments, will pay attention. And that's the hope. Enough people talk about it.
link |
01:24:04.960
I think business leaders, like business leaders, obviously have so much power here.
link |
01:24:09.440
Yeah. They pay the lobbyists who make things
link |
01:24:13.600
happen. Let's be honest. There's people who pull levers that are not the politicians themselves.
link |
01:24:17.600
And I do think business leaders have so much to gain from these tools to keep their businesses
link |
01:24:23.120
safe, to not have to quarantine and lockdown. And I hope that all of them hear this message to say,
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01:24:29.360
let's ask the president or the people around the president to designate these as public
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01:24:34.480
health tools. Change the system. And if you can't change every aspect of the system,
link |
01:24:39.680
then figure out how to change the system enough so that you're doing everything
link |
01:24:43.840
in a safe way that is not endangering anyone, but it is only protective.
link |
01:24:48.560
Yeah. You mentioned last time that you spent time as a Buddhist monk.
link |
01:24:54.960
We didn't spend much time talking about it. I just would love to talk to you about it a
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01:25:00.160
little bit more. Maybe by way of advice, how do you recommend people can integrate
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01:25:08.000
meditation into their lives? Or how does one meditate?
link |
01:25:14.720
I think for me, meditation was really an active effort, which sounds weird because most people
link |
01:25:26.000
think of meditation as the absence of activity. But just like anything, meditation requires
link |
01:25:35.200
exercise. In this case, it requires exercise and quieting your mind. And the whole... Well,
link |
01:25:42.800
there's a lot of different reasons people meditate. Most people watching this podcast or this show,
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01:25:49.440
what is this called? I don't know.
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01:25:50.960
Is this an interview? I'm not even recording. This is
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01:25:53.360
just you and I talking. It is. Most people are meditating to bring
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01:26:01.680
some balance and bring some sanity to their life and just be able to control their feelings and
link |
01:26:06.720
emotions a little bit more. And for that purpose, I think the best way to... What meditation is,
link |
01:26:14.560
if you can call it what you will, it's just getting some alone time, some time to think
link |
01:26:18.800
or not think. Whatever looks different for each person. For me, it was a very active effort to
link |
01:26:26.560
try to quiet my mind with the explicit intent to detach from things, from lots of things.
link |
01:26:34.800
And it's actually... It sounds weird in our culture here to talk about detachment as a goal.
link |
01:26:41.840
Detachment from loved ones, detachment from objects is easy to reconcile. People understand
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01:26:47.760
that, yeah, I don't want to be too attached to my car or whatever. But detachment from
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01:26:52.320
a loved one is a very hard thing because we want to do the opposite usually. We want to love a loved
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01:26:56.720
one. But in a lot of Buddhist thought, it is those attachments that keep people in this cycle of
link |
01:27:05.920
rebirth. Now, I don't personally believe in rebirth in a Buddhist sense in that you actually get
link |
01:27:18.240
born multiple times. I think my personal feeling is we die and we're vanished. That's just me.
link |
01:27:25.680
But I still really found meditation to be extraordinarily powerful to feel control over
link |
01:27:36.480
a whole different part of my body that I never thought that it could be controlled, your mind.
link |
01:27:42.640
You close your eyes and most of us immediately start seeing blotches and we start thinking about
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01:27:50.640
things. And it's an amazing feeling to start getting to the point where you can actually
link |
01:27:59.440
quiet your mind and close your mind down so that you can just have peace, silence of your mind
link |
01:28:08.400
for a long period of time. And I loved it. But it's kind of a dangerous slope because you can
link |
01:28:14.800
kind of get caught up in it and really start going from, okay, I'm trying to quiet my mind
link |
01:28:19.840
to almost being addicted to quieting your mind. And it was a very active exercise every day,
link |
01:28:25.200
15 hours a day to just practice quieting my mind. And eventually I could. And in Buddhism,
link |
01:28:33.840
there's a whole lot of stages that you go through too. Once you hit that point where you can quiet
link |
01:28:38.400
your mind, then there's other psychological things that happen. And eventually the end goal for a
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01:28:47.600
Buddhist monk who's spending their life meditating in the forest is to achieve nirvana, is to have
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01:28:54.160
an absence of any attachment to the point where you're not even attached to your own foot or your
link |
01:29:00.080
own leg. You can cut it off. So you don't even have an attachment to self, to ego? Do you feel
link |
01:29:09.520
like a conscious being or no? Well, I never attained it, but I didn't really. So the goal
link |
01:29:16.560
is you have to first look at it through the eyes of samsara, which is the cycle of rebirth,
link |
01:29:22.880
which is suffering. It's a cycle of suffering is how it's viewed. And the idea is like,
link |
01:29:27.600
if I really love this hat and then the hat gets lost, I'm sad. So that makes me suffer.
link |
01:29:34.320
And if I hate this hat and I see it, then it makes me sad or mad. And that is an emotion.
link |
01:29:40.080
But if I'm completely ambivalent about that hat, I don't care if it's there,
link |
01:29:45.360
I don't care if it gets lost, if it's shredded, then that invokes no emotional rise out of me,
link |
01:29:52.080
good or bad. And so the idea is to find the balance there where you are so detached from
link |
01:29:57.520
everything that you're not getting a rise, negative or positive. And this is really,
link |
01:30:03.840
it's really such a distinct thing in a relative to our normal lives here in America where we live
link |
01:30:13.840
for rises. You want happiness and joy. And then you also, nobody wants sadness, but when you come
link |
01:30:20.400
out of sadness, you feel happy. Either way it averages out. And if it doesn't average out,
link |
01:30:26.080
then you're in a bad spot. That would be things like major depressive disorder where you're
link |
01:30:31.760
truly not averaging out. But if you're living a pretty happy life, that's why there's no right
link |
01:30:36.080
or wrong. You can go up and down and you average out or you can just go that straight line.
link |
01:30:40.400
So this is not necessarily the Buddhist ideal is somehow obviously the ideal you should strive for,
link |
01:30:49.600
but the actual exercise of meditation that the Buddhist monks use seems like a
link |
01:30:58.880
great tool for becoming aware of your own mind. And that seems to be important for
link |
01:31:06.560
appreciating life. There's some kind of experiencing life on a deeper level.
link |
01:31:15.440
I think so. I mean, that's my personal opinion is yes. And that I think it,
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01:31:22.800
I don't meditate anymore.
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01:31:25.680
Back in the capitalist Western world where there's meetings.
link |
01:31:30.640
That's right. I mean, I stopped after I was a monk and then the tsunami hit
link |
01:31:34.720
and I lived in a refugee camp and that was the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004. And it just really,
link |
01:31:44.640
it was really interesting in Sri Lanka. They wanted me, I asked, well, what can I do to help?
link |
01:31:49.600
It was a horrible, horrible hell on earth experience in many ways. But when I said,
link |
01:31:57.280
what can I do to help? The answer was, well, you could meditate. That's how, keep doing what you're
link |
01:32:04.160
doing. That's how we can get good karma. And to me, coming from Western roots, I just couldn't
link |
01:32:11.280
deal with that. I just said that it doesn't make sense to me. Why would I just sit and meditate
link |
01:32:16.400
when there's so much devastation happening here? And so I kind of stopped meditating then and then
link |
01:32:22.000
never really recovered from that time in the refugee camp. But I do feel like I understand
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01:32:29.200
or like I am aware of a part of me that most people never get the privilege to be aware of.
link |
01:32:35.040
And that is a pretty profound feeling, I think, or just awareness to say, if I ever need to go
link |
01:32:45.520
back to that, I have the capacity to do that. And I do use it. I mean, I don't use it a lot,
link |
01:32:51.440
but I use it when I really need to, to try to settle myself, to actually calm myself, whether
link |
01:33:01.840
it's pain, physical or emotional pain. It is possible to make those things go away, but just
link |
01:33:09.120
like anything, it takes training. If you take yourself back to that place you were, Sam Harris
link |
01:33:18.080
talks about that through his meditation practice, he's able to escape the sense of free will
link |
01:33:25.280
and the sense of agency. You can get away from that. Do you ever think about consciousness and
link |
01:33:33.200
free will when you were meditating? Like, did you get some deep insight about the nature
link |
01:33:40.640
of consciousness that you were somehow able to escape it through meditation or no?
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01:33:46.240
I looked at it in a much more utilitarian way, I think.
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The sensation, like minimizing amount of thoughts in your mind and then beginning to really
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appreciate the sensation. You weren't writing a book on free will.
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01:34:01.920
Right. I mean, maybe if I kept at it, there's a good chance that if the tsunami didn't happen,
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I might still be sitting there on the top of that mountain.
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If there's tsunamis, you see pain, you see, especially if you see cruelty and you're
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supposed to meditate through that, there's something in the human spirit that pushes us
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to want to help. If you see somebody who's suffering, to react to that seems like to help
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them as opposed to care less through meditation. Don't become attached to the suffering of others.
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01:34:36.960
Exactly. I mean, that's, I do think that that's, you know, and they're two totally valid ways to
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live life. They are, generally, I think they're ingrained in us pretty early in society.
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Right. And it's hard to escape.
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01:34:52.000
Yeah.
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What about just in general, becoming detached from possessions, like minimalism in not having
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many things. So, the capitalist world kind of pushes you towards having possessions and
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01:35:09.040
deriving joy from more and more and better possessions. Have you returned back to the
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joys of that world or do you find yourself enjoying the minimalist life?
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01:35:21.360
A little of both. I think I really don't like, I find things to be a burden, to be a massive
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burden. And to me, when you have a burden like that, you know, even if it's just knowing that
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01:35:37.440
there's like boxes in your basement of stuff, you know, whatever it might be, it makes it hard to
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01:35:43.520
focus. And so, I personally like, I mean, my ideal, like if I had a, my house, for example,
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would be to have like nothing on anything. And that to me is like peaceful. Some people find
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that to be not peaceful. For me, it's like, I love to have the idea that if needed, I could like
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01:36:10.800
pack up and move and not worry about anything. Do I actually have that in reality? No. We're
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01:36:19.440
about to have a baby, you know, but it's like, I already see it, it's like stressful. There's
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like boxes of stuff showing up at the house, like bottles and clothes and all these little
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01:36:30.720
hats and whatnot. And I do have to like sometimes go into my meditation to just say like, this is
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okay. You know, like it's okay to have all of this stuff. It's not permanent, you know. And, but I do
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think that it's easy to get lost in it all. And it's important to remember given all that, like
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people who buy houses, you know, buy a home and buy a house and make a home out of it. And you
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start a family. It's easy to forget that even though you have all these responsibilities,
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01:37:05.840
you're still free. And like freedom takes work and it takes remembering, it takes
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01:37:12.640
meditation on it, but you're free. You're born free, you live free. I mean, depends of course
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01:37:18.880
which country, but in the United States, even with all the possessions, even with all the burdens
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01:37:25.280
of sort of credit and owing money and all those kinds of things, you can scale everything down
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01:37:33.600
and you're free. But ultimately the people you love, you love each other, it doesn't take much
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01:37:40.160
money to be happy together. And for me, I personally value that freedom of having the freedom to
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01:37:47.600
always pursue your happiness as opposed to being burdened by material possessions that, you know,
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yeah, that basically limit your ability to be happy because you're always paying off stuff.
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01:37:59.840
You always catch, you know, trying to match the neighbors that are always a little bit richer,
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01:38:04.320
that kind of pursuit. I think that pursuit is wonderful for innovation and for building
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01:38:09.520
cooler, better things. But on an individual level, I think you have to remember that,
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01:38:15.200
first of all, life is finite. And second of all, like your goal is not to get a bigger house.
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01:38:20.000
Your goal is to be just content and happy in the moment.
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01:38:24.560
I completely, completely agree with that. So in looking at our failure at scale
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to engineer, to manufacture, to deploy tests, how do you feel about our prospect as a human
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01:38:42.080
civilization? Are you optimistic? So this pandemic, it is what it is. It hurt a lot of people,
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01:38:51.840
both it took lives, but it also hurt a lot of businesses and a lot of people economically.
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01:39:00.400
But there's very likely to be a much worse pandemic down the line. There might be other
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threats to human civilization. Are you nevertheless optimistic?
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01:39:10.800
Oh, I don't think I'm optimistic about it at all, I think.
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01:39:14.320
What are you most worried about?
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01:39:15.440
It's one of those things, it's so existential that I don't worry about it. But I do think,
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01:39:23.520
I mean, in the United States, for example, so you asked about the human civilization,
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but let's talk about like American society for a moment. I do think that we're probably seeing
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the end of a really interesting experiment, like the American experiment,
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01:39:39.680
and we're seeing its limitations. We're probably going to become another blip,
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01:39:44.080
like another power that's in the history books that like rose and collapsed.
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01:39:48.800
Probably that's where we'll go. In terms of civilization, I think we're demonstrating a
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pretty significant inability to recognize the danger, whether that's the pandemic or whether
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01:40:03.280
that's climate change. I think it's extraordinary that we are not taking these things seriously.
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Yeah.
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And we're not acting with the urgency. And I mean, in some ways, climate change
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truly makes like this pandemic look like child's play in terms of like the destruction it has the
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01:40:26.560
potential to wreak. I tend to think if you just look at the progress of human history,
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01:40:32.480
that the people who do good in the world outpower the people that do bad in the world.
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01:40:41.840
So there's something about our minds that likes to focus on the negative, like on the destructive,
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01:40:49.120
because we're afraid of it. It's also, for some reason, more fun to watch destruction.
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01:40:56.640
But it seems like the people who build, who create solutions, who innovate, and who just put
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like both on the emotional level, so love out there and like on the actual engineering level,
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01:41:12.880
tools that make for higher quality of life. I think those win out if you look at human history.
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01:41:19.120
But the question is whether the negative stuff can sometimes peak to the level where everybody's
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just destroyed. But as long as that doesn't happen, I tend to believe that there'll be like
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a gradual, with some noise, a gradual improvement of quality of life in human civilization.
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01:41:37.360
I do think so, to a certain extent. But it's that what you said, like unless there's like some
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significant peak of bad, you know, the problem with bad is that it can happen like that, you know,
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01:41:50.640
good. You can't build a society overnight, but you sure can kill one. Like I just think about
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01:41:58.000
food crises and instability and just, I don't know. But I do hope that, I mean, I completely agree. I
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think we can engineer our way to a healthier, better world. Like I truly do. My concern is that
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the people who are doing that until very recently don't generally rule the world. Now, of course,
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01:42:21.040
we're seeing non elected leaders and, you know, people who run massive corporations essentially
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01:42:31.040
having as much or really more power than elected leaders, or than kings and queens and such. So how
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01:42:37.680
they choose to wield that power, you know, is an interesting choice. And I do hope that you're
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right in that over time, fear will drive companies to produce a better product or whatever, you know,
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01:42:52.640
something like over time, it's just like predator prey models. You get so bad or so everything like
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01:42:59.120
it's so revved up that all of a sudden, something cracks and they say, okay, I do want an electric
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01:43:04.080
car or whatever. And that takes some combination of innovation, letting people know that you're
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01:43:10.800
an innovation, letting people know that these electric cars exist. It's kind of rapid test too.
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01:43:15.440
Like you get to finally feel it and see it, have an electric car. And then all of a sudden things
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01:43:20.960
change and everyone says, oh, this is so bad. And actually I'm doing good for the world, relatively
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01:43:25.200
speaking. And, you know, I guess the paradigm shift, it becomes a, for lack of a better word,
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01:43:32.320
viral positivity does. And I mean, I believe that ultimately that wins out
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01:43:39.120
out because I think there's much more power to be gained. So I think most people want to do good.
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01:43:46.160
And if you want to wield power, you want to channel people's desire to do good.
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01:43:54.160
And I think over time that's exactly what people will do. But yeah, this, I mean, both on the
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01:44:01.200
natural side, the pandemic, you know, there's still biology at play. There's still viruses
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01:44:05.520
out there trying to kill us. There's accidents. There's nuclear weapons. There's unintended
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01:44:10.720
consequences of tools, whether it's on the nanotechnology side or the artificial intelligence
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01:44:16.000
side. Then there's the natural things like meteors and all that kind of stuff and the climate change,
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01:44:23.920
all of that. But I tend to think we humans are a clever bunch. And when there's a deadline,
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01:44:30.000
a real deadline or a real threat before us, we kind of step up. I don't know, but maybe you have
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01:44:37.120
to believe that until the very end. Otherwise life's not as fun.
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01:44:43.600
Yeah, that's right. I mean, we'll have to see, I guess. Well, ideally we won't be alive to see that.
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01:44:50.800
Well, no, Michael, I'm glad we talk again because this has been such a difficult time
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01:45:00.800
that feels like there's no solutions. And it's so refreshing to hear that there's a solution
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01:45:08.960
to COVID. And there's an engineering solution on the individual level, something people can do.
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01:45:14.720
On the government level, it's something people can do. On the global level, something people can do.
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01:45:19.920
We should be doing rapid testing at scale. It's obvious. It's amazing that you still
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01:45:27.360
are telling that story, pushing that message bravely, boldly. I really,
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01:45:34.000
really appreciate the work you're doing. And I will do in my small way the same to try to help out
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01:45:41.680
and everybody else should too until we get hundreds of millions of tests in people's hands.
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01:45:47.040
It's an obvious solution. We should have had it a long time ago. And I like solutions, not problems.
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01:45:56.400
And this is obviously a solution. So thank you for presenting it to the world and thank you for
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01:46:00.880
talking about it. It's something that I can't not do. If it saves one person's life, then it was
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01:46:07.360
worth the two years of lobbying for this. And so let's hope we see a change. Thanks for talking today.
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01:46:15.360
Absolutely.
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01:46:17.680
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Michael Mina. To support this podcast,
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01:46:21.840
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, let me leave you with some words from
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01:46:27.280
Lord Byron. Always laugh when you can. It is cheap medicine. Thank you for listening and hope to see
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01:46:35.840
you next time.