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  • As the UK’s independent public inquiry into Covid-19 gets underway, members of the Covid bereaved complain that they are not being given an opportunity to testify.

    Today, in the second part of our two-part special, Mark speaks to the parents of Susan Sullivan, a woman with Down's Syndrome who died of Covid-19 at Barnet General Hospital on March 28, 2020, after being deemed “not for resuscitation” and he reveals the findings of a confidential investigation by the Royal Free NHS Hospital Trust into her death. The report, which makes for shocking reading, found that Susan was not seen by a consultant until 20 hours after admission to Barnet’s Accident and Emergency department and that the fact that she had Down’s Syndrome and had been fitted with a pacemaker should not have excluded her from intensive care.

    Mark also speaks to Kamran Mallick, the CEO of Disability Rights UK, about what the Sullivan case reveals about the pattern of discrimination experienced by people with learning disabilities across the NHS, and to Dominic Wilkinson, a medical ethicist, who explains the challenge to doctors of weighing the harms and benefits of invasive procedures to patients.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    John and Ida Sullivan

    www.covidfamiliesforjustice.org / @CovidJusticeuk

    Kamran Mallick, CEO of Disability Rights UK.

    www.disabilityrights.uk / @KamranMallick

    Professor Dominic Wilkinson

    @NeonatalEthics

    Professor of Medical Ethics and Director of Medical Ethics at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. Dominic is also a Consultant Neonatologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital and a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College.

    www.jesus.ox.ac.uk/about-jesus-college/our-community/people/professor-dominic-wilkinson/

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

    This episode of Going Viral has been produced with the support of a grant from the Higher Education Innovation Fund at City, University of London. It is part of the project, “Commemorating Covid, Remembering Pandemics”, www.rememberingpandemics.com

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • As the UK’s independent public inquiry into Covid-19 gets underway, members of the Covid bereaved complain that they are not being given an opportunity to testify.

    Today, Mark speaks to the parents of Susan Sullivan, a woman with Down's Syndrome who died of Covid-19 at Barnet General Hospital on March 28, 2020, after being deemed “not for resuscitation” and being denied access to intensive care. The Sullivans have long suspected that their daughter was the victim of medical bias and may have survived if the hospital had granted her statutory right to have a family member at her bedside. Determined to be Susan’s voice, John and Ida Sullivan launched their own investigation into Susan’s death and uncovered a catalogue of medical errors in the process. We also hear from Baroness Heather Hallet, the chair of the UK public inquiry, and from Fran Hall and other members of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Fran Hall @FranFD1

    John and Ida Sullivan

    www.covidfamiliesforjustice.org / @CovidJusticeuk

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

    This episode of Going Viral has been produced with the support of a grant from the Higher Education Innovation Fund at City, University of London. It is part of the project, “Commemorating Covid, Remembering Pandemics”,

    www.rememberingpandemics.com

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

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  • As the UK’s independent public inquiry into Covid-19 gets underway, members of the Covid bereaved complain that they are not being given an opportunity to testify.

    In a new two part special, Mark speaks to the parents of Susan Sullivan, a Down’s Syndrome woman who died of Covid-19 at Barnet General Hospital on March 28, 2020, after being deemed “not for resuscitation” and being denied access to intensive care. The Sullivans have long suspected that their daughter was the victim of medical bias and may have survived if the hospital had granted her statutory right to have a family member at her bedside. Determined to be Susan’s voice, John and Ida Sullivan launched their own investigation into Susan’s death and uncovered a catalogue of medical errors in the process.

    Mark investigates....

    ...'That's Dancing Queen' and 'Who Do We Not Save' coming to Going Viral on Thursday 13th July.

  • As sure as night follows day, we will face another pandemic, so how can we learn from the mistakes made during Covid-19, to ensure our response next time is not only more effective, but also more ethical?

    Today Mark and his guests Ilina Singh, James Wilson and John Prideaux dissect the British Government’s approach during the Covid-19 pandemic and explore the failure to engage seriously with the ethical challenges the pandemic raised, comparing the British approach with those in the USA and China. And they debate how ethicists and ethical thinking could play a more central role in deciding how to respond to the next pandemic. With Catherine Joynson of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics. Produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Catherine Joynson

    Associate Director, Nuffield Council on Bioethics

    www.nuffieldbioethics.org | @CathJoynson | @Nuffbioethics

    John Prideaux

    The political correspondent at the Economist.

    www.mediadirectory.economist.com/people/john-prideaux/ | https://www.economist.com/ | @JohnPrideaux | @TheEconomist

    Ilina Singh

    Professor of Neuroscience & Society at the University of Oxford and co-director at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Ethics and the Humanities. Principal Investigator on The UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator, a collaborative project that brought UK ethics research expertise to bear on the multiple, ongoing ethical challenges present by Covid-19.

    https://www.psych.ox.ac.uk/team/ilina-singh | @OxPsychiatry

    James Wilson

    Professor of Philosophy and Co-Director of the Health Humanities Centre at UCL and co-investigator on the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    www.ucl.ac.uk/philosophy/people/permanent-academic-staff/james-wilson | @jamesgswilson | @ucl

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Co-producer: Kate Jopling @katejopling

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

    This episode of Going Viral on trust in the pandemic, has been produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator. The Ethics Accelerator was funded by the UKRI Covid-19 research and innovation fund.

    https://ukpandemicethics.org/ | @PandemicEthics_

    Transcript available here:

    Going-Viral-What-Would-an-Ethical-Pandemic-Look-Like-Transcript.pdf

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • From the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the British Government made it clear that a baseline level of mortality from Covid was being “priced in” to its decision making: on March 12th 2020, Boris Johnson stopped short of ordering the sort of lockdowns seen in other countries and warned that, “many more families are going to lose loved ones before their time.” This approach belied a series of value judgements and trade-offs where people’s lives were set against other values, such as personal liberty and the economy. Today Mark and his guests Anjana Ahuja, Martin McKee and Dominic Wilkinson, reappraise this approach. With Ceinwen Giles and Matt Fowler. Produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Anjana Ahuja

    Contributing writer on science for the Financial Times and co-author of the bestselling ‘Spike: The Virus Vs The People’ - the inside story of the Covid-19 pandemic with Sir Jeremy Farrar.

    https://www.ft.com/anjana-ahuja / @anjahuja

    Ceinwen Giles

    Co-CEO of Shine Cancer Support, member of the General Advisory Council of The King's Fund and Chair of the Patient and Public Voices Forum for the NHS England Cancer Programme.

    www.shinecancersupport.org / @ceineken

    Professor Martin McKee

    Professor of European Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Martin is Research Director of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies and he’s published many scientific papers and books on health and health policy, with a particular focus on countries undergoing political and social transition.

    www.lshtm.ac.uk/aboutus/people/mckee.martin / @martinmckee

    Matt Fowler

    Co-Founder of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice.

    www.jrct.org.uk/covid-19-bereaved-families / @CovidJusticeUK

    Professor Dominic Wilkinson

    Professor of Medical Ethics and Director of Medical Ethics at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. Dominic is also a Consultant Neonatologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital and a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College. He is one the editors of a forthcoming book with Oxford University Press on pandemic ethics.

    www.jesus.ox.ac.uk/about-jesus-college/our-community/people/professor-dominic-wilkinson/ / @NeonatalEthics

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Co-producer: Kate Jopling @katejopling

    Cover art by Patrick Blower. www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

    This episode of Going Viral on trust in the pandemic, has been produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator. The Ethics Accelerator was funded by the UKRI Covid-19 research and innovation fund.

    https://ukpandemicethics.org/ / @PandemicEthics_

    Transcript available here:

    Going-Viral-How-Many-Deaths-Are-Too-Many-Transcript.pdf

  • Professor Sir Michael Marmot has been researching health inequalities and their relationship to social injustice for more than 50 years. He has long been a vocal critic of how health inequalities undermine social cohesion and the ability of health systems to respond effectively to pandemics and other health emergencies. Despite being an outspoken critic of austerity and the policies of successive Coalition and Conservative British governments, he was named a Companion of Honour in the 2023 New Year Honour’s List.

    Today Prof Sir Michael Marmot speaks to Mark about Covid-19 and health inequalities as well as his decades-long research into this field. This interview is featured in our companion episode: ‘All In It Together: Were Unequal Outcomes Inevitable during Covid-19?’

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Professor Sir Michael Marmot

    Professor of Epidemiology at University College London, Director of the UCL Institute of Health Equity, and Past President of the World Medical Association.

    https://www.instituteofhealthequity.org/ @MichaelMarmot

    @marmotihe

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Co-producer: Kate Jopling @katejopling

    Cover art by Patrick Blower. www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

    This episode of Going Viral on trust in the pandemic, has been produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator. A partnership between the Universities of Oxford, Bristol and Edinburgh, University College London, and the Nuffield Council on Bioethics (the Principal Investigator was Professor Ilina Singh, University of Oxford). The Ethics Accelerator was funded by the UKRI Covid-19 research and innovation fund.

    https://ukpandemicethics.org/ / @PandemicEthics_

    Transcript available here:

    Going-Viral-Bonus-Interview-with-Professor-Sir-Michael-Marmot-Transcript.pdf

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • When Covid-19 first struck the UK, the disease was described as “a great leveller”. But it soon became clear that Covid's impacts were not evenly distributed - we may have been in the same storm, but we were in different boats. Today Mark and his guests Charlotte Augst, Halima Begum and Beth Kamunge-Kpodo discuss unequal outcomes during the Covid-19. With Professor Sir Michael Marmot and Pastor Mick Fleming. Produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Dr. Charlotte Augst

    Former Chief Executive of National Voices, a coalition of charities working on health issues and which was extremely active highlighting issues of inequality during the pandemic.

    www.nationalvoices.org.uk / @CharlotteAugst

    Dr. Halima Begum

    Chief Executive of the Runnymede Trust, the UK’s leading race equality think tank.

    https://www.runnymedetrust.org / @Halima_Begum

    Pastor Mick Fleming

    Founder of Church on the Street Ministries, Burnley.

    @PastorFleming

    Dr. Beth Kamunge-Kpodo

    Beth is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Reading. She has a longstanding interest in exploring and addressing various forms of inequality.

    www.reading.ac.uk/law/our-staff/beth-kamunge-kpodo

    Professor Sir Michael Marmot

    Professor of Epidemiology at University College London, Director of the UCL Institute of Health Equity, and Past President of the World Medical Association. Professor Marmot has led research groups on health inequalities for over 50 years.

    @MichaelMarmot

    https://www.instituteofhealthequity.org

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Co-producer: Kate Jopling @katejopling

    Cover art by Patrick Blower. www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    This episode of Going Viral on trust in the pandemic, has been produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    It is a partnership between the Universities of Oxford, Bristol and Edinburgh, University College London, and the Nuffield Council on Bioethics (the Principal Investigator was Professor Ilina Singh, University of Oxford). The Ethics Accelerator was funded by the UKRI Covid-19 research and innovation fund.

    https://ukpandemicethics.org/

    @PandemicEthics_

    Transcript available here:

    Going-Viral-Were-Unequal-Outcomes-Inevitable-during-Covid-19-Transcript.pdf

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • The coronavirus pandemic raised significant questions about public trust: trust in science, trust in politicians and trust in the public health messaging. Today Mark and his guests Anjana Ahuja; Sarah Cunningham-Burley; Charles Kwaku-Odoi and Christina Pagel discuss trust during the Covid-19 pandemic for this Going Viral special, produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Anjana Ahuja

    Anjana Ahuja is a contributing writer on science for the Financial Times, offering weekly opinion on significant developments in global science, health and technology. Last year she co-authored the bestselling ‘Spike: The Virus Vs The People’ - the inside story of the Covid-19 pandemic with Sir Jeremy Farrar. Spike was shortlisted for the 2022 Orwell Prize for Political Writing and the 2022 Royal Society Science Book Prize.

    https://www.ft.com/anjana-ahuja / @anjahuja

    Professor Sarah Cunningham-Burley

    Sarah is Professor of Medical and Family Sociology and Dean of Molecular, Genetic and Population Health Sciences at the University of Edinburgh. Sarah led on work around engaging the public as part of the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator which finished its work in August 2022. She brought together members of the public to consider ethical issues arising during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    https://www.ed.ac.uk/profile/sarah-cunningham-burley / @Sarah_C_Burley

    Rev Charles Kwaku-Odoi

    Charles is Chief Officer of the Caribbean and African Health Network (CAHN) and a Deputy Lieutenant (DL) of the county of Greater Manchester. Charles works to bring equity and fairness across a range of important health and wellbeing issues for people of the Caribbean and African Diaspora. He sits on a wide range of local and national governance boards including Macc (Manchester Community Central), Faith Network for Manchester, SAGE Ethnicity Subgroup, Greater Manchester Voluntary Community & Social Enterprise (VCSE) Leadership Group, Coalition of Race Equality (CORE) Organisations.

    www.cahn.org.uk / @charleskod

    Professor Christina Pagel

    Christina Pagel is a Mathematician and Professor of operational research at University College London within UCL's Clinical Operational Research Unit, which applies operational research, data analysis and mathematical modelling to topics in healthcare.

    https://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=ACPAG88 / @chrischirp

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Co-producer: Kate Jopling @katejopling

    Cover art by Patrick Blower. www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    This episode of Going Viral on trust during the pandemic, has been produced in collaboration with the UK Pandemic Ethics Accelerator, which was funded by the UKRI Covid-19 research and innovation fund.

    https://ukpandemicethics.org/

    @PandemicEthics_

    Transcript available here:

    Going-Viral-Who-Do-We-Trust-in-a-Pandemic-Transcript-1.pdf

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • Mark visits the Science Museum in London to look at their Collecting Covid-19 objects and talk to Natasha McEnroe, the museum’s Keeper of Medicine, about their curatorial choices. The collection currently comprises over 400 items relating to the Covid-19 pandemic, including some major works of art.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With:

    Natasha McEnroe, Keep of Medicine at Science Museum London

    @natashamcenroe

    https://www.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/project/collecting-covid-19/

    Roxanna Halls on her painting of Katie Tomkins, Mortuary and Post-Mortem Services Manager at West Herts Hospitals NHS Trust, created as part of the Portraits for NHS Heroes project in response to the pandemic

    https://www.instagram.com/roxanahallsartist/?hl=en

    @RoxanaHalls

    https://www.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/blog/artwork-roxana-halls/

    Will Haynes, from the University of Sheffield’s geography department, on the project, “collecting the loneliness of students in the pandemic”

    @willr_haynes

    https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/geography/news/geography-students-publish-research-article

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • One of the most important functions of journalism is to bear witness to historic events. But in the case of the coronavirus pandemic, some of the most unflinching witnesses to the crisis that engulfed the NHS in 2020-2021 were doctors and frontline health workers. In this episode, the Oxford-based palliative care doctor, Rachel Clarke, recalls her experience of the first wave of Covid-19 as it ripped through the wards of her local hospital and emphasises the importance of holding the government to account for the UK’s coronavirus death toll.

    Recorded at the Department of Journalism at City, University of London on March 10th, Dr. Rachel Clarke’s remarks came at a workshop convened with the Science Museum on “Connecting in the time of Covid”. We will be sharing further outtakes from the workshop in forthcoming episodes.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Dr. Rachel Clarke @doctor_oxford

    https://www.doctoroxford.com/

    @cityjournalism

    “Connecting in the time of Covid”: https://tinyurl.com/2p9ez37h

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy our podcast – please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • Pandemics don’t tend to register in collective memory and there are almost no memorials to the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic, but Covid-19 looks set to be different. Today Mark and Hannah visit the ‘National Covid Memorial Wall’ on the South Bank of the Thames in London, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Stretching 500 metres along Albert Embankment, the wall is an audacious work of guerrilla art, comprising of 150,000 hand-drawn hearts – one for every British victim of the coronavirus. To find out more, Mark speaks to the founders of the group ‘Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice’ - Jo Goodman, Matt Fowler and Nathan Oswin, who dreamt up the people's memorial.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Hannah Mawdsley @HannahMawdsley

    Jo Goodman

    Matt Fowler

    Nathan Oswin

    @CovidJusticeUK / @CovidMemorialUK

    For more information about the National Covid Memorial Wall, visit:

    www.covidfamiliesforjustice.org

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy our podcast – please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  • In this special episode, supported by the Department of Journalism at City, University of London, Mark speaks to three UK-based health and science reporters about the highs and lows of covering the Covid-19 pandemic: Sarah Boseley, The Guardian’s Health Editor; Victoria Macdonald, Health and Social Care Editor at Channel 4 News and Shaun Lintern, the Independent’s Health Correspondent. What’s it been like being on the front line of the story of the century? And looking back, what do they wish they had known earlier or done differently?

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Sarah Boseley, The Health Editor of The Guardian @sarahboseley

    www.theguardian.com/profile/sarahboseley

    Victoria Macdonald, Health and Social Care Editor, Channel 4 News @vsmacdonald

    www.channel4.com/news/by/victoria-macdonald

    Shaun Lintern, Health Correspondent, Independent @ShaunLintern

    www.independent.co.uk/author/shaun-lintern

    This episode is supported by the Department of Journalism, City, University of London

    www.city.ac.uk/about/schools/arts-social-sciences/journalism

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_Pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

  • Today Mark explores the discovery of the first vaccine, against Smallpox in 1796, by the English country doctor Edward Jenner. With Owen Gower, General Manager of Dr. Jenner’s House Museum. Meanwhile, Melissa catches up with Mark’s progress in the Novavax Covid-19 vaccine trial, the very latest in vaccine science. From Smallpox to Covid-19: this is the house that Jenner built.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Owen Gower, General Manager, Dr. Jenner’s House, Museum and Garden, The home of vaccination. @owentg

    jennermuseum.com / @DrJennersHouse

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy our podcast please leave us a rating or review - thank you!

  • This is not the first time scientists have raced to develop vaccines against a new disease. In the 1960s, scientists faced a similar crisis over rubella, also known as German measles. Today Mark explores the race to create the rubella vaccine with Dr. Stanley Plotkin, dubbed ‘The Godfather of Vaccines’. In 1964, working in his Wistar Institute laboratory in Philadelphia, Stanley developed the rubella vaccine — the “R” in MMR— that’s now used across the world. And Melissa speaks to science writer Meredith Wadman about the ethics of creating the rubella vaccine.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Dr. Stanley Plotkin, Professor Emeritus at the Wistar Institute and University of Pennsylvania, and consultant to the vaccine industry.

    vaccinestoday.eu/stories/author/splotkin/

    Meredith Wadman @meredithwadman, Reporter @ScienceMagazine, Author of "The Vaccine Race: Science, Politics and the Human Costs of Defeating Disease”.

    meredithwadman.com

    sciencemag.org/news/2020/03/physician-whose-1964-vaccine-beat-back-rubella-working-defeat-new-coronavirus

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you are enjoying our series do leave us a rating or review! Thank you

  • It’s the science story of the century - how successful vaccines against Covid-19 have been created in under a year. Mark explores the back-story on how they did it so quickly with Dr Anthony Fauci, Director of the NIAID and Sarah Gilbert from the Jenner Institute, Oxford. He gets the low down on the vaccine science from scientist Rob Swanda and he talks vaccines vs. variants with Wendy Barclay from Imperial College London.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., NIAID Director

    www.niaid.nih.gov/about/director

    Professor Sarah Gilbert, Saïd Professorship of Vaccinology, Jenner Institute & Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine

    www.jenner.ac.uk/team/sarah-gilbert

    Rob Swanda

    @ScientistSwanda / Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UClU56Y1m8J9w82itIEXEHFQ?view_as=subscriber

    Professor Wendy Barclay, Action Medical Research Chair Virology, Imperial College London.

    www.imperial.ac.uk/people/w.barclay

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy these podcasts, please leave us a rating or review. Thank you.

  • On New Year’s Eve 2020, Mark took his mum to St Charles’s Hospital in London’s North Kensington to get a shot of the new Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, almost a year after the coronavirus had emerged in Wuhan. It’s the science story of the century - how successful vaccines against Covid-19 have been created in under a year. Mark explores how they did it so quickly with Adrian Hill, Director of the Jenner Institute in Oxford behind the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. And against the backdrop of global vaccine hesitancy, and as Covid-19 cases surge in Britain’s second wave, Mark speaks to Peter Openshaw from Imperial College London about the magic of vaccines.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Professor Adrian Hill, Lakshmi Mittal and Family Professorship of Vaccinology; Director of the Jenner Institute; Co-Director, Oxford Martin Programme on Vaccines; Fellow of Magdalen College.

    www.ox.ac.uk/news-and-events/find-an-expert/professor-adrian-hill

    Peter Openshaw Professor of Experimental Medicine at Imperial College at Imperial College, London.

    www.imperial.ac.uk/people/p.openshaw / @p_openshaw

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

    If you enjoy these podcasts please leave us a rating or review - thank you.

  • Disease ecologist Peter Daszak speaks to Mark down the line from his hotel room in Wuhan, China, on day 4 of his quarantine. He’s a member of the World Health Organisation team currently investigating the origins of SARS-CoV-2.

    Hosted by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    @PeterDaszak the President of EcoHealth Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to understanding the connections between human, animal, and environmental health.

    Facebook @EcoHealthNYC

    Twitter @EcoHealthNYC

    Instagram @ecohealth_alliance

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

  • Mark returns to a subject close to his heart: the Spanish Flu of 1918/19 and asks what can we learn from that pandemic of 100 years ago? With Wendy Moore and Hannah Mawdsley.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Wendy Moore, author of The Knife Man; Wedlock; How to Create the Perfect Wife; and The Mesmerist. Her new book is ENDELL STREET: The Trailblazing Women who ran World War One’s Most Remarkable Military Hospital (Atlantic, UK). Published in the US (Basic Books) as NO MAN’S LAND: The Trailblazing Women who ran Britain’s most extraordinary Military Hospital during World War 1.

    You can hear ENDELL STREET adapted for BBC Radio 4 here:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000jmpp

    Twitter @wendymoore99

    www.wendymoore.org

    Hannah Mawdsley, Twitter: @HannahMawdsley

    Series Producer Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram goingviral_thepodcast

  • Mark examines the origins of Covid-19 and why we failed to heed the warnings about coronaviruses with virus hunter Peter Daszak, President of EcoHealth Alliance.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    @PeterDaszak the President of EcoHealth Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to understanding the connections between human, animal, and environmental health. EcoHealth Alliance works in 30 countries around the world to identify and study the threat of emerging zoonotic disease. EcoHealth Alliance has been instrumental in understanding the origins and spread of diseases like SARS, MERS, Nipah virus, and Ebola, among others. EcoHealth Alliance also published the first ever global emerging disease hotspots map, identifying regions where the threat is highest. Dr. Daszak helped to launch the Global Virome Project, an ambitious vision to identify all of the world's unknown viruses. He is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and Chair of its Forum on Microbial Threats.

    Facebook @EcoHealthNYC

    Twitter @EcoHealthNYC

    Instagram @ecohealth_alliance

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter @GoingViral_pod

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  • With the UK recording the highest death toll from Covid-19 in Europe, Mark speaks to Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet and Robert Dingwall, medical sociologist at Nottingham Trent University, who sits on the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG) to help him make sense of the British government’s decision-making.

    Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

    With

    Richard Horton, Editor of The Lancet medical journal www.thelancet.com / @richardhorton1

    Robert Dingwall, medical sociologist and a member of NERVTAG @rwjdingwall

    Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

    Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

    Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

    Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast