In 2019, there were 405,000 deaths from malaria worldwide (source:WHO). You have to be careful comparing a new, spreading pandemic to an established disease, but it is interesting that the two afflictions are polar opposites in who they affect the most, rich countries vs. poor.
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Given that we're going to spend an unlimited amount on coronavirus, which affects the developed world, and that we'll have to mount a global health response, this is an incredible opportunity to go after other infectious diseases, at (relatively speaking) zero marginal cost.
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The funding requirements for eradicating tuberculosis (which kills 1.6 million people a year) is on the order of a few tens of billions of dollars. Again, basically free compared to what will be spent on covid-19. So let's do it!https://www.who.int/tb/strategy/end-tb/en/ …
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Fighting a respiratory infection like covid-19 is also a heaven-sent opportunity to address the number one killer in poor countries, lower respiratory infections. If we're going to spend all the money (which I'm all for!) let's get the most bang we can. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/the-top-10-causes-of-death …pic.twitter.com/CxsjQERGk6
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If coronavirus was this generation's 9/11, why not make endemic infectious disease our Iraq?pic.twitter.com/UH71p1gnZH
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