Announces More Than $14 Million in Grants to Partners Working to
Predict and Prevent the Next Pandemic
Google.org, the philanthropic arm of Google (NASDAQ:GOOG), has announced
grants of more than $14 million to support partners working in Southeast
Asia and Africa to prevent the next pandemic. Google.org's Predict and
Prevent initiative is supporting efforts to identify hot spots where
diseases may emerge, detect new pathogens circulating in animal and
human populations, and respond to outbreaks before they become global
crises. Several new lethal infectious diseases crop up every year.
Examples include the well-known killers, HIV/AIDS, bird flu, and SARS,
as well as drug-resistant strains of ancient scourges malaria and
tuberculosis. Three-quarters of new diseases are zoonoses, meaning
they've jumped from animals to humans.
"Business as usual won't prevent the next AIDS or SARS. The teams we're
funding today are on the frontiers of digital and genetic early
detection technology. We hope that their work, with partners across
environmental, animal, and human health boundaries, will help solve
centuries-old problems and save millions of lives," said Dr. Larry
Brilliant, Executive Director, Google.org.
Identifying hot spots
Knowing where to look is critical to disease surveillance. Climate
change and deforestation increase human-animal contact, and with it,
disease spreads. "The holy grail is to predict disease outbreaks before
they happen. For Rift Valley fever and malaria, long-term weather
forecasts and deforestation maps can show us where to look for
outbreaks, up to six months in advance," said Frank Rijsberman, Program
Director, Google.org.
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The Woods Hole Research Center - $2 million multi-year grant to
support high-resolution satellite mapping of forests to enhance
monitoring of forest loss and settlement expansion in tropical
countries. WHRC will create information to share with environmental
and human experts so they can better anticipate the emergence of
infectious diseases. For more information, please visit http://www.whrc.org/.
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Columbia University International Research Institute for Climate and
Society (IRI) - $900,000 multi-year grant to improve the use of
forecasts, rainfall data and other climate information in East Africa,
and link weather and climate experts to health specialists so they can
better predict outbreaks of infectious diseases. For more information,
please visit http://portal.iri.columbia.edu/portal/server.pt.
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University Corporation for Atmospheric Research - $900,000 multi-year
grant to build and implement a system that will use weather
projections to inform and target response to disease threats in West
Africa. For more information, please visit http://www.ucar.edu/.
Detecting diseases earlier
Genetic detection filters viral information in DNA to uncover deadly new
pathogens, and digital detection mines online data to reveal early
signals of possible epidemics. "We want to stop viruses dead in their
tracks - their animal tracks - before they jump to humans," noted Dr.
Mark Smolinski, Google.org's Threat Detective.
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Global Viral Forecasting Initiative (GVFI) - $5.5 million multi-year
grant (with equal funding from the Skoll Foundation) to support the
collection and analysis of blood samples of humans and animals in hot
spots within Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, China, Malaysia,
Lao PDR and Madagascar. The GVFI team, headed by Dr. Nathan Wolfe, has
demonstrated that potentially pathogenic animal viruses jump more
frequently to humans than previously believed and will work to detect
early evidence of future pandemics. For more information, please visit http://gvfi.org/index.html.
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Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health - $2.5 million
multi-year grant to support research to accelerate the discovery of
new pathogens, and to enable rapid, regional response to outbreaks by
establishing molecular diagnostics in hot spot countries including
Sierra Leone and Bangladesh. Dr. Ian Lipkin and colleagues have
discovered more than 75 viruses to date, established critical links
between infection and the development of acute and chronic diseases,
including pneumonia, meningitis/encephalitis, cancer, and mental
illness. For more information, please visit http://cii.columbia.edu/.
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Children's Hospital Corporation supporting Healthmap and ProMED-mail -
$3M multi-year grant to combine HealthMap's digital detection efforts
with ProMED-mail's global network of human, animal, and ecosystem
health specialists. Together, these programs will assess current
emerging disease reporting systems, expand regional networks in Africa
and Southeast Asia, and develop new tools to improve the detection and
reporting of outbreaks. For more information please visit http://www.childrenshospital.org/,
http://www.healthmap.org/en,
and http://www.promedmail.org/pls/otn/f?p=2400:1000:.
"On every continent, viruses move from animals into people. GVFI's
mission is to monitor this viral exchange. Working in animal markets,
with restaurant workers, and with hunters at the end of the road, we
sort through this traffic to try to stop deadly diseases before they
spread," said Dr. Nathan Wolfe, Founder and Director, Global Viral
Forecasting Initiative.
For more information and a Google Earth Layer highlighting the grantees,
please visit http://www.google.org/predict.html.
About Google Inc.
Google's innovative search technologies connect millions of people
around the world with information every day. Founded in 1998 by Stanford
Ph.D. students Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Google today is a top web
property in all major global markets. Google's targeted advertising
program provides businesses of all sizes with measurable results, while
enhancing the overall web experience for users. Google is headquartered
in Silicon Valley with offices throughout the Americas, Europe and Asia.
For more information, please visit http://www.google.com.
About Google.org
Google.org, the philanthropic arm of Google, uses the power of
information to help people better their lives. We develop and invest in
tools and partnerships that can help bring shared knowledge to bear on
the world's most pressing challenges in the areas of climate change,
economic development and global health. For more information, visit http://www.google.org.
Google
Katy Bacon, +1-650-214-5161
press@google.com