Lessons from the pandemic: Responding to emerging zoonotic viral diseases—a Keystone Symposia report
Jennifer Cable, Anthony S. Fauci, William E. Dowling, Stephan Günther, Dennis A. Bente, Pragya D. Yadav, Lawrence C. Madoff, Lin‐Fa Wang, Rahul K. Arora, Maria D. Van Kerkhove, May Chu, Thomas Jaenisch, Jonathan H. Epstein, Simon D. W. Frost, Daniel G. Bausch, Lisa E. Hensley, Éric Bergeron, Ioannis Sitaras, Michael D. Gunn, Thomas W. Geisbert, César Muñoz‐Fontela, Florian Krammer, Emmie de Wit, Pontus Nordenfelt, Erica Ollmann Saphire, Sarah C. Gilbert, Kizzmekia S. Corbett, Luis M. Branco, Sylvain Baize, Neeltje van Doremalen, Marco Aurélio Krieger, Sue Ann Costa Clemens, Renske Hesselink, Dan Hartman
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic caught the world largely unprepared, including scientific and policy communities. On April 10-13, 2022, researchers across academia, industry, government, and nonprofit organizations met at the Keystone symposium "Lessons from the Pandemic: Responding to Emerging Zoonotic Viral Diseases" to discuss the successes and challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and what lessons can be applied moving forward. Speakers focused on experiences not only from the COVID-19 pandemic but also from outbreaks of other pathogens, including the Ebola virus, Lassa virus, and Nipah virus. A general consensus was that investments made during the COVID-19 pandemic in infrastructure, collaborations, laboratory and manufacturing capacity, diagnostics, clinical trial networks, and regulatory enhancements-notably, in low-to-middle income countries-must be maintained and strengthened to enable quick, concerted responses to future threats, especially to zoonotic pathogens.