In an ugly world, vaccines are a beautiful gift worth honouring
According to the WHO, they have saved more lives than any other medical invention
The Nobel prize for medicine, awarded on October 2nd to Katalin Karikó, a biochemist, and Drew Weissman, an immunologist, is a fitting capstone to a great underdog story. Dr Karikó’s unfashionable insistence on trying to get RNA into cells set back her career. She persisted, and the two developed a technique which allowed the immune system to be primed against threats in an entirely new way. When the covid-19 pandemic hit, the mRNA vaccines they had made possible saved millions of lives—and freed billions more to live normally again.
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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The greatest benefit conferred on humankind”
Leaders October 7th 2023
- Are free markets history?
- Why Africans are losing faith in democracy
- The ousting of Kevin McCarthy: bad for America, worse for Ukraine
- Rising bond yields are exposing fiscal fantasy in Europe
- In an ugly world, vaccines are a beautiful gift worth honouring
- Rishi Sunak is wrong to amputate Britain’s high-speed rail line
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