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Neglected Tropical Diseases and Pandemic Prevention With Peter Hotez

Meet The Microbiologist

Release Date: 11/01/2021

Biorisk Assessment and Management With Saeed Khan  show art Biorisk Assessment and Management With Saeed Khan

Meet The Microbiologist

Saeed Khan, Ph.D., Head of the Department of Molecular Pathology at Dow diagnostic research and reference laboratory and President of the Pakistan Biological Safety Association discusses the importance and challenges of biosafety/biosecurity practices on both a local and global scale. He highlights key steps for biorisk assessment and management and stresses the importance of training, timing and technology. Ashley's Biggest Takeaways Adequate biosafety and biosecurity protocols depend on a thorough understanding of modern challenges, and scientists must be willing and able to respond to new...

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When Proteins Become Infectious: Understanding Prion Disease With Neil Mabbott show art When Proteins Become Infectious: Understanding Prion Disease With Neil Mabbott

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From Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), Neil Mabbott, Ph.D., has worked for nearly 2 decades on understanding the mechanisms by which prion proteins become infectious and cause neurological disease in humans and animals. He discusses the remarkable properties of prions and addresses complexities surrounding symptoms, transmission and diagnosis of prion disease.

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Trillion Dollar Microbes Make the Bioeconomy Go Round With Tim Donohue show art Trillion Dollar Microbes Make the Bioeconomy Go Round With Tim Donohue

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Episode Summary —ASM Past President, University of Wisconsin Foundation Fetzer Professor of Bacteriologyand Director of the  (GLBRC) calls genomics a game-changer when it comes the potential of microbes to create renewable resources and products that can sustain the environment, economy and supply chain around the world. He also shares some exciting new advances in the field and discusses ways his research team is using microorganisms as nanofactories to degrade lignocellulose and make a smorgasbord of products with high economic value. Take the  Ashley's Biggest...

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Meet The Microbiologist

, Regents’ Professor and Chair of the Medical Laboratory Science Program at Texas State University discusses the many variants, mammalian hosts and diverse neurological symptoms of rabies virus. Take the  Ashley’s Biggest Takeaways: Prior to his academic career, Rohde spent a decade as a public health microbiologist and molecular epidemiologist with the  and , and over 30 years researching rabies virus. While at the Department of Health Lab, Rohde worked on virus isolation using what he described as “old school” cell culture techniques,...

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ASM's Young Ambassador, Aureliana Chambal, discusses the high incidence of tuberculosis in Mozambique and how improved surveillance can help block disease transmission in low resource settings.  Ashley's Biggest Takeaways: Mozambique is severely impacted by the TB epidemic, with one of the highest incidences in Africa (368 cases/ 100,000 people in the population). Human-adapted members of the . These 7 lineages may vary in geographic distribution, and have varying impacts on infection and disease outcome. For decades, 2 reference strains have been used for TB lab research, H37Rv, which...

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Good Science, Bad Science and How to Make it Better with Ferric Fang and Arturo Casadevall show art Good Science, Bad Science and How to Make it Better with Ferric Fang and Arturo Casadevall

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The scientific process has the power to deliver a better world and may be the most monumental human achievement. But when it is unethically performed or miscommunicated, it can cause confusion and division. Drs. Fang and Casadevall discuss what is good science, what is bad science and how to make it better. Get the book!

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Using AI to Understand How the Gut-Brain Axis Points to Autism With James Morton show art Using AI to Understand How the Gut-Brain Axis Points to Autism With James Morton

Meet The Microbiologist

Dr. James Morton discusses how the gut microbiome modulates brain development and function with specific emphasis on how the gut-brain axis points to functional architecture of autism. Watch James' talk from ASM Microbe 2023: Using AI to Glean Insights From Microbiome Data https://youtu.be/hUQls359Spo

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Atypical Metabolism of Leishmania and Other Parasitic and Free-Living Protists With Michael Ginger show art Atypical Metabolism of Leishmania and Other Parasitic and Free-Living Protists With Michael Ginger

Meet The Microbiologist

Dr. Michael ginger, Dean of the School of Applied Sciences in the Department of Biological and geographical Science at the University of Huddersfield, in West Yorkshire, England discusses the atypical metabolism and evolutionary cell biology of parasitic and free-living protists, including Leishmania, Naegleria and  even euglinids.

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IBS Biomarkers and Diagnostic Diapers With Maria Eugenia Inda-Webb show art IBS Biomarkers and Diagnostic Diapers With Maria Eugenia Inda-Webb

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, Pew Postdoctoral Fellow working in the Synthetic Biology Center at MIT builds biosensors to diagnose and treat inflammatory disorders in the gut, like inflammatory bowel disease and celiac disease. She discusses how “wearables,” like diagnostic diapers and nursing pads could help monitor microbiome development to treat the diseases of tomorrow.   Subscribe (free) on , , , , or by . Ashley's Biggest Takeaways Biosensors devices that engineer living organisms or biomolocules to detect and report the presence of certain biomarkers.   The device consists of a bioreceptor...

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Peter Hotez talks about the global impact and historical context of neglected tropical diseases. He also highlights important developments in mass drug administration and vaccine research and shares why he chose to publish the third edition of Forgotten People, Forgotten Diseases during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Ashley's Biggest Takeaways


Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) are chronic and debilitating conditions that disproportionately impact people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). 

Many of these diseases are parasitic, such as hookworm infection, schistosomiasis and chagas disease; however, in recent years, several non-parasitic infections caused by bacteria, fungi and viruses, as well as a few conditions that are not infections, including snake bite and scabies (an ectoparasitic infestation), have been added to the original NTD framework (established in the early 2000s). 
What do most NTDs have in common?

High prevalence.
High mortality; low morbidity.
Disabling.
Interfere with people’s ability to work productively. 
Impact child development and/or the health of girls and women.
Occur in a setting of poverty and actually cause poverty because of chronic and debilitating effects.

Hotez and his colleagues recognized that there is a uniqueness to the NTDs ecosystem, and they began putting together a package of medicines that could be given on a yearly or twice per year basis, using a strategy called Mass Drug Administration (MDA). This involved the identification of medicines that were being used on an annual basis in vertical control programs and combining those medications in a package of interventions that costs about $0.50 per person per year. “Throw in an extra 50 cents per person and we could double or triple the impact of public health interventions,” he explained.  

Emerging diseases, such as SARS-CoV-2, capture the attention of the public for obvious reasons. They pose an imminent threat to mankind. NTDs are not emerging infections, but they are ancient afflictions that have plagued humankind for centuries and, as a consequence, have had a huge impact on ancient and modern history. One of the reasons we have mainland China and Taiwan today may have been, in part, due to a parasitic infection, Schistosomiasis.

Hotez and colleagues at the Texas Children’s Center for Vaccine Development have developed a COVID-19 vaccine, based on simple technology, similar to what is used for the Hepatitis B vaccine. They hope to release the vaccine for emergency use in resource poor countries like India and Indonesia. 

When asked about the timing of the publication of his book, the third edition of Forgotten People, Forgotten Diseases, Hotez acknowledged the difficulty of helping countries understand that NTDs have not gone away. COVID-19 is superimposed on top of them, and the pandemic has done a lot of damage in terms of NTD control. Although social disruption has interfered with the ability to deliver mass treatments, Hotez said that it has been gratifying to see that the USAID and their contractors have responded by putting out guidelines about how to deliver mass treatments with safe social distancing.

“As a global society, we have to figure out how to walk and chew gum at the same time,” he said. “We’ve got to take care of COVID, but we really must not lose the momentum we’ve had for NTDs because the prevalence is starting to decline and we’re really starting to make an impact.”