The Flu Hunter
For years, Robert Webster has been warning of a global influenza outbreak. Now governments worldwide are finally listening to him
- By Michael Rosenwald
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Webster says the world is teetering on the edge of a knife blade. He thinks that H5N1 poses the most serious public health threat since the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 40 million to 100 million people worldwide. Though the H5N1 strain has so far shown no signs that it will acquire the ability to transmit easily from person to person—all evidence is that flu victims in Vietnam and Thailand acquired the virus from direct contact with infected poultry—that has provided Webster no comfort. It’s only a matter of time before this virus, as he puts it, “goes off.” He has been saying this for several years. The world is finally taking notice. Elaborate plans are now being created in dozens of countries to deal with a pandemic. In November, President Bush requested that $7.1 billion be set aside to prepare for one, with hundreds of millions of dollars to be spent on further developing a new vaccine that was recently hatched in Webster’s lab.
Webster has been advising federal health officials every step of the way. He does so out of fear of this virus and also because it is his job. When the H5N1 strain emerged in the late 1990s, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases awarded Webster a major contract to establish a surveillance center in Hong Kong, to determine the molecular basis of transmission of avian flu viruses and isolate strains that would be suitable to develop vaccines. “He’s certainly one of those people in this field who have been way ahead of the curve in bringing attention to this issue,” Anthony Fauci, the institute’s director, told me. “He was out ahead of the pack. He’s one of the handful of people who have not only been sounding the alarm, but working to prevent this thing from turning into something that nobody wants to see happen.”
Webster’s job keeps him out of the country two to three weeks a month. Back in Memphis, his lab analyzes samples of influenza virus strains from around the world, to see how they are mutating. Recently, health officials have reported finding H5N1 avian flu in birds in Turkey, Romania, Croatia and Kuwait. It has not yet been found in birds in North America. If H5N1 makes its way here, Webster will likely be among the first to know.
This past June, I caught up with Webster at a meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, in Atlanta, where he was scheduled to deliver a speech about the threat of bird flu. There were more than 5,000 microbiologists in attendance, which, because I am a recovering hypochondriac, I found strangely comforting. Walking around with Webster at a meeting of scientists is an experience that must be similar to walking around with Yo-YoMa at a meeting of cellists. When Webster walked by, people suddenly stopped speaking, a fact to which he seemed oblivious.
He opened his talk by asking a series of intriguing questions: “Will the H5N1 currently circulating in Vietnam learn to transmit, reproduce, from human to human? Why hasn’t it done so already? It’s had three years to learn how, and so what’s it waiting for? Why can’t it finish the job? We hope it doesn’t.”
He paused. “Is it the pig that’s missing in the story?” Webster explained that the strain is still not capable of acquiring the final ingredient needed to fuel a pandemic: the ability to transmit from person to person. For that to happen, Webster and others believe that a version of the human flu virus, which is easily transmittable between people, and the H5N1 avian virus have to infect the same mammalian cell at the same time and have virus sex. If H5N1 picks up those genes from the human flu virus that enable it to spread from person to person, Webster says that virtually nobody will have immunity to it. If an effective vaccine based specifically on that newly emerged virus isn’t quickly available, and if antiviral drugs aren’t also, many deaths will ensue.
Watching Webster speak, I couldn’t help thinking that animals are not always our friends. It turns out that animals are a frequent source of what ails us. University of Edinburgh researchers recently compiled a rather frightening list of 1,415 microbes that cause diseases in humans. Sixty-one percent of those microbes are carried by animals and transmitted to humans. Cats and dogs are responsible for 43 percent of those microbes, according to the Edinburgh researchers; horses, cattle, sheep, goats and pigs transmit 39 percent; rodents, 23 percent; birds, 10 percent. Primates originally transmitted AIDS to humans. Cows transmit bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease. In their 2004 book, Beasts of the Earth: Animals, Humans and Disease, the physicians E. Fuller Torrey and Robert Yolken cite evidence suggesting that a parasite transmitted by cats, Toxoplasma gondii, causes schizophrenia. Acouple of years ago, the monkeypox virus broke out among several people in the Midwest who had recently had close contact with pet prairie dogs.
And then there are pigs. For many years, Webster has theorized that pigs are the mixing bowls for pandemic flu outbreaks. He has actually enshrined the theory in his house. He has a stained-glass window next to his front door that depicts what he perceives to be the natural evolution of flu pandemics. At the top of the glass, birds fly. Below them, a pig grazes. Man stands off to the left. Below all of them are circles that represent viruses and seem to be in motion. They are set in a backdrop of fever red.
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Comments (1)
I am a Special Education and Literature teacher for Middle Grades, and had frequently been told that my "expectations were too high" when people learned that these 10-13 year old students, many with diagnosed learning disabilities or behavioral problems, were reading articles and completing projects from Smithsonian Magazine. In 2006 my 7th grade class did a project with this article as the centerpiece. It was a surprise "hit" with the students, many following up independantly on viral research, and many predicting what was, as we see, sure to come. I am awed today at the ramifications of the coincidence, and the fulfilled expectations.
Posted by Kelly Reece on April 30,2009 | 07:59 PM