Vaccines, Viruses, and Us
Vaccines have saved more lives than almost any other human invention. They’re so effective that the diseases they prevented all but disappeared from collective memory. Now, childhood immunization rates are falling. Measles, declared eliminated in 2000, is back. Federal agencies are being reshaped by officials who have questioned whether vaccines work at all. And a growing movement of influencers, parents, and politicians is challenging not just individual shots but the very idea that public health is a shared obligation.
So, where did this come from, what is actually going on, and what do we do about it? How did vaccines become one of the defining political fault lines of this moment—and how can trust in public health be repaired? To learn more, David Wallace-Wells, author of The Uninhabitable Earth, hosted a conversation with Dr. Demetre Daskalakis—an infectious disease physician and former director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases—and Jessica Malaty, an infectious disease epidemiologist and science communicator whose research focuses on trust in public health. ♦