Galileo, Home COVID Monitoring Tech, Origin Of The Feces. May 15, 2020, Part 2
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 15 May 2020
⏱️ 46 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Plato. A bit later in the hour, I look back at Galileo with Mario Livio and also the power of fossilized feces. Yeah. But first, one of the keys to managing the COVID-19 epidemic is data, accurate data from lots of people and lots of communities. Who's sick? Who's not? Where are the hotspots? |
| 0:22.3 | And can we learn anything from the patterns of who gets sick and who gets better? |
| 0:27.0 | But how to collect that reliable data? |
| 0:29.3 | Maybe it's a better test available to more people. |
| 0:32.9 | Maybe it's tracking your own health on a smartwatch or other device. |
| 0:37.3 | Maybe some answers already exist |
| 0:39.0 | in our medical data and we just need to sort through them and find out. Joining me now |
| 0:45.1 | to talk about how technology can help us get and manage all that data and what we might be |
| 0:50.2 | able to learn from it is Dr. Eric Topol. He's the founder and director of the Scripps |
| 0:55.0 | Research Translational Institute, a professor of molecular medicine, and executive vice president |
| 1:00.9 | of Scripps Research in La Jolla, California. Welcome back to Science Friday, Eric. |
| 1:06.5 | Oh, great to be with you again, Ira. |
| 1:09.0 | One of the things that keeps coming up during this pandemic is testing. |
| 1:13.3 | And recently the FDA has given the OK to a couple of at-home tests. |
| 1:18.6 | Can you tell us a little about them, what you think of them, how reliable they're turning out to be? |
| 1:24.1 | Well, I think the at-home path is probably the best of all, just because you can then get to the massive scale that we need to. |
| 1:32.3 | In working with the Rockefeller Foundation, our action plan called for 30 million tests a week, and it's going to be hard to achieve that level without being able to use the home, at least a large part of the testing path. |
| 1:46.5 | Now, the tests that have been approved to date for the home are not as accurate as we'd like. |
| 1:52.7 | For the test that we'd like to see, it would get to very high levels of sensitivity to try to get |
| 1:59.3 | that false negative rate for the virus or the antigen. |
| 2:04.2 | They're both two different ways that you can detect an infection. |
| 2:07.7 | Get that rate as low as possible. |
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