The Guardian view on Covid science: cooperation, not just competition | Editorial

Scientists should follow the example of the Chinese professor whose selfless decision to share his breakthrough led to the medical miracle of a vaccineThere are many people deserving of praise for selfless acts during the past 12 months. But one person whose act of scientific generosity ought to be remembered isZhang Yongzhen. The scientist, who works out of the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Centre, was the first to map the whole genome sequence of Sars-CoV-2. He did so on 5 January 2020 and hoped to share it with researchers by uploading his work to the US National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI).The professor knew he was dealing with a deadly virus – but he had no idea how dangerous. The pathogen has killed more than 1.7 million people and shut down nations, leaving a trail of economic disruption. Concerned that the NCBI would take its time, the scientist sanctioned the sequence’sglobal public release via an Australian colleague. On 11 January, when Wuhan recorded its first Covid death, the virus ’s genomic sequence was posted on anopen access site. The 28,000 letters of Covid ’s genetic code allowed Oxford University’sJenner Institute,Moderna and BioNTech to design their vaccines in days. Testing took the rest of the year. To go from an unknown lethal new virus to an approved vaccine in months is a medical miracle. While the immediate sharing of data from a dangerous infectious disease might seem obvious, it goes against the grain of the way science...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Coronavirus Medical research Infectious diseases Microbiology Science China World news Asia Pacific Source Type: news