Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Researchers Conducted A Pandemic Simulation To See How We'd Do—And Let's Just Say We're Doomed

Researchers Conducted A Pandemic Simulation To See How We'd Do—And Let's Just Say We're Doomed
Getty Images

According to this recent study, if a major pandemic broke out now, at least 15 million Americans would be dead.


Experts at Johns Hopkins Centre for Health Security worked with politicians to gauge how the United States would do if a new, contagious disease were to break out.



Some of the politicians involved in the study were Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, Indiana Representative Susan Brooks (R) and former CDC Director Julie Gerberding.



They were involved in a day-long exercise to see how well the government would react to a moderately contagious and moderately deadly virus. The set-up for the exercise was as follows:


  • The virus, dubbed Clade X, originated in Frankfurt, Germany and Caracas, Venezuela.
  • The virus is transmitted primarily by coughing
  • Doctors cannot find an effective vaccine or antiviral
  • Cases of the virus have just been reported at a small college in Massachusetts

The study continued by combining elements of past incidents of natural and chemically-engineered viruses, both real and invented.



The government officials and scholars in attendance had to take the elements given to them and make decisions on things such as travel bans to Germany and Venezuela, sending troops to aid sick communities abroad, and how to prioritize a vaccine should one be developed.



Part of the purpose behind the exercise was to provide a real-life simulation for the new members of the Trump administration.



By the end of the day (20 months in simulated time), Clade X, later revealed to be chemically engineered by a terrorist group, had killed 150 million people around the globe — 2 percent of the world's population. It had killed 15 to 20 million in the United States alone.



If a vaccine were still unable to be developed, death tolls could climb to 900 million people or more than 10% of the global population.



People are concerned for the future.













Others believe the study should serve as a wake-up call.













The designer of the Clade X simulation, Dr. Eric Toner, said,


"I think we learned that even very knowledgeable, experienced, devoted senior public officials who have lived through many crises still have trouble dealing with something like this .

"And it's not because they are not good or smart or dedicated, it's because we don't have the systems we need to enable the kind of response we'd want to see."



He concluded saying,


"We don't have the ability to produce vaccines to a novel pathogen within months rather than decades and we don't have the global public health capabilities that would allow us to rapidly identify and control an outbreak before it becomes a pandemic.

"It will happen, but I don't know when."



H/T: Indy100, Washington Post, Business Insider

More from News

Donald Trump holding photos of White House ballroom
Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty Images

CNN Just Used A Hilarious Poll To Show Just How Unpopular Trump's Ballroom Is—And We're Cackling

After President Donald Trump claimed that his new White House ballroom is "very popular" with the American public, CNN shared a hilariously shady poll that gets to the truth of the matter.

Last year, Trump ordered the demolition of the entire East Wing to make way for a 90,000 square-foot ballroom that will dwarf the size of the White House itself, sparking alarm from historical preservationists and the public alike.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @devynnehaddoxx's TikTok video
@devynnehaddoxx/TikTok

Woman In Labor Times How Long Her Husband Takes To Poop To See If She Can Push Their Baby Out Faster In Hilarious Viral Video

It's well-known across the internet that it takes forever for men to use the restroom. For dads especially, in the time it takes them to poop, when they return to the house, their kids will have aged seven years, and their baby will have learned to walk.

These are jokes, of course, but it's an internet consensus that men spend a really long time on the porcelain throne.

Keep ReadingShow less
David Letterman (left) has continued defending Stephen Colbert (right) as CBS faces backlash over canceling The Late Show.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images; Gilbert Carrasquillo/GC Images

David Letterman Rips 'Lying Weasels' At CBS For Claiming Colbert Was Canceled For Financial Reasons In Epic Takedown

David Letterman isn’t staying quiet about CBS canceling The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. As Colbert’s run comes to an end later this month, the former late-night host is publicly challenging the network’s claim that the decision was purely financial.

Letterman, who hosted The Late Show from 1993 until stepping down in 2015, addressed the controversy during a new interview with New York Times journalist Jason Zinoman.

Keep ReadingShow less
Antonia Eastwood; Gemma Monk
Antonia Eastwood/MSN; Cover Images

Woman Speaks Out After Prison Sentence To Reveal What Led Her To Hurl Black Paint At Sister-In-Law On Her Wedding Day

In early 2024, 49-year-old Antonia Eastwood married Ashley Monk after about five months of dating. During the ceremony, Antonia tripped while walking down the aisle.

Antonia and Ashley were both suspicious that she did not trip accidentally and that Ashley's sister, Gemma, actually tripped her. Gemma and Antonia were not close, and the couple also believed that Gemma might be jealous that they were marrying after five months, though she'd been with her childhood sweetheart for 20 years without tying the knot.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billie Eilish on 'Good Hang'
Good Hang with Amy Poehler/YouTube

Billie Eilish's Refreshingly Blunt Take On Aging And 'Botched' Plastic Surgery Has Fans Nodding Hard

You know what they say: the grass is greener on the other side. Most people want something that they don't have.

While many people right now are fixated on appearing younger than their age, Billie Eilish—who already looks younger than her age—is looking forward to what comes next.

Keep ReadingShow less