In 2019, COVID-19 became a household name, but as new diseases emerge researchers remain in a biological arms race trying to keep ahead of the next pandemic.
Thanks to a $7.5 million grant, an emerging diseases research facility will be increasing its biodefense research capabilities with updated safety infrastructure.
The National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL) on Albany Street is one of only two National Biocontainment Laboratories in the country equipped for biodefense research on maximum containment pathogens, like the Ebola and Nipa viruses.
At
the NEIDL annual meeting on November 14, chief safety officer Kevin
Tuohey detailed the plans for the approved grant, which remains in the
design phase until final approval from the National Institutes of
Health.
Funds will be
used to modernize the ventilation systems of high containment labs and
convert airlocks on maximum containment labs to include full chemical
shower decontamination capability.
Money
is also planned for containment labs researching vector transmitted
diseases like West Nile and Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), a
mosquito transmitted disease that put large areas of Eastern and Central
Massachusetts on high alert this summer due to a rising prevalence of
infections.
“Aedes
aegypti, a mosquito that can carry and transmit diseases like dengue
fever, chikungunya, Zika fever and yellow fever viruses, is typically
found in tropical and subtropical climates. But
as the climate warms, the mosquito has been found as far north as Canada
and has the potential to become a regular nuisance in New England and
Canada by 2100,” said a spokesperson for NEIDL in a statement over
email.
As the facility
is located right off Interstate-93 on the BU Medical Campus, NEIDL
works closely with city and state health entities as well as federal,
like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on safety
procedures. NEILD has an impeccable safety record, passing over 20
inspections this year, both announced and unannounced.
During
the public comments section of the annual meeting, some attendees
expressed concerns that the coming federal administration of President
elect Donald Trump could have a negative impact on NEIDL funding and
safety standards. Trump’s nomination for health secretary, former
independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr, is a vocal
vaccine sceptic and has a history of spreading healthcare misinformation
with a potential body count.
Four
months before a deadly measles outbreak hit Samoa in 2019, Kennedy and
his anti-vax nonprofit, Children’s Health Defense, were at the small
island nation providing public support for anti-vaccination figures. The
year before, an improperly mixed vaccination had killed two infants in
an isolated incident for which two nurses received a prison sentence. As
a result of the anti-vaccine movement, the nation’s vaccination rate
fell from 60% - 70% to just 31%. When the Measles outbreak hit the
under-vaccinated population, it killed 83 people, mostly children.
Following
the outbreak, Kennedy doubled down in a letter to the Samoan prime
minister, saying, “There is also the possibility that children who
received the live measles virus during Samoa’s recent vaccination drive
may have shed the virus and inadvertently infected vulnerable
children... Further boosting with MMR vaccine might only exacerbate the
situation and further spread the disease.”
Just
this year, NEIDL announced breakthrough progress on a new RNA vaccine
that could have longer-lasting immunization effects than current
COVID-19 vaccines, but still requires years of research.
In
response to concerns, a spokesperson at the NEIDL meeting said, “We
will always have the highest safety standards regardless of who is
funding us. We are a private entity, and we need to go two steps
beyond.” Due to working closely with city and state health entities,
NEIDL also reassured that policy changes at the federal level would not
impact local safety standards.