Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative pledges $3 billion to fight disease

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Chan was born in Braintree, a leafy suburban New England city in Massachuse­tts in America but grew up in Quincey, another New England town which is the birthplace of Dunkin’ Donuts and the Dropkick Murpheys and is ten miles from Boston.

Chan’s parents were ethnic Chinese refugees who fled Vietnam in refugee boats. In turn, she was raised speaking Cantonese and taking on the role of interprete­r for her grandparen­ts. “My mum working two jobs throughout my childhood, my grandparen­ts not speaking English … so it was my job to interpret for them,” she told The Today Programme in 2014 in one of her most candid interviews to date, admitting that as a child, she “was really uptight”.

In 2003, she graduated as class valedictor­ian, an academic title of success used in the US, from Quincy High School and was voted “class genius” by her classmates. After school, she joined

Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan on Wednesday pledged more than $3 billion toward a plan to “cure, prevent or manage all disease within our children’s lifetime.”

Speaking through tears at a San Francisco event to announce the initiative, Chan said she hoped to spare parents the pain she had seen while delivering difficult news as a pediatrici­an.

“In those moments and in many others we’re at the limit of what we understand about the human body and disease, the science behind medicine, the limit of our ability to alleviate suffering. We want to push back that boundary,” she said.

The event was attended by business and political luminaries including former Microsoft Corp Chairman Bill Gates, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee and California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom.

Zuckerberg said science and the medical community have made rapid advancemen­ts over the last 50 years, including eradicatin­g smallpox and nearly eliminatin­g polio without the aid of modern technology.

“Today, just four kinds of diseases cause the majority of deaths,” Zuckerberg added in a posting on his Facebook page, citing cancer, heart disease, infectious diseases and neu- Harvard University where she met Zuckerberg in 2003. The first person to go university in her family, she graduated with a BA in biology in 2007 and also studied Spanish. Wasting no time, she then started teaching science at the private Harker School for a year, before entering the medical school of the University of California in 2008.

She met Zuckerberg in the toilet queue at a frat party

In quintessen­tially American fashion, Chan met Zuckerberg in line for the bathroom at a frat party in 2003. Talking about their first encounter to The New Yorker in 2010, Chan said: “He was this nerdy guy who was just a little bit out there,” and recalled his novelty beer glasses imprinted with a computer programmin­g joke. Unlike the rest of the world, Chan knew Zuckerberg prior to him becoming a billionair­e. Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, Chan was one of the first people to join Facebook on 5 February 2004.

Testimony to Zuckerberg’s workaholic nature and Chan’s strict rological diseases. “We can make progress on all of them with the right technology.”

The plan includes creating a bioscience research center, called the Biohub, developing a chip to diagnose diseases, and ways to monitor the bloodstrea­m continuous­ly and map cell types in the body.

Chan and Zuckerberg will donate $600 million over the next decade to the Biohub in San Francisco, bringing together Bay-area researcher­s and scientists from the University of California at San Francisco, the University of California at Berkeley and Stanford University.

Two initial Biohub projects will be a Cell Atlas, a map of cells controllin­g the body’s major organs, and the Infectious Disease Initiative to develop new tools, tests, vaccines and strategies for fighting diseases such as HIV, Ebola and Zika.

The Biohub will be led by University of California, San Francisco professor Joseph DeRisi and Stanford University professor Stephen Quake, whose work includes small molecule screening and biological measuremen­ts.

Dr. Cori Bargmann, a Rockefelle­r University neuroscien­tist, will lead all of Chan Zuckerberg’s science initiative­s. meticulous­ness, Chan reportedly had a “relationsh­ip contract” with Zuckerberg at one point which stated: “One date per week, a minimum of a hundred minutes of alone time, not in his apartment and definitely not at Facebook.”

Neverthele­ss, this, of course, changed after they moved in together and later got married. Chan and Zuckerberg married on on 19 May 2012, just a day after Facebook’s stock market launch. Anonymous sources who attended the wedding leaked the dinner menu, which comprised of both sushi and Mexican food, and the fact that one of Billie Joe Armstrong from Green Day, one of Chan’s favourite bands, had performed. Unusually, the wedding was a surprise for all of the guests, who were duped into believing they were attending a surprise medical school graduation party for Chan.

She had three miscarriag­es before her daughter was born

The pair now has one daughter Maxima, who is was born in November 2015. In fact, it is her who the latest disease-curing initiative has been dedicated to. “We want to dramatical­ly improve every life in Max’s generation and make sure we don’t miss a single soul,” Chan said upon announcing the news. “We’ll be investing in basic science research with the goal of curing disease.”

Despite being a deeply private couple, Zuckerberg publicly announced that the pregnancy followed three miscarriag­es. “It’s a lonely experience. Most people don’t discuss miscarriag­es because you worry your problems will distance you or reflect upon you,” he wrote in a Facebook post. “So you struggle on your own. We hope that sharing our experience will give more people the same hope we felt and will help more people feel comfortabl­e sharing their stories.”

She is said to be protective of her husband

Having given few public appearance­s, little is known of Chan’s exact character but an unnamed person who knew her described her as a quiet yet forceful presence who is protective of her new husband to the New York Times. Despite having an active Facebook presence, it is rare for Chan to be tagged in party snaps.

She is a Buddhist

According to a Zuckerberg post from October 2015, Chan is a Buddhist. Given the lack of interviews she has given, one of the few ways to judge Chan’s interests are Facebook. According to the social media site, she is a fan of Taylor Swift, James Taylor, Green Day, Jay Z, Beyonce, Ingrid Michaelson, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, and her favourite books are Pride and Prejudice, Harry Potter, The House of Spies. Her likes include Bill Gates, Glee’s LeaMichell­e, Wall Street Journal, Alexander McQueen and National Geographic. Courtesy the Independen­t, UK

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