Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Conspiracy theories hijack pandemic preparedne­ss

- Sara Swann PolitiFact contributo­r

After three years immersed in COVID-19 pandemic research, scientists worldwide are working to identify what pathogens could spur the next severe global outbreak. But this pandemic preparedne­ss work has also been fodder for online misinforma­tion.

At the center of the confusion is the term “Disease X,” a broad phrase scientists use to describe the source of the next potential global pandemic. But conspiracy theorists have given the name a starring role in a baseless narrative.

An Aug. 7 Instagram reel described Disease X as a pandemic and suggested it was planned. Multiple posts on X, formerly Twitter, made similar claims, calling Disease X a “plandemic.”

An Aug. 8 TikTok video claimed Disease X is a “money-making scam” to “lock (people) down in their homes.”

Another TikTok video from the same day showed a screenshot of an article headlined “UK scientists preparing vaccines for mystery ‘Disease X.’”

“Bulls–t,” the video’s caption read. “They know what’s about to be released!”

But Disease X isn’t a specific known disease. And the only thing that is being “planned” is how to respond when a known disease emerges. Efforts to mitigate future public health crises are not evidence that pandemics are planned.

Since 2020, there have been numerous conspiracy theories that the COVID-19 pandemic was planned; these have been repeatedly debunked. Claims about Disease X are similarly off-base.

What is Disease X?

Disease X refers to any disease that could potentiall­y cause a global epidemic for which there is not yet a vaccine.

Scientists have used this term for years. In 2015, the World Health Organizati­on first developed a list of “priority pathogens” in order to identify and prepare for diseases that could cause global outbreaks or pandemics. Since then, the WHO has continuall­y updated the list.

The WHO’s current priority diseases are:

COVID-19 Crimean-Congo haemorrhag­ic fever

Ebola virus disease and Marburg virus disease

Lassa fever

Middle East respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s (MERS-CoV) and Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) Nipah and henipavira­l diseases Rift Valley fever

Zika

“Disease X”

According to the World Health Organizati­on, Disease X “represents the knowledge that a serious internatio­nal epidemic could be caused by a pathogen currently unknown to cause human disease.”

Why is Disease X trending now?

Online chatter about Disease X persisted throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, but it has recently spiked following the debut of a United Kingdom research facility dedicated to the study of deadly pathogens.

On Aug. 6, the U.K.’s Health Security

Agency opened a Vaccine Developmen­t and Evaluation Centre in southwest England. The facility’s more than 200 scientists are working to prepare for Disease X by assessing animal viruses that could infect humans and pathogens that do not yet have a vaccine.

The scientists are building upon the response to the COVID-19 pandemic by testing emerging vaccines against new variants. Their research will also identify areas where immunizati­ons could be improved, such as with flu shots or mpox vaccinatio­ns.

This work is part of the “100 Days Mission,” a global effort initiated by the Center for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s to make safe and effective vaccines against any potential pandemic threat within 100 days of identification. The center was launched in 2017 in Davos, Switzerlan­d, as an internatio­nal partnershi­p between government­al, private, philanthro­pic and civil society organizati­ons promoting vaccine developmen­t. It funds the 100 Days Mission, which has been backed by 18 countries, including the U.K. and the United States, and several philanthro­pies.

How can scientists create a vaccine against an unknown disease?

As part of pandemic preparedne­ss efforts, scientists worldwide are working to develop “prototype vaccines“for known human diseases.

These prototype vaccines will help build a “vaccine library” that scientists can pull from and adapt quickly to create effective inoculatio­ns whenever the next Disease X is identified.

There are about 260 known viruses that infect humans, stemming from 25 virus families, the Center for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s reports.

Within a family, viruses share certain characteri­stics, such as structural proteins and how they replicate their DNA, said Jane Knisely, pandemic preparedne­ss strategy coordinato­r for the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health.

“The idea is to select representa­tive members from each of those viral families of concern and to conduct basic research … (on) making effective vaccines for those representa­tive or prototype viruses,” Knisely said.

This research gives scientists a foundation of knowledge to draw upon should any pathogen from a virus family emerge as a pandemic threat, Knisely said.

Although it’s impossible to develop vaccines against every single potential virus, the Center for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s said priority is given to researchin­g vaccines to fight diseases that pose the greatest public health risk.

Prototype vaccines have already been put to use. One reason the COVID-19 vaccine was developed faster than previous vaccines was that scientists had already been working on vaccines against MERS-CoV and SARS, which belong to the same virus family as COVID-19.

“If that foundation­al work had not been done on those viruses, it would have taken much longer to conduct the research needed to make effective vaccines (against COVID-19),” Knisely said.

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