November 20, 2002: President's Page Meeting
the Challenges of Bioterrorism Our informal motto Princeton
in the nations service and in the service of all nations is
one that takes on special significance as the world engages in a battle
against international bioterrorism. Universities can assumeindeed
have an obligation to assumea lead role in addressing the critical
and complex scientific, technological, societal and policy challenges
posed by this growing threat. Two graduate students at Princeton, Rebecca
Katz and Scott Steele, helped arrange one of Princetons responses
to these challenges this fall. In 1995, while working in a
public health clinic in India, Rebecca Katz, currently a doctoral candidate
in the Woodrow Wilson School, contracted a disease caused by the bacterium
Brucella which is common in parts of Southeast Asia but rare in North
America. Being a responsible health care consumer, Rebecca conducted her
own in-depth study about its causes and effects. She discovered that the
best, most complete research existed in the bioweapons literature because
in the 1950s Brucella was the first agent weaponized for use against humans
by the U.S. While Rebecca eventually threw
off the more debilitating effects of the bug, an interest in bioweapons
remained with her. Her plan to go into public health took a distinct turn
toward bioweapons and civilian biodefense, and her challenge became finding
an institution and an adviser who would allow her to pursue what was then
a relatively esoteric interest. Professor Burton Singer, Charles and Marie
Robertson Professor of Public and International Affairs at Princeton,
was intrigued by the topic of bioweaponerys threat, which then was
related to but somewhat on the periphery of his own research interests.
Professor Singer convinced Rebecca that Princeton would be the best place
for her to pursue her doctoral work, in part because of the flexibility
we could afford her to study a topic that demands a cross-discipline approach.
This fall Rebecca teamed up
with Scott Steele, one of my own doctoral students in molecular biology,
to organize a conference around bioterrorism. Scotts interest in
the policy side of science dates back at least to his experience after
college working at the National Institutes of Health where he was exposed
to the public health threats of infectious disease. Their symposium this
fall on Science, Security and Preparedness attracted leading
experts from universities, the science community, government agencies,
and industry. The event succeeded just as the students intended; its sessions
educated the general public while providing experts with ample opportunity
to pool knowledge. This free flow of information,
especially among experts, was one of the fundamental issues discussed
during the symposium. As Margaret Hamburg, vice president for biological
programs at the Nuclear Threat Initiative in Washington, noted, government
scrutinyin the name of national securityof just how public
and accessible research on select agents should be is increasing. Science
is driven by the free exchange of ideas, and it is critical that the science
community engage actively in discussion with legislators and government
officials concerning what kinds of research truly need to remain confidential.
(Princeton has a long-standing policy of not conducting classified
research and of insisting that the research we do conduct be subject to
critical scrutiny and broad dissemination.) One of the most revealing sessions
was led by Jack Killen, assistant director for biodefense research at
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in the National
Institutes of Health. He noted that federal spending on biodefense had
been steady at about $50 million annually prior to the anthrax terrorism
that claimed five lives last year. In the current fiscal year, spending
jumped to $274 million, and the budget is expected to reach $1.75 billion
in 2004 and remain at that level indefinitely. As Dr. Killen said, such
a rapid increase in funding for any aspect of biomedical science is completely
unprecedented in the history of NIH. Universities and industry are
expected to receive about 85 percent of these research funds, which will
be overseen by Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who received an honorary degree from
Princeton last spring for his outstanding leadership in the fight against
another global threat, the AIDS epidemic. Dr. Killen hopes that the influx
of federal dollars will support basic research on biological scourges.
It is highly possible for bioweapons research to produce treatments for
diseases that are still common in some developing countries or, like the
West Nile virus, are spreading to the United States and other areas where
they were either unknown or thought to have been eradicated. This spill-over
effect from bioweapons research into other, potentially life-saving, fields
is extremely important, but such transfers are not new. As Professor of
Chemistry Warren Warren, acting director of the Center for Photonics and
Optoelectronic Materials, aptly puts it: Many of the spectacular
achievements of twentieth century science followed the same simple paradigm:
as new directions in basic atomic physics matured, they were adopted by
chemists and applied physicists. This work in turn enabled applications
in biological, clinical, and environmental science, driven both by universities
and by innovative companies. These are challenging times,
but with concerned, responsible and well educated citizens like Rebecca
and Scott, we have a better chance of turning these challenges into opportunities
that can benefit all humankind.
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