About Going viral: How Covid changed science forever

In three Lectures epidemiologist Jonathan Van-Tam will take a deep dive into viruses and reveal why discoveries and advances made during the on-going pandemic mean biological science will never be the same again.

Jonathan Van-Tam
Paul Wilkinson

In the 2021 CHRISTMAS LECTURES from the Royal Institution, Jonathan Van-Tam will be joined by expert British scientists who all played vital roles in the Covid-19 pandemic, to reveal how new discoveries are set to change the future of medicine. 

With millions of lives at stake and no treatments or vaccines to hand, these scientists fell back on tried and tested principles of contact tracing and isolation. Alongside this, they accelerated their research to achieve the impossible. They raced to understand the virus’s biology, to find treatments and create vaccines that could bring the pandemic under control. And they succeeded. Within 11 months the first vaccine was produced – a process that often takes 10 years.

Jonathan will show how public health measures, combined with ground-breaking science will have an impact far beyond Covid-19.

There are biomedical breakthroughs that could help fight other infectious diseases, genetic disorders and even cancer. From advances in early detection techniques – lateral flow tests, blood tests and wearable tech which can detect illnesses before symptoms are even noticeable – to rapid genome sequencing that could be used to speed up cancer diagnosis or assess organ donor compatibility, to the world’s first mRNA vaccines which could be used to treat Malaria and HIV.

Data has been shared across the world and rapid clinical trials have tested the efficacy of new drugs. Biological and epidemiological science will never be the same again. 

The Royal Institution is closed 19 March

The Ri is closed this week on Tuesday 19 March.