How to Prevent the Next Pandemic: Nature Based Solutions and Policy Opportunities

Reducing the risk of future pandemics requires investment in prevention, preparedness, and response. However, primary pandemic prevention (preventing zoonotic spillover) has been largely absent in global conversations, policy guidance, and practice in part because there is a lack of a clear definition of prevention and lack of clear guidance on how to do this. Ecological countermeasures—actions that protect and restore wildlife habitat or mitigate wildlife-human interactions—provide many benefits including preventing pandemics at the source. Such action is critical, and we believe, our best path forward, because as the effects of anthropogenic change increase, the risk of pandemics will, too.

Moderated by award-winning science writer David Quammen, opening statement by Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove (WHO), and hosted by Dr. Raina Plowright (Cornell), this panel-style webinar with ten global and cross-disciplinary experts, offers a summary of the key strategies for pandemic prevention including the fundamental drivers of pandemics, the strategies we can take to prevent them, and the current policy opportunities for primary pandemic prevention.

What You’ll Learn:

● How human activity and environmental change increase the risk of virus spillover from animals to humans
● How we can stop spillover events by addressing the fundamental drivers of spillover through ecological countermeasures
● How key strategic ecological countermeasures (beyond the current general guidance “prevent deforestation”) can be deployed
● How pandemics solutions intersect climate change and biodiversity loss solutions
● Effective and clear recommendations for policy makers to integrate pandemic prevention alongside global preparedness efforts

MODERATOR & PANELISTS:

  • David Quammen; Science Writer
  • Maria Van Kerkhove; World Health Organization COVID-19 Technical Lead and Emerging Diseases and Zoonoses Lead in the Department of Prevention and Preparedness of Epidemics and Pandemics
  • Raina Plowright; Professor; Disease Ecology and Cornell Atkinson Scholar, Department of Public and Ecosystem Health, Cornell University (United States)
  • DeeAnn Reeder; Professor of Biology; Bucknell University (United States)
  • Neil Vora; Pandemic Prevention Fellow; Conservation International (United States)
  • Abi Vanak; Director; Centre for Policy Design (India)
  • Teague O’Mara; Director of Conservation Evidence; Bat Conservation International(United States)
  • Benjamin Roche; Research Director; French Research Institute for SustainableDevelopment (France)
  • Iroro Tanshi; Co-Founder; Small Mammal Conservation Organization (Nigeria)
  • Aliyu Nuhu Ahmed, PhD student, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Gambia)