- Original Article
- https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/jun/26/vaccinologist-sarah-gilbert-vaxxers-astrazeneca-we-need-to-be-better-prepared-for-a-new-pandemic
June 26, 2022
The Guardian
(Gilbert with her Barbie doll. Photograph: Andy Paradise/REX/Shutterstock)
The woman who co-developed the AstraZeneca
vaccine on reassuring doubters, her new book and having a baby penguin named
after her.
Dame Sarah Gilbert, 60, is a professor of
vaccinology at Oxford’s Jenner Institute and author, with Catherine Green, head
of Oxford University’s clinical biomanufacturing facility, of Vaxxers – a
gripping narrative about developing the AstraZeneca vaccine that is wonderfully
accessible and illuminating without dumbing down the science. She lives in
Oxford with her husband and grownup triplets.
Another wave of Covid-19 is reported to be
on its way. To what extent are you able to anticipate what the virus will do
next and prepare?
Anticipating what the virus will do next is
the job of those who do surveillance in epidemiology. But if a new sequence is
thought to be becoming dominant, our problem is that making a new version of
the vaccine takes time and has to be tested and approved. What’s been
happening, as we go through one wave after another, is that the virus has been
too quick. Regulators cannot approve a vaccine unless they can see the clinical
data, then you have to scale up manufacturing to produce the vaccine in
quantity. Developers are still using the original vaccines, which are supplying
good protection against the disease.
In your book, you answer the fear, felt by
some people, that the vaccine was produced too quickly.
We moved from vaccine production to
licensure as quickly as possible. But every single thing we normally do when
developing a vaccine was done, it was just that we worked very hard to cut out
all delays in that process. This was only possible because there was one
project in the world that everyone cared about and regulators were able to
remove bottlenecks in their process.
The vaccine was presented in the media as a
competition between manufacturers.
When we started, nobody had any certainty
over what would work; it was important to have as many options in development
as possible. We had multiple successful vaccines, which was wonderful. Pfizer,
Moderna and AstraZeneca were licensed for emergency use early and yet there
were still shortages in vaccine production.
Your book powerfully reassures vaccine
doubters. I wonder if you agree that the psychology behind the vaccine-averse
might partly be in reaction to months of being told how to live, or not live –
and be a wish to reclaim control?
There might be something in that. In some countries,
people do not want to be vaccinated because their government recommends it and
they don’t trust their government. I don’t think that was a feature in the UK
because, whatever people’s view on government, they recognise the input of the
NHS. But a lot of the hesitancy among younger people was because they were
receiving misinformation, sometimes through friends whose opinions they
trusted.
Is there any risk that Covid-19, instead of becoming more transmissible and less deadly, might return as a more severe variant?
The truth is we don’t know where Covid-19
is going next. It could continue to become milder or it could become a more
severe disease again.
Are we over-reliant on the vaccine’s
efficacy in the UK and becoming slipshod in no longer wearing face masks? Do
you still wear a mask?
I’ve more or less stopped. I had about a
year of always following the guidance. But recently, there hasn’t been any
guidance. I’ve travelled on the tube without a mask. I got Covid, for the first
time, about 10 days ago. It was like having an unpleasant cold and didn’t worry
me. It only lasted a few days and I was fine again.
To what extent was having triplets good
preparation for the stamina you’ve needed professionally?
If you’ve been through having triplets, you
realise that when the chips are down and you have to do something, you can.
People often do more than they expect of themselves – when there’s a need to
find the strength and energy to get a job done.
What was your most stressful moment?
Ironically, it was when we got the efficacy
result in November 2020. It was complicated because there were different levels
of efficacy in different parts of the trial. Everybody had been working flat
out for months and was very tired. Those leading the project had to go into
pretty gruelling media interviews. I was doing two hours of back-to-back
15-minute interviews without a break. It was wonderful to have the result but
having to explain it was challenging.
And yet somehow you found time to write a
book.
I’d do it whenever I had a spare moment. A
small part of it, I dictated as I was walking. I sometimes walk to work when
the weather is nice as it gives my brain a rest and nobody can interrupt me.
It must have been hard for your family
having you consumed by work.
It’s difficult to take any time away from
the job I do. I find it really hard to switch off. I need to get better at
that. It was difficult for all of us – they did whatever they could to support
me.
Oxford has made you a professor of
vaccinology – it must be a delight to have that recognition.
I’ve had the title from 2010 but now have
an endowed chair. It’s very gratifying but none of the people who work for me
have secure jobs, so I’m still raising funds to keep them in post. I’m
recruiting staff for my research group (on vaccines that are not for Covid and
on vaccine technology) and am very, very busy. We’ve lost a lot of staff who
are exhausted and no longer willing to put up with short-term, not particularly
well-paid jobs. The funding really needs to change though I don’t see any
short-term prospect of it getting better.
You’ve had a Barbie doll named after you –
what does she look like? And a baby penguin at London Zoo?
I can show you [she produces a bespectacled
Barbie with straight red hair, face mask dangling from her hand]. Can you see?
She’s not a bad likeness and – look – I really like her little mask. I’ve
visited the baby penguin and fed it some fish – that was quite fun.
You have a mug saying “Keep calm and
develop vaccines”. Who gave it to you?
It was a Secret Santa present at work. The
mug is now with the Science Museum in London. But I want to show you something
else: my daughter embroidered this [a little sampler with the same message
stitched in place].
I’ve read that you keep calm and garden
when you can – how is your garden doing?
Really, really bad. It’s been overtaken by
weeds. It’s a small garden and because of being busy all my life, I designed it
to be low-maintenance, but it does require some intervention and recently
hasn’t had any.
Your book sees a new pandemic as a future
certainty. What should we do differently next time around?
We need to be better prepared in many
different areas. In vaccine development, there are viruses we already know can
cause disease outbreaks, yet we don’t yet have a vaccine against them. We
should be developing vaccines now against all those and having them ready so
that if there is an outbreak, we’ve got the vaccine to cope with it.