Surname 2
scientist who have worked in the most delicate laboratories across the globe. First, he talked to
Keiji Fukuda World Health Organization's headquarters, in Geneva. Fukuda worked as assistant
director-general for health, security, and environment, overseeing influenza planning at the time
of the interview. Fukuda and other researchers were doing a research on how the bird flu infected
and killed millions of birds and a number of people in Hong Kong (Specter 1). The group did not
make progress with findings and so they decided to kill all the birds in Hong Kong and the
disease disappeared only to appear later in Thailand. H5N1 was the virus causing the flu but
scientists needed to discover how the virus was transferred from birds to humans because it was
not scientifically possible. Discovering the connection was the only way to stop the flu from
killing people. The scientist took to the laboratory to uncover the truth, ferrets were used in the
lab to study how the virus mutated in the human body (Specter 2). Fouchier also examined the
virus and found out that with its kind of multiple mutations, it was going to be hard to eradicate it
completely. Yoshihiro Kawaoka did another time the same research which ended up creating a
horrifying type of the same virus. The finding only led the scientists to be more worried that the
virus could be used as a terror weapon.
Specter also interviewed Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease
Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota Health Center. Osterholm was one of the
experts on influenza and bioterrorism at the time. Osterholm expressed his fears that most of the
laboratory works could be used by terrorist to cause massive death. The expert gave an example
of a medical photographer who died in England through a smallpox virus made in the lab where
she was working (Specter 3). He also gave an instance where H1N1--"swine flu was stored
between northern China and Russia border and would later spread to the rest of the world
causing many deaths. According to Osterholm, many people are infected with mistakes made in