Jacob Trefethen on Global Health R&D

Hear This Idea

Jacob Trefethen oversees Open Philanthropy’s science and science policy programs. He was a Henry Fellow at Harvard University, and has a B.A. from the University of Cambridge.

You can find links and a transcript at www.hearthisidea.com/episodes/trefethen

In this episode we talked about open source the risks and benefits of open source AI models. We talk about:

  • Life-saving health technologies which probably won't exist in 5 years (without a concerted effort) — like a widely available TB vaccine, and bugs which stop malaria spreading
  • How R&D for neglected diseases works —
  • How much does the world spend on it?
  • How do drugs for neglected diseases go from design to distribution?
  • No-brainer policy ideas for speeding up global health R&D
  • Comparing health R&D to public health interventions (like bed nets)
  • Comparing the social returns to frontier (‘Progress Studies’) to global health R&D
  • Why is there no GiveWell-equivalent for global health R&D?
  • Won't AI do all the R&D for us soon?

You can get in touch through our website or on Twitter. Consider leaving us an honest review wherever you're listening to this — it's the best free way to support the show. Thanks for listening!

To listen to explicit episodes, sign in.

Stay up to date with this show

Sign in or sign up to follow shows, save episodes and get the latest updates.

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada