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forgotpwagain | 6 months ago

The cynical part of me wonders: if this has been a promising approach for 10+ years, why weren't they able to secure VC funding years ago (or nonprofit biomedical research funding from places like the Gates Foundation that care a lot about infectious disease)?

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Alex3917|6 months ago

This. Claims of a universal antiviral are as old as western medicine itself. Literally the only reason anyone knows what the Hippocratic oath is is because Hippocrates was already famous at the time for promoting elderberry as the universal antiviral.

abeppu|6 months ago

My understanding is that the _concept_ of a virus wasn't even established until the late 19th century, because we first needed the germ theory, and then we needed to understand bacteria well enough to have a filter whose pores were known to be smaller than bacteria could pass through, but which some _other_ infection agent could still pass through.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_virology#Discovery

Hippocrates could recommend elderberry for a bunch of ailments, but he didn't have the concept of a "universal antiviral".

0xDEAFBEAD|6 months ago

Did Hippocrates know the difference between viral and bacterial infections?

ajmurmann|6 months ago

Definitely! However, the parent made it sound like the pharma industry put it in a giant warehouse next to the arch of the covenant

Spooky23|6 months ago

There’s alot of promising approaches and investments made.

The miracle of the mRNA covid vaccine and the use of that framework to treat cancer is a good example.

As we wind down research in the US, there will be lots of churn as the market finds new approaches to development.

codr7|6 months ago

Because curing profits isn't really on their priority list at all, it's all virtue posturing.