back to indexAlbert Bourla: Pfizer CEO | Lex Fridman Podcast #249
Chapters
0:0 Introduction
3:43 Clinical trials
19:47 Trust
39:35 Safety
49:51 Booster shots
52:45 Mandates
59:14 Antivirals
64:13 Hope for future
00:00:00.000 |
The following is a conversation with Albert Bourla, CEO of Pfizer. 00:00:04.080 |
If you'd like to skip ahead to our conversation, the timestamps as always are below. 00:00:09.200 |
But if not, please allow me to say a few words about truth and human nature, 00:00:14.880 |
specifically about two groups of people throughout history that seek to lay claim to the truth. 00:00:20.920 |
The first group will tell you that only they possess the truth, 00:00:25.300 |
that the government will save you, the company will save you, 00:00:28.920 |
the science, the authorities, the experts, the institutions will save you. 00:00:32.160 |
The second group, too, will tell you that only they possess the truth, 00:00:36.960 |
that the government will hurt you, the company will hurt you, 00:00:40.300 |
the science, the authorities, the experts, the institutions will hurt you. 00:00:43.680 |
Both groups have the benevolent and the malevolent, their heroes and their charlatans. 00:00:50.340 |
And I think the hard truth is that no one in this world can tell you with absolute certainty which is which. 00:00:59.040 |
This is the burden of being human, of being free. 00:01:03.040 |
Don't blindly follow any leader, neither the emperor nor the martyr who points out that the emperor has no clothes. 00:01:13.960 |
Vaccines have saved hundreds of millions of lives in the past century. 00:01:19.040 |
And in general, the advance of medicine has saved billions of lives. 00:01:22.920 |
If you ignore the power of science, you're not being honest with the lessons of history. 00:01:28.260 |
And if you ignore the corrupting nature of power and money within institutions, 00:01:32.760 |
including governments and companies that led to the suffering and death of hundreds of millions in the past century, 00:01:39.300 |
you are once again not being honest with the lessons of history. 00:01:43.960 |
I announced that I will be having this conversation with Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO, and a lot of people wrote to me. 00:01:52.000 |
I would like to say that I was and am and always will be listening and learning with an open mind from everyone. 00:01:59.160 |
My own opinion, worth little as it is, is that the development of the COVID vaccines is one of the greatest accomplishments of science in recent history. 00:02:08.160 |
For the rest, from safety and efficacy to policy and economics, I stand humbled before a complicated world full of fear and anger. 00:02:18.160 |
A small number of malicious people from all walks of life will use that fear and anger to divide us, 00:02:24.160 |
because the division makes them money and gives them power. 00:02:28.120 |
I took two shots of the Pfizer vaccine. This was my decision. 00:02:35.360 |
And I certainly don't want to dismiss your concerns or worse, you as a person, if you choose not to get vaccinated. 00:02:43.040 |
I can assure you one thing, in this conversation, and in any conversation, the choice of questions I ask and words I say is mine and mine alone. 00:02:52.040 |
When my words fall short, as they often do, it is only because of the limitations of my mind and of my speaking ability. 00:03:04.740 |
I cannot be bought by anyone with money, power, or fame. 00:03:08.380 |
I hope to prove this to you and to myself in the coming years. 00:03:13.320 |
This life is short. And to me, without integrity, it is not worth living. 00:03:18.320 |
People sometimes talk down to me, call me naive. 00:03:26.060 |
I think this life, this world, this, our human civilization is beautiful. 00:03:31.780 |
And as Dostoevsky said, beauty will save the world. 00:03:37.400 |
This is the Lex Friedman Podcast, and here's my conversation with Albert Bourla. 00:03:42.560 |
The development of the COVID-19 vaccine was one of the greatest accomplishments of science in recent history. 00:03:50.440 |
No matter what, this should give people hope for the future. 00:03:56.600 |
I hope we can discuss both the inspiring and the difficult ideas in this conversation so that we can do our small part in healing this division. 00:04:07.320 |
Take me through the day of November 8th, 2020, when the Pfizer team were waiting for the results of the phase three clinical trials. 00:04:13.860 |
We had assembled in a very small office that we are having in Connecticut. 00:04:21.440 |
And in another place, what we call the Data Monitoring Committee, which is a group of experts, independent experts, they're on Pfizer. 00:04:32.180 |
We're going to have the opportunity to unblind the data and then tell us if the study needs to continue or if it is successful or if it fails. 00:04:45.460 |
So the call came a little bit later than what we expected, which created a lot of anxiety to all of us, but came around, I think, two o'clock. 00:04:57.500 |
Sitting there waiting and teasing one another, drinking coffee, making jokes. 00:05:03.320 |
So how did you feel like when you heard the results, the successful results? 00:05:14.320 |
Like if a huge weight that was on my shoulders was lifted. 00:05:40.440 |
So looking back from that moment to before, how much did it cost to develop the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine? 00:05:47.360 |
What was it like making the decision to make that investment when the risk is very high and you don't know if it's going to be successful? 00:06:00.740 |
We are putting money, we are investing in research, which is highly risky. 00:06:05.320 |
The difference in that case was that we didn't risk at all. 00:06:10.240 |
We put everything in one go so that we don't lose time. 00:06:17.500 |
And then if that goes well, then we will spend another 50. 00:06:22.280 |
Here we put all together a little bit more than $2 billion, $2.3 billion. 00:06:28.240 |
And it was a significant decision, but it was a very easy decision to make in the context of what we were living at that time. 00:06:49.140 |
And we knew that we have capabilities that may help. 00:06:53.840 |
So there was not a second question or choice. 00:06:58.420 |
When you make decisions like that, you're the CEO of a company that needs to make money and that hopes to do a lot of good in the world. 00:07:12.000 |
How much of both of those things are part of the calculation? 00:07:17.220 |
So when you said it was an obvious choice, I think you've said a bunch of things of the kind of saying we need to go all in, sort of very boldly diving in. 00:07:29.920 |
How much was that that the world is facing uncertainty and fear and potentially destructive pandemic in the early days, just when you're seeing the full uncertainty before us, don't know how it's going to unroll. 00:07:45.260 |
And how much of it is this may also be a good financial decision to take this risk? 00:07:53.220 |
And I know very well that if you focus too much on making money, you will never make. 00:07:57.640 |
You should focus in what is the real value driver. 00:08:02.680 |
And the real value driver, it is to make breakthroughs that change patients' lives. 00:08:08.340 |
If you don't do that, you will never make money. 00:08:13.300 |
Things will fall into place and also money will follow. 00:08:15.760 |
But the mentality of the company is to be how to help the patient. 00:08:19.840 |
And that's what the management was that the shareholders want, because that's the only way that we can create value. 00:08:25.960 |
In this particular case, we're not thinking at all about what are we going to make when we sell it or if not sell it, because what we were focusing 100% was how to bring a solution to the world that will help all of us. 00:08:42.620 |
Change the way, the fear that was bring hope to the world. 00:08:45.920 |
And as always, when you do that, you will have good returns as well. 00:08:51.580 |
On a philosophical level, on a human level, do you ever worry that the pressure to cover the costs that were invested to develop a new drug, to develop this vaccine harms your ability to conduct unbiased studies? 00:09:07.960 |
Not at all, because the studies are highly regulated. 00:09:12.880 |
Everybody knows what regulators, and when I say regulators, FDA, European authorities, UK authorities, Israeli authorities, Japanese authorities, Canadian authorities, want to see how the study needs to be conducted and what exactly they need to see to approve it or not. 00:09:29.500 |
So clearly, everybody takes into consideration how much money I'm going to invest and what is the chances that I'm going to lose them. 00:09:38.920 |
But what you can do is to change the rules of the game so that you won't lose the money. 00:09:44.180 |
There are very well established methodologies that would say with very high precision if your medicine is effective, if your medicine is safe. 00:09:54.340 |
And those are there for all and all playing with the same rules. 00:09:59.680 |
Do you have an intuition about why is the FDA trying to get 75 years to release the Pfizer data? 00:10:07.940 |
They're trying to request that it will not be released for 75 years. 00:10:11.900 |
And then maybe the broader version of that question is, do you think people should have sort of full transparency and immediate access to the data? 00:10:22.720 |
Immediate, you know, on the scale of weeks, not years? 00:10:27.260 |
I think the relations with regulators, they have been always very transparent. 00:10:32.060 |
And there are a lot of laws that they are forcing regulators and companies to put out there their interactions and what exactly was discussed. 00:10:44.100 |
Now, to go into specific details of some discussions, I don't know what is the reason that the FDA wants to take that time. 00:11:01.640 |
It looks like maybe it's because I come from the Soviet Union. 00:11:06.860 |
This is me saying this is there seems to be a bureaucracy that gets in the way of transparency. 00:11:14.980 |
So government is very good at setting rules and making sure there's oversight of companies and people and so on. 00:11:21.060 |
But they create they slow things down, which is a feature and a bug. 00:11:28.800 |
I think the reason they said it's 75 years is because they set a rate of being able to only review 500 pages of data a day or something like that. 00:11:38.180 |
And it's a very kind of bureaucratic thing where in reality, you could just show the data. 00:11:46.780 |
But in the battle to win people's trust, to inspire them with science, it feels like transparency is one of the most beautiful things. 00:11:54.900 |
One of the most powerful things that the FDA has. 00:11:57.200 |
FDA has the potential to be one of the great institutions of our country. 00:12:02.080 |
And this is one example that it feels to me like a failure. 00:12:06.580 |
So in your perspective, you're saying I'm sure they have a good reason. 00:12:09.780 |
So to you, the FDA is this black box that you submit things to once they approve. 00:12:27.800 |
Everybody knows very well what are the processes. 00:12:30.340 |
The review process also, it is very detailed. 00:12:35.600 |
They have scientists of very, very high caliber. 00:12:37.860 |
Not every regulator in the world, but the Europeans, the Brits, the FDA, clearly, they have very, very high caliber of scientists that they are going into a lot of details. 00:12:50.040 |
And also, basically everything for a study is really released by law in the specifications of the product. 00:13:00.580 |
But it's a very detailed document that it is issued and has basically the essence of everything was discussed. 00:13:06.380 |
I don't know about specific documents if it takes them time to release, but clearly this is not a black box type of process. 00:13:15.940 |
A lot of this stuff is how do you effectively communicate to the world about the incredible science that's been done, about the processes that were followed. 00:13:25.260 |
And sometimes it's just ineloquence in communication. 00:13:31.360 |
It's ineloquence of communication and silence. 00:13:33.940 |
Silence in the moment when clearly a lot of people are bothered and have questions. 00:13:40.120 |
This is when you speak out and you explain exactly why, as opposed to letting the sort of distrust build up and linger. 00:13:49.700 |
Because the result is there's a very large percentage of the population that just, I mean, it divides people. 00:14:00.340 |
And also the effectiveness of solutions suffers, like the vaccine and so on. 00:14:08.540 |
I asked a few folks I know if they had challenging questions for you. 00:14:20.620 |
By the way, I'm sweating, not because this is a difficult conversation, it is, but it's also hot in here for the record. 00:14:34.840 |
He's a psychologist and intellectual and author. 00:14:38.480 |
He suggested to me that I raise the concern that there's a close working relationship between Pfizer, FDA, and CDC. 00:14:47.440 |
Do you worry that this affects both positive and negative Pfizer's chances of getting drugs approved? 00:14:56.160 |
The fact that there's people that worked at the FDA that now work at Pfizer, Pfizer FDA, that there's a kind of pipeline. 00:15:04.120 |
Does this worry you that it affects your ability to do great unbiased work? 00:15:11.560 |
I have zero doubts that this is not affecting at all their ability to be unbiased and regulate. 00:15:20.400 |
And in order to, for the system also reinforces that by creating significant time barriers. 00:15:27.800 |
If someone moves from an industry to FDA, he won't be able to deal with topics for a period of time and then for even an enhanced period of time with topics that are related with a company he or she may come from. 00:15:40.240 |
I think these regulators, they are really very strict. 00:15:48.360 |
If anything, I feel sometimes that maybe they should be a little bit more open minded, particularly when it comes to new technologies, rather than trying to judge and implement the same framework of variation of new technologies to all. 00:16:03.440 |
They are always, as regulators, on the conservative side. 00:16:06.840 |
But always, always, they are unbiased and they are trying the best. 00:16:15.960 |
They have processes to make sure that there are self checks and balances within the agencies, both in CDC and in the FDA. 00:16:23.760 |
Difficult decisions, they bring external experts that they should express. 00:16:27.560 |
Easy decisions, there are internal experts that they are debating a lot. 00:16:31.120 |
And if there are disagreements, they elevate them. 00:16:33.040 |
So I think we are lucky to have good regulators. 00:16:42.720 |
As with all governmental agencies, there is bureaucracy and the bureaucracy needs to be addressed. 00:16:49.160 |
And by saying bureaucracy is not relaxing the bar. 00:16:54.560 |
The bar needs to remain high, but focusing on what matters rather than on the detail. 00:17:04.440 |
So you don't, you know, I've been reading quite a bit about history. 00:17:08.960 |
You don't worry about human nature and corruption that can seep in. 00:17:13.120 |
You're saying institutionally there's protections against this. 00:17:16.680 |
I think there is always the fear of corruption, particularly when you speak about public servants. 00:17:23.520 |
But clearly the risk is very different country by country. 00:17:31.960 |
I think the regulatory agencies have a very good track record and history of the US, of Europe, of England. 00:17:39.400 |
Of very, very good track record of integrity. 00:17:46.160 |
So I grew up in the Soviet Union and I need to perhaps introspect this a little bit. 00:17:53.080 |
But when I was growing up, ethically, there was a sense that bribery is the only way you can get stuff done. 00:18:03.440 |
Like you get pulled over by a police officer, like obviously you need to bribe them. 00:18:10.800 |
And then so coming to this country, it was beautiful to see that the rule of law has so much power. 00:18:16.600 |
And ultimately, the rule of law, when enacted, when it holds up, it gives people freedom to do the best work of their lives. 00:18:32.280 |
And again, it goes back to the perception, the communication. 00:18:35.440 |
When there's people that have worked at Pfizer and at FDA, at the CDC, you know, you look at their resume, they have those things on their resume. 00:18:45.760 |
Are these great leaders that we are supposed to see as authorities, are they playing a game on us? 00:18:54.640 |
I would say that I recognize what you said about what happened in or what I'm sure that what you describe in the country that you're coming from, it was how you experienced it. 00:19:07.240 |
And I know that there are other countries that you need to do these things to do your job. 00:19:12.640 |
I don't think is the case in this country, particularly when it comes to those agencies that you mentioned. 00:19:23.760 |
And also, I don't think that there are a lot of people that they are worried about it or doubt it. 00:19:28.800 |
I'm sure like everywhere, there will be a minority, but the vast majority of the Americans, the vast majority of the Europeans, the vast majority of the Brits, the vast majority of the Israelis, they trust what FDA or EMA or CDC or any HRA will say. 00:19:46.080 |
Still, there's currently a distrust of big pharma in the public. 00:19:51.520 |
Maybe this is something I'd love to hear your comment on. 00:19:54.040 |
There's distrust of science when it's tangled up with corporations and government institutions like we've talked about. 00:20:01.120 |
But you have, they have to be entangled to achieve scale, oversight and to achieve the kind of scale that Pfizer has been able to accomplish. 00:20:16.080 |
How can you regain the public trust, do you think? 00:20:19.000 |
Not regain, but sort of take steps to increase the public trust? 00:20:23.440 |
Reputation is something that you can lose in buckets, but you can earn it back in drops. 00:20:31.720 |
And once you lost it, you are going to take a lot of effort to bring it back. 00:20:42.400 |
It's clear that the reputation of the industry in the last decade was on the lowest that we have seen ever. 00:20:56.080 |
But clearly, there are reasons that are related also with the behavior of the industry. 00:21:00.760 |
That needed to change, and I'm hopeful that very few will disagree that the industry is a very different industry right now. 00:21:12.200 |
That being said, I truly believe that if there is one lesson that stands out from the many lessons that we learned during COVID, 00:21:22.920 |
is the power of science in the hands of the private sector. 00:21:27.320 |
I think it was the private sector that came with solutions with diagnostic tests, when we didn't have, 00:21:38.280 |
solutions with respirators, when we didn't have, solutions with treatments, solutions with vaccines. 00:21:44.360 |
And I think that demonstrated very clearly to the world the value of a thriving life sciences sector, 00:21:58.840 |
That also affected very positively the reputation, both of the sector and of Pfizer. 00:22:08.080 |
I'm not going to make the mistake to consider given. 00:22:10.800 |
I'm not to make the mistake that because our reputation is high, that will remain so. 00:22:19.520 |
Every day with everything we do, with everything we say, with the way we behave. 00:22:24.320 |
And I hope that we'll rise to this occasion and we will do that. 00:22:37.720 |
It is a company you love, a company you believe in. 00:22:41.000 |
It's a company that has developed drugs that has helped millions of people. 00:22:45.560 |
So let me ask yet another hard question on this topic of reputation. 00:22:51.720 |
In 2009, Pfizer pleaded guilty to the illegal marketing of arthritis drug Bextra and agreed to a $2.3 billion settlement. 00:23:00.480 |
How do you make sense of the fact that this happened to a company you love and that you believe in? 00:23:08.400 |
The Bextra case in 2009 was related to things that happened in 2003. 00:23:15.240 |
And the things that happened in 2003 were things that basically several of our reps did off-label promotion. 00:23:23.280 |
So they spoke about, with the physicians, about off-label use of the product. 00:23:32.560 |
So off-label are things that the FDA didn't approve, extra stuff. 00:23:37.040 |
You basically say this drug does extra stuff that the FDA never approved. 00:23:41.160 |
And this is something that is allowed when physicians are speaking to physicians. 00:23:45.360 |
But it is not allowed for the pharmaceutical companies to refer to these studies, because usually are studies that are happening off-label. 00:23:52.360 |
And apparently several of our reps in 2003, they did it. 00:24:05.200 |
The fine was related not to the severity of the conduct, but the size of the revenues. 00:24:09.960 |
So the fines are, if Bextra was a small product, we would get a small fine. 00:24:20.520 |
I don't think that these things happened since then. 00:24:26.160 |
We have a stellar record from 2009 until now of complying with every single regulation and rule. 00:24:35.080 |
We have internal processes to make sure that these are not happening by individuals that may have an interest. 00:24:41.480 |
For example, to get a promotion, they may try and do things that are not the right things. 00:24:46.680 |
And we have, more importantly, a culture in this company that really sets aside people that they think differently. 00:25:00.120 |
But I believe a lot has changed in the 20 years that followed. 00:25:06.760 |
- So you're developing drugs, you're developing solutions to help millions of people, but there's risk involved. 00:25:13.880 |
And so there would be lawsuits heading back your way, because there's a lot of lawyers in the world, partially. 00:25:23.920 |
How do you put that into the calculation of how you try to do good in the world? 00:25:37.560 |
How do you not fall victim to thinking that it's just the cost of doing business, 00:25:44.280 |
and that some of the lawsuits might actually represent real pain that people are going through? 00:25:48.960 |
- I think that we try always to do the right thing. 00:25:52.280 |
And that's, as I said, very well embedded into our culture. 00:25:56.480 |
If you don't do the right thing, sooner or later you will pay for it. 00:26:03.080 |
And right now, for us doing the right thing, it is being able to find innovations to issues that are real. 00:26:10.600 |
Diseases that they do not have good coverage, good treatments right now. 00:26:17.000 |
We try to find treatments that significantly surpass the current standards of care. 00:26:24.880 |
And we try not only to comply with what regulators are asking us to do. 00:26:30.240 |
This is what you need to do to prove the safety or the efficacy. 00:26:34.880 |
No matter what we do on that, I'm sure that people will find opportunity, 00:26:39.480 |
because as you said, there are a lot of lawyers, to sue us. 00:26:44.440 |
And we believe that eventually, if you are doing the right thing, 00:26:49.800 |
you will be on the right side of the history. 00:26:53.120 |
- I'm really glad you say that, because focusing on doing the right thing, 00:26:59.400 |
no matter the money, I believe is the best way to make money. 00:27:08.600 |
creating a product that people love is the best way to make money. 00:27:11.760 |
So focusing on the core of the thing that makes people feel good, 00:27:22.160 |
My good friend Joe Rogan, he's been highlighting to me 00:27:27.200 |
this aggressive marketing on mainstream media channels by Pfizer. 00:27:40.560 |
That a lot of us, a lot of people, me included, 00:27:44.320 |
look to these mainstream channels of news for kind of authority, 00:27:48.800 |
of like, what the heck's going on in the world? 00:27:51.560 |
And if Pfizer is sponsoring many of these shows, 00:28:00.240 |
there's a worry, it may be a perception thing, 00:28:03.360 |
but there's also a natural worry that it would influence 00:28:07.120 |
'cause they're afraid of losing the sponsorship. 00:28:08.960 |
It's subtle, but at scale, it might have a serious impact. 00:28:28.760 |
What we do, we go on TV and we are having ads 00:28:33.480 |
about our products and they're highly regulated. 00:28:38.240 |
I think it is the right of people to know, to learn, 00:28:47.280 |
that they are off-label, that have not been approved. 00:28:49.640 |
We need to have, every time we go on TV, as you know, 00:28:57.400 |
Sometimes that takes more time than the good things. 00:29:01.360 |
And I don't think that we are doing aggressive marketing. 00:29:04.680 |
Now, people could be influenced and can be biased 00:29:09.600 |
in the podcasts or in the other type of media activities 00:29:13.480 |
that they have for multiple different reasons. 00:29:17.520 |
- Yeah, I know, but it's still, it's pressure. 00:29:20.880 |
I mean, one of it is perception, but I worry about it too. 00:29:24.520 |
I have a ton of sponsors for this podcast, for example, 00:29:30.400 |
They're just, you know, I think likely that kind 00:29:39.400 |
And I worry about that a lot because, you know, 00:29:50.160 |
or have the capacity to be good and desire to be good. 00:29:54.760 |
When I came to MIT, I was a little bit disappointed, 00:30:03.240 |
How much pressure, I think unjustified pressure 00:30:15.200 |
especially at MIT when there's, I think, a lot of money. 00:30:18.000 |
People still felt constraints and they weren't, 00:30:32.000 |
money constraints, but when you have sponsors, 00:30:35.440 |
it just, I personally worry that it doesn't bring 00:30:41.320 |
And so I feel like I want to put some responsibility 00:30:44.800 |
on sponsors and great big companies like Pfizer 00:30:49.440 |
to kind of not get in the way of the best of human nature, 00:30:54.440 |
whether it's sponsoring podcasts, mainstream media, 00:31:05.160 |
- You need to know that we are so, so careful 00:31:09.240 |
First of all, we have very few, very, very few. 00:31:16.800 |
They will try to see if there is a conflict of interest 00:31:20.400 |
And also what is the reputation of the persons 00:31:27.840 |
So I don't think, our friend, I think was from Texas. 00:31:42.160 |
- Oh, in terms of like having a negative effect 00:31:56.360 |
we are very careful not to sponsor other things 00:32:07.440 |
- So with the incredibly fast development of the vaccine, 00:32:13.360 |
could you tell me the story from the engineering 00:32:21.820 |
By November, you even had the ambition to do it by October. 00:32:46.560 |
it is basically the vast majority of the time 00:32:55.440 |
And you do that because the phase three study 00:33:08.720 |
to make sure that the product that you're putting 00:33:23.120 |
But the phase three study had to follow all the rules 00:33:27.120 |
that any study follows when you do this trial. 00:33:47.760 |
And for those four, we selected eventually two, 00:34:02.440 |
- What does trying entail in those early days? 00:34:05.200 |
- You go, first of all, with smaller doses in humans. 00:34:11.380 |
And then after you have done a lot of experiments 00:34:13.960 |
in animals so that you can feel that it is safe enough 00:34:17.320 |
to go to humans and then go with very low dose. 00:34:22.200 |
and then you monitor those humans to make sure 00:34:24.800 |
that there are not any, let's say, reactogenicity 00:34:29.760 |
At the same time, you start to measure what is doing 00:34:37.800 |
and you do that with multiple ages of people, 00:34:42.520 |
And eventually, from the 20 vaccines to multiple doses, 00:34:47.060 |
to multiple schedules, is it after three weeks, 00:34:53.840 |
All of that will inform you that I think this is the vaccine, 00:35:02.420 |
that I believe will give me the best results. 00:35:06.560 |
then you go to do what we call the phase three. 00:35:09.880 |
This is a very big study, thousands of people, 00:35:14.160 |
where you use the vaccine that you think is the right one, 00:35:19.640 |
The placebo and the vaccine, they look identical. 00:35:22.560 |
Nobody knows if he's injected a placebo or a vaccine. 00:35:29.200 |
the doctor doesn't know if he's injecting placebo or vaccine. 00:35:39.000 |
there are keys, and there are at least two people 00:35:44.960 |
And those people, they have legal obligations 00:35:53.920 |
The idea is that when you go into this study, 00:35:58.200 |
you need to make sure that you are going with the right one. 00:36:04.380 |
You need to have a significant number of people 00:36:10.880 |
And then you see how many of them will get the disease. 00:36:16.040 |
in percentage of infections for the vaccinated 00:36:20.440 |
At the same time, you're monitoring all of them 00:36:22.440 |
to see if there are differences in the safety profile. 00:36:25.160 |
If those that they go to placebo have the same, 00:36:27.160 |
let's say, heart attacks with those that they didn't. 00:36:30.840 |
They got the vaccine because heart attacks will happen 00:36:33.280 |
if you have 50,000 people, because it's part of life. 00:36:37.340 |
All these processes are very well established since years. 00:36:43.560 |
What we did the last one was exactly the same 00:36:51.740 |
Instead of recruiting 50,000 people over a year, 00:37:01.760 |
we went with 150 hospitals doing the recruitment. 00:37:24.200 |
People don't know what they can and what they cannot do. 00:37:29.400 |
And if anything, they have a serious tendency 00:37:40.600 |
they will think out of the box to be able to deliver. 00:37:45.840 |
Instead of eight years, we didn't ask them to do it in six. 00:37:51.400 |
Our normal manufacturing yearly production of Pfizer 00:37:57.680 |
was 200 million doses of vaccines every year. 00:38:00.200 |
That's what we are doing in the last 10 years. 00:38:06.380 |
We asked them to make 3 billion doses for a new vaccine. 00:38:30.280 |
And immediately, this is where the human ingenuity 00:38:45.120 |
that the conversation in public is often not about that. 00:39:07.060 |
And that's a source of incredible inspiration to people. 00:39:18.820 |
I'm hoping to do our little part in this conversation 00:40:00.000 |
- No, they should not fear something like that. 00:40:04.640 |
There is no medical product in the history of humanity 00:40:09.520 |
that have been tested as much as this vaccine 00:40:12.720 |
has been administered to hundreds of millions of people. 00:40:20.000 |
they have been scrutinized, those people, constantly. 00:40:24.240 |
Right now, healthcare authorities are looking 00:40:31.520 |
and try to see if it is vaccine related or not. 00:40:49.120 |
that it is so safe, exactly as the data sheet says 00:40:54.120 |
about this vaccine, more than any other product. 00:40:59.160 |
They should not be afraid of something like that, 00:41:06.360 |
that it is misinformation, that it is spread on purpose. 00:41:09.240 |
- Well, I don't like the word misinformation, 00:41:13.880 |
because, you know, again, back to the Soviet Union, 00:41:19.160 |
anyone who opposes the state is spreading misinformation. 00:41:24.160 |
So you can basically call anything misinformation. 00:41:37.240 |
And just, no offense to me, just because you wear a tie, 00:41:42.760 |
to be in the possession of the truth than anyone else. 00:41:50.480 |
- And as people can see that I'm not wearing a tie, 00:41:58.800 |
those that they have the power to impose on the others 00:42:03.800 |
the stigma that what you are saying is misinformation. 00:42:12.180 |
we have accomplished, and science is one of them. 00:42:15.480 |
And data is, and analytics of data is another one. 00:42:20.480 |
And to say that something which is highly scientific 00:42:29.020 |
I think that it is not what you are describing 00:42:37.500 |
or in any other autocratic regime in the world right now. 00:42:42.300 |
But I definitely do think that the scientists, 00:42:47.300 |
the public science communicators I've listened to 00:42:58.740 |
have put their ego aside and really listened to people. 00:43:06.320 |
maybe you've not even taken a biology course in college 00:43:11.340 |
But still they have children, they worry, they fear, 00:43:19.000 |
they don't know if they should listen to the CEO of Pfizer 00:43:26.060 |
who might just care about money and nothing else. 00:43:29.060 |
And so they just use common sense and they ask questions. 00:43:42.900 |
that's kind of what is the source of division. 00:43:51.580 |
doesn't mean that you are having either humility or empathy 00:44:13.900 |
to the public health because they're undermining. 00:44:21.300 |
And if you're not respecting their need to learn 00:44:27.100 |
So I fully agree with you that we should be very patient 00:44:31.540 |
to explain again and again and again what is happening. 00:44:44.900 |
What I'm saying it is there is a small number of people 00:45:15.180 |
in the minds of the people that they're afraid 00:45:22.900 |
A week later, the wife of the Pfizer CEO died. 00:45:27.900 |
There is a picture in this website of my wife. 00:45:34.060 |
Someone sends to me, now I'm pissed, I'm not laughing. 00:45:41.020 |
if you read something, mom is fine, don't worry. 00:45:44.140 |
Then I remember that she has very old parents back in Greece. 00:45:53.060 |
by Greek newspapers and they will publish it, okay? 00:45:56.100 |
They are those people that wrote these things. 00:46:04.860 |
So this is the narratives that they are on purpose forming 00:46:20.420 |
people that listen to this, that kind of doubt institutions, 00:46:23.520 |
I do also want to say that there's quite a few folks 00:46:34.180 |
the man is lying to you, the government is lying to you, 00:46:43.840 |
big pharma is lying to you, they're manipulating you. 00:46:48.340 |
I'm surprised at how much money can be made with that. 00:46:52.660 |
So you have to, just as people use their common sense 00:46:56.540 |
to be skeptical when listening to politicians 00:47:00.380 |
and powerful figures, they should be skeptical 00:47:03.300 |
to also when listening to sort of the conspiracy theorists 00:47:08.700 |
but people who raise questions about institutions. 00:47:11.780 |
Think on your own, think critically with an open mind 00:47:19.620 |
but also everybody has the capacity to do good. 00:47:26.180 |
not when entangled with institutions is a beautiful thing. 00:47:42.740 |
this incredible technology to sing it praises. 00:48:00.740 |
So for example, not to do a Shakespearean analysis 00:48:04.660 |
of you Twitter, but I think you tweeted something 00:48:07.220 |
about a study with 100% efficacy of the vaccine 00:48:11.760 |
or in stopping the transmission or something like that. 00:48:14.640 |
Do you regret sort of being, like over-representing 00:48:27.600 |
but just kind of like highlighting the super positive things 00:48:32.600 |
that may be misinterpreted, you know, saying 100%? 00:48:41.500 |
I rush to say that in biology, there is nothing 100%, 00:48:44.580 |
because always there will be when you go to the millions. 00:48:47.560 |
There were in the study things that were 100%, 00:49:04.880 |
So still, the direction of this is the point. 00:49:22.540 |
Because I know that people are listening to me right now, 00:49:29.260 |
not only being clear as to what I want to say, 00:49:38.620 |
I don't think that someone who only cherry-picks information 00:49:45.940 |
it's someone that it is the one to be trusted. 00:49:52.060 |
- So many felt the vaccine was presented as a cure 00:50:00.940 |
Did you always believe that many regular shots 00:50:07.100 |
do you think this will, for the Pfizer vaccine, 00:50:10.160 |
is it something you see that's taking a booster shot 00:50:15.100 |
- Yes, in the beginning when we had the first months 00:50:24.220 |
Then around April, May, I start seeing the first data 00:50:27.020 |
and I made statements that I think we will need a booster 00:50:31.740 |
around eight to 12 months after the second dose. 00:50:48.940 |
that with absent a new variant, with everything we know. 00:50:52.820 |
With Delta, it was proven that we need the booster 00:51:00.620 |
And I still said, I think the booster is a six months, 00:51:05.340 |
and then I think it will be an annual revaccination. 00:51:14.980 |
And Omicron says that two doses might be challenging. 00:51:18.980 |
We don't know exactly yet, but three doses work. 00:51:22.700 |
So clearly a lot of countries already started moving now 00:51:26.140 |
the third dose, not from six months to three. 00:51:33.100 |
that people will not be protected with the third dose. 00:51:38.100 |
I don't know with Omicron, if how long this will last. 00:51:44.620 |
And frankly, I don't know if we will need a new vaccine 00:51:54.660 |
If there is a need for a new vaccine, we will have it. 00:52:00.580 |
of this new vaccine, I can also feel very comfortable 00:52:15.740 |
And if we have to switch and have half of that 00:52:21.980 |
So I think the world should feel very, very comfortable 00:52:26.220 |
that if there is a need, we will be ahead of the virus. 00:52:34.340 |
And you're on track to do 4 billion next year. 00:52:47.940 |
What are your feelings about vaccine mandates 00:52:51.060 |
in terms of, do you think the most effective way 00:52:56.380 |
to vaccinate the population is to require it? 00:53:11.780 |
and a very difficult decision for whoever needs to make it. 00:53:16.580 |
It is the public health officials of every country 00:53:21.180 |
I have to make the decision for Pfizer employees. 00:53:24.660 |
And I had to balance the fear of those that they work, 00:53:29.660 |
that they want to feel that the others are vaccinated 00:53:43.780 |
We are giving exceptions, of course, for health, 00:53:45.820 |
maybe some religions, but we decided to mandate it. 00:54:10.180 |
because no matter what, you have a small number of people 00:54:26.580 |
But it's not to me to say, because the debate, 00:54:45.420 |
you should be ready to make difficult decisions. 00:54:59.620 |
I think at the public level, at the federal level, 00:55:06.740 |
even if it's good for the health of the populace. 00:55:09.900 |
There's something about preserving the freedom 00:55:14.580 |
Like doing the hard work of convincing people 00:55:17.020 |
to get vaccinated, to choose to get vaccinated if they want, 00:55:34.980 |
- Do you think children need to get vaccinated? 00:55:50.780 |
that fear for the wellbeing of their children. 00:55:57.940 |
Can you steel man their arguments against the vaccine 00:56:06.140 |
I had the opportunity to interact with parents 00:56:25.900 |
And they were the ones that were speaking at that time. 00:56:41.780 |
because she's below the age, is not protected. 00:56:47.460 |
I'm sure that those that they are afraid of the vaccine, 00:56:50.580 |
not of the disease, which are smaller number, admittedly. 00:56:54.460 |
Also, they will have, if they are afraid of them, 00:56:57.500 |
I'm sure that they will afraid even more about their kids 00:57:08.860 |
How can we do to demonstrate, to convince people, 00:57:12.260 |
to win the minds and the hearts of the people 00:57:30.020 |
And how can you say that I'm not going to protect a kid 00:57:44.860 |
and they don't have vaccines so that they can control. 00:57:48.340 |
It is such a big disruption and such a big risk 00:57:59.740 |
Look, how many kids are having polio right now? 00:58:23.620 |
- Well, the unique thing about the COVID vaccine 00:58:33.440 |
you're making a choice that can potentially hurt them. 00:58:41.660 |
- I think choosing to vaccinate children makes a choice 00:58:46.660 |
so that something could not potentially hurt them, 00:58:50.260 |
That's why we are doing vaccinations since ever. 00:58:57.340 |
that they're concerned for themselves and for their kids. 00:59:00.340 |
What I know it is that I'm a scientist and I'm a parent. 00:59:12.580 |
- So we've talked quite a bit about the vaccine, 00:59:28.060 |
And how are you able to develop it in four months? 00:59:33.380 |
Like you said, and all of that in just a few minutes. 00:59:44.060 |
that you get only if you get the disease, you get COVID. 00:59:46.980 |
Then what happens is that you will take for five days, 00:59:51.900 |
pills day and night and twice a day for five days. 01:00:23.180 |
for something that you can take home and stay home. 01:00:25.820 |
The biggest problem right now in Europe, in the US, 01:00:43.380 |
because they don't have the capacity because of that. 01:00:57.940 |
And this is a significant, significant game changer. 01:01:02.700 |
- I have to ask a controversial, difficult question. 01:01:26.820 |
'cause I've read quite a few criticisms of people. 01:01:30.420 |
There's been some comparisons of Paxilovir to the ivermectin 01:01:36.180 |
There is Dr. John Campbell that describes that comparison 01:01:40.460 |
And there's quite a lot of people that debunk 01:01:46.260 |
But there is a lot of people that kind of see this free drug 01:01:51.020 |
without patents on it and say, "This could be the savior." 01:02:00.580 |
that were claimed that they are the solution to COVID. 01:02:05.580 |
And clearly, they were proven that they're not. 01:02:15.380 |
I, as a scientist, and I discussed with our scientists, 01:02:19.060 |
they don't see any reason why a medicine like ivermectin, 01:02:24.060 |
which is a parasitic site, to be able to act on COVID. 01:02:28.620 |
And so they don't seem that there's any connection. 01:02:31.660 |
And they haven't seen any paper that describes someone 01:02:37.860 |
I'm sure that there will be some people that will claim 01:03:01.620 |
- Well, to push back, there is quite a lot of papers, 01:03:18.300 |
- Well, some of the big ones have been retracted, 01:03:52.900 |
thousands of people and will be under the scrutiny, 01:04:08.940 |
they will know all hospitals, if it works or not, 01:04:13.820 |
- We've gone through one of the more difficult periods 01:04:18.380 |
in recent human history over the past few years, 01:04:39.140 |
Although there are a lot of things that need to be fixed 01:04:58.060 |
from science, from quality of life, from any aspect. 01:05:07.860 |
can create and always create a better future, 01:05:12.580 |
- You have helped save the lives of millions of people, 01:05:20.020 |
but you yourself are just one biological organism 01:05:44.260 |
that I start feeling that I want to be around 01:05:56.380 |
I hope they will be around to see their children. 01:06:17.660 |
And you only have two minutes or less to answer it. 01:06:25.940 |
You said ingenuity is the thing that gives you hope. 01:06:28.940 |
We seem to be all busy trying to help each other, 01:06:34.100 |
- I would repeat something that Steve Jobs has said. 01:06:41.480 |
It eliminates the old and gives place to the new. 01:07:15.620 |
some of these difficult questions with me today, 01:07:18.180 |
and that you give your extremely valuable time 01:07:26.620 |
but I can brag with my kids that I was in your podcast 01:07:41.900 |
please check out our sponsors in the description. 01:07:44.460 |
And now, let me leave you with some words from Oscar Wilde. 01:07:52.340 |
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.