Mark Zuckerberg And Wife Priscilla Chan Pledge $3 Billion To Wipe Out ALL DISEASE By The End Of The Century

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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a goal that’s even more ambitious than connecting the entire world to the internet: He and his wife want to help eradicate all disease by the end of this century.

Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan are committing $3 billion over the next 10 years to accelerate basic scientific research, including the creation of research tools — from software to hardware to yet-undiscovered techniques — they hope will ultimately lead to scientific breakthroughs, the way the microscope and DNA sequencing have in generations past.

The goal, which they are unlikely to live to see accomplished, is to ‘cure, prevent or manage all disease’ in the next 80 or so years. 

Mark and Priscilla

They acknowledge that this might sound a crazy, but point to how far medicine and science have come in the last century — with vaccines, statins for heart disease, chemotherapy, and so on — following millennia with little progress.

He and Chan have spent the past two years speaking to scientists and other experts to plan the endeavor. 

Zuckerberg said ‘that this isn’t something where we just read a book and decided we’re going to do.’

Through their philanthropic organization, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the commitment includes $600 million to fund a new research center in San Francisco where scientific and medical researchers will work alongside engineers on long-term projects spanning years or even decades. 

The goal is not to focus narrowly on specific ailments, such as bone cancer or Parkinson’s disease, but rather to do basic research. One example: a cell atlas that maps out all the different types of cells in the body, which could help researchers create various types of drugs.


Chan’s work as a pediatrician seems to be a big driver in their couple’s decision to take up this latest cause.

‘I’ve been with families where we’ve hit the limit of what’s possible through medicine and science,’ Chan said. ‘I’ve had to tell families devastating diagnoses of leukemia, or that we just weren’t able to resuscitate their child.’

The couple spoke with The Associated Press in their home in Palo Alto, California.

Zuckerberg and Chan hope that their effort will inspire other far-reaching efforts and collaboration in science, medicine and engineering, so that basic research is no longer relegated to the margins.

‘We spend 50 times more on health care treating people who are sick than we spend on science research (to cure) diseases so that people don’t get sick in the first place,’ Zuckerberg said. 

He added that the approach reflects a belief that ‘people are always going to suffer from disease so therefore we should focus on treating people who are sick.’

Eric Lander, a professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and director of the Broad Institute at MIT and Harvard, said he’s had some 20 conversations with Zuckerberg and Chan over the past year about the initiative and called their goal ‘the right kind of goal for thinking about that kind of timeframe.’ 

He is not involved with the project itself, but expressed confidence in it.

‘It’s very hard with today’s science funding to build a team to work on scientific problems that are like what you would find at a world-class technology company, that are that scale,’ Zuckerberg said. ‘So that’s something I think we can concretely help out with.’

Their new center, called Biohub, will run as an independent research center at the University of California, San Francisco in collaboration with UC Berkeley and Stanford University.

The couple stressed that they believe that their goal can be accomplished, if not in their lifetime, then in their child’s lifetime. 

It was their daughter Max’s birth last November that inspired the billionaire couple to give away nearly all their money to help solve the world’s problems.

At the time, this was valued at more than $45 billion worth of Facebook stock, which the couple transferred to the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. The couple’s philanthropy plan won’t affect Zuckerberg’s status as controlling shareholder of Facebook.

This is so commendable. God bless Mark Zuckerberg and family. 

AP

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