NPR

Who's most likely to save us from the next pandemic? The answer may surprise you

The South African-based scientist who co-discovered the omicron variant of COVID-19 makes an intriguing argument.
Yeshnee Naidoo prepares a "flow cell" for analysis by one of the center's many genetic sequencing machines.

"So we're just gonna go in a freezer," says Tulio de Oliveira.

We're at the institute that he directs, the Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation at Stellenbosch University near Cape Town, South Africa. And he's taking me to a cold storage room chilled to 20 degrees below freezing.

He calls over his deputy, Yeshnee Naidoo, to lead the way.

"This is the lab queen," jokes de Oliveira. Because she's in charge of lab operations.

Naidoo pulls hard on the freezer door.

"You need muscle here," she says with a grunt.

Naidoo and de Oliveira want to point out an important delivery that's just arrived.

It's a plastic box containing 300 samples extracted from cerebrospinal fluid taken from patients a continent away.

"Very close to the Amazon Forest in Colombia,"

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