
BBC Inside Science What’s the evidence for vaccines?
40 snips
Sep 4, 2025 Caroline Steel, a journalist known for her engaging storytelling in science, joins Marnie Chesterton to dive into intriguing scientific discussions. They tackle the recent decision by US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to cut funding for mRNA vaccine research, questioning its implications for public health. The conversation also explores the remarkable capabilities of the UK's cutting-edge Isambard AI supercomputer and its potential for advancing vaccine technology and AI applications. Plus, there's a fun nod to musical chemistry from listeners!
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Funding Cuts Threaten Broader RNA Innovations
- Cutting mRNA funding will stall diverse applications beyond vaccines, including cancer vaccines and protein therapies.
- Reducing research now risks broader loss of transformative medical advances.
Research Trumps Abrupt Funding Cuts
- Don't cut research as a response to safety concerns without further study.
- If safety worries exist, the right response is more research, not halting development.
Isambard AI Delivers National-Scale Compute
- Isambard-AI connects thousands of NVIDIA chips with ultra-fast networking to deliver national-scale AI compute.
- Its power lets the UK train large language models and gain sovereign AI capability.
