In this lesson we’re going to look at a video called “The Next Outbreak? We’re Not Ready” by Bill Gates. This video appeared one year ago, just shortly after the Ebola scare of 2014 began to fade away, and it concerns preparedness for future disease or virus outbreaks.
Bill Gates is a good public speaker, who consistently uses simple words and speaks at a slow, intelligible pace. This speech and others by him are great tools for practicing your listening skills. There are some challenging words of vocabulary, of course, so make a note of these words and look them up in your dictionary. Pay attention to his speech patterns and practice repeating after him to gain a more natural flow in your own speaking.
Let’s start by looking at some useful vocabulary from the video.
Epidemic n. – a widespread occurrence of a health problem such as a disease
(can also be an adjective, meaning to have the properties of an epidemic)
Eradication n. – the process of eradicating something, meaning to get rid of it
Catastrophe n. – a major disaster
R&D n. – stands for “research and development,” referring to the branch of a company
Infectious adj. – likely to spread or influence people, usually used in a medical sense
Logistics n. – the activity of organizing movement and distribution
Ebola n. – the name of a disease
Vaccine n. – a kind of medicine that will prevent you from getting a disease
Use the above vocabulary to fill in the blanks. (Answers are at the bottom of this page.)
Watch the following video and try to answer the comprehension questions, which focus on numbers. It is always important, in listening, to pay attention to numbers and you should be in the habit of quickly making notes of numbers while listening to lectures.
Watch the video again from 03:21 to 04:16 of the video again and fill in the blanks:
The failure to prepare could allow the next __________ to be dramatically more devastating than Ebola. Let’s look at the __________ of Ebola over this year. About 10,000 people died, and nearly all were in the three West African countries. There’s three reasons why it didn’t _____________. The first is that there was a lot of heroic work by the _____________. They found the people and they prevented more ___________. The second is the nature of the virus. Ebola does not spread through the air. And by the time you’re contagious, most people are so sick that they’re bedridden. Third, it didn’t ________________________. And that was just luck. If it had gotten into a lot more urban areas, the case numbers would have been much larger.
Listen to the material again and answer true or false to the following statements:
The IELTS Writing Task 2 asks you to explain an argument or present an opinion, often on a “hot topic” like education, the environment, and so forth. Try to write an essay, in IELTS Writing Task 2 style, which outlines the extent to which you agree with Bill Gates’ presentation.
In 2014 there was an Ebola outbreak in Western Africa which caught the attention of the global media, causing people around the world to panic over the possibility of a worldwide outbreak. In his TED talk, conducted after the epidemic had been contained, Bill Gates comments that Ebola was fortunately not as serious as it could have been, but warned that in future things might be much worse.
Bill Gates argues that we were lucky not to have been harmed more seriously by Ebola because humanity was not equipped to deal with the crisis fast enough. He says that our response was too slow, and that in future if a major epidemic was to threaten us – such as the Spanish Flu outbreak of the last century – we would need to respond swiftly and with far greater organization. I’m not a health expert but I can believe what he says because it seems to make sense. If there was a disease more infectious than Ebola, it would surely spread faster and we would need to react faster in order to contain it.
His suggested method for dealing with future outbreaks is the better equip and train our medical professionals. This involves firstly supplying them with better funding so that they can create vaccines, and then pairing them with the military in order to ensure a faster response time and better logistical training. I agree with the first point because we need to fund our health care systems better in all parts of the world. However, I disagree with the second. I can’t see why we should give more power to the world’s militaries, which already have too much power. Instead, perhaps the medical practitioners can simply learn from military tactics.
To conclude, I mostly agree with Bill Gates. Humanity needs to be prepared to face potential catastrophes, and giving power to our health care providers is an important step towards doing that. However, I don’t think that we should use the military to solve health issues.
Vocab test
Comprehension
Gap-fill
True or False
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