Leaders | A Nobel cause

In an ugly world, vaccines are a beautiful gift worth honouring

According to the WHO, they have saved more lives than any other medical invention

Image: The Economist

The Nobel prize for medicine, awarded on October 2nd to Katalin Karikó, a biochemist, and Drew Weissman, an immunologist, is a fitting capstone to a great underdog story. Dr Karikó’s unfashionable insistence on trying to get RNA into cells set back her career. She persisted, and the two developed a technique which allowed the immune system to be primed against threats in an entirely new way. When the covid-19 pandemic hit, the mRNA vaccines they had made possible saved millions of lives—and freed billions more to live normally again.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The greatest benefit conferred on humankind”

From the October 7th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Neural connection, with an electric bolt travellingacross, trailing a little fruit fly.

A map of a fruit fly’s brain could help us understand our own

A miracle of complexity, powered by rotting fruit

The illustration depicts a large judge's gavel about to hit the Google logo

Dismantling Google is a terrible idea

Despite its appeal as a political rallying cry


Shigeru Ishiba holds a press conference  in Tokyo, Japan on September 27th 2024

Socially liberal and strong on defence, Japan’s new premier shows promise

But he must ditch his more eccentric ideas if he is to control his party


Don’t celebrate China’s stimulus just yet

It will take more than a spectacular stockmarket rally to revive the economy

The year that shattered the Middle East

Kill or be killed is the region’s new logic. Deterrence and diplomacy would be better

YouTube’s do-it-yourself brigade is taking on Netflix and Disney

Legions of self-taught film-makers are coming for the television industry