It's during that period
that we put vaccine away
and had it available in case
there were other outbreaks.
And it turned out,
there were three outbreaks.
One went away quickly, but there were two.
I was there on day 13
of the second outbreak.
We injected the vaccine, cases went up,
then they went down, and controlled it.
And then this DRC in North Kivu outbreak,
which really was terrible
because it was in a war zone.
And that's the one where we've been
not only vaccinating in DRC
but in surrounding countries.
By the way, that is now, I believe,
day 38 or 39 out of the 42 necessary
to say it's over.
We hope it is.
And that would be, again,
an enormous example
of what vaccines can do,
even in a very difficult setting.
CA: And yet, in one way, Seth,
it's kind of shocking
that the outbreak that happened
at the start of 2015, end of 2014,
that it happened at all,
because the world has known
about Ebola for a long time.
It's been sequenced and so forth.
A vaccine could have been developed
and got ready for a possible outbreak.