Speaker 0: So
Speaker 1: they had brought flooring the dog and first class then the american customs had to buy love the warm her, give her medicine so she had to be vomiting and all sorts of other unpleasantness happened to the poor dog. And there's coffee smells everywhere. By the way in the Marriott. People were serving breakfast. I'm like, oh my God, we're gonna confuse this dog now with all the coffee and she's, you know, jet lagged and warmed and the sport dog is not going to perform and she kicks it out of the park.
Speaker 0: The people from the prostate cancer Foundation are so blown away they end up funding guests and merchants research project to explore. The idea that smell might be the best way to diagnose a dangerous cancer. To a layman like me. The idea that a cancer or a virus would have a smell is not intuitive,
Speaker 1: it's not the
Luke's Note
Dogs are capable of smelling disease and cancer. They don’t smell the cancer itself - instead, they pick up on the distinct smell your body and its cells release as a byproduct of having the disease.
Speaker 0: the cost and inconvenience and hassle and imperfection of option one was that we've never done enough testing at any stage of the pandemic. And because we didn't do enough testing the pandemic soared out of control. Someone has a wedding or a thanksgiving dinner. And in a perfect world, everyone would get tested before coming. But of course they don't. And one person ends up infecting 10 other people and maybe one or two of those 10 will die. All these horror stories have at their core a failure of disease detection. I e mailed Michael Mina at the Harvard School of Public Health who was one of the big critics of the way we tested for covid.
Speaker 0: the cost and inconvenience and hassle and imperfection of option one was that we've never done enough testing at any stage of the pandemic. And because we didn't do enough testing the pandemic soared out of control. Someone has a wedding or a thanksgiving dinner. And in a perfect world, everyone would get tested before coming. But of course they don't. And one person ends up infecting 10 other people and maybe one or two of those 10 will die. All these horror stories have at their core a failure of disease detection. I e mailed Michael Mina at the Harvard School of Public Health who was one of the big critics of the way we tested for covid.
The cost and inconvenience and hassle and imperfection of option one was that we've never done enough testing at any stage of the pandemic. And because we didn't do enough testing the pandemic soared out of control. Someone has a wedding or a thanksgiving dinner. And in a perfect world, everyone would get tested before coming. But of course they don't. And one person ends up infecting 10 other people and maybe one or two of those 10 will die. All these horror stories have at their core a failure of disease detection. I e mailed Michael Mina at the Harvard School of Public Health who was one of the big critics of the way we tested for covid.
Luke's Note
Dogs can be trained to detect virtually any disease/pathogen, including COVID and colon cancer. Although it’s not foolproof, their level of accuracy exceeds even our most advanced technology and medical alternatives.
Testing! yo!
Luke's Note
Hey man