Gain-of-Function Research and the COVID Origins Debate

Gain-of-Function Research and the COVID Origins Debate
Above: Health workers conduct COVID-19 tests at the St. Vincents Hospital drive-through testing clinic at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on June 27, 2021. Image copyright: Steven Saphore/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

Overview

  • Gain-of-function (GOF) research involves enhancing viruses to study their transmissibility or virulence, purportedly to aid in pandemic preparedness but long criticized for potential dual-use and biosecurity risks.
  • Before 2014, U.S. agencies like the National Institutes of Health and Department of Defense heavily funded viral research with minimal oversight, including collaborations with China's Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV).
  • A 2014 U.S. moratorium paused GOF research over safety concerns, but exemptions allowed several projects to continue. Following review, a new P3CO safety framework was introduced, which added review procedures for research involving enhanced pathogens.

The Spin

Pro-establishment narrative

GOF research plays a vital role in preparing for future pandemics by helping scientists understand how viruses evolve. While safety is paramount, regulating rather than halting such research is the best way to minimize risks while advancing global health preparedness.

Establishment-critical narrative

GOF research poses serious dangers that outweigh its benefits, especially when conducted in opaque or poorly regulated environments. The possibility that COVID leaked from a lab underscores the urgent need for stricter oversight or a complete halt to such experimentation.