Julia Naftulin
- I attended a top conference for infectious disease professionals to learn about the state of public health.
- Amid frustrations with funding and pay, new and seasoned attendees highlighted the importance of community.
- This article is part of “IDWeek,” a series on one of the leading conferences for infectious-disease experts.
Following a day of back-to-back lectures, I settled into my metal folding chair among thousands of doctors and scientists. My eyes darted between the medical society promotions projected on massive screens suspended above and the empty, blue-lit stage before us.
I was ready for my formal welcoming to IDWeek, an annual conference for professionals in infectious disease medicine and research. Instead, I got a full-on Broadway show.
At five minutes past 6 p.m., the stage went dark, and the excited chittering that first overtook the ballroom fell silent. Suddenly, a spotlight made way for a tuxedo-clad Javier Muñoz, the actor best-known as Alexander Hamilton from Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hit musical. He broke out into a Hamilton song — reciting, I’m not throwin’ away my shot — and whoops and applause followed.
IDWeek’s opening plenary, held on October 19 in Atlanta’s Georgia World Congress Center, was not what I expected from a sea of public-health aficionados. But as I spent four days observing and mingling with these infectious disease experts and professionals-in-training, I came to understand that initial fanfare as the staccato of a largely melancholy tune.
At the global conference, I met workers passionate about public health during a time riddled with uncertainty over the field’s future: A handful of former and furloughed workers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were in attendance, some giving talks as the government remained shut down. Seasoned and newly minted doctors spoke with deep conviction about their work, then commiserated over dried-up funding for it. Students weighed the field’s poor pay against their hunger to make a difference in a world that’s more interconnected than ever before.
No one I interviewed at IDWeek could say exactly what the future of public health will look like. Instead, they shared their challenges and strategies for navigating an uncertain future.
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