Business
Health officials focused on Ebola, measles
Signage for the FIFA World Cup at The Shops at Columbus Circle in New York, May 21, 2026.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
As athletes and millions of fans gear up for the FIFA World Cup starting next week, global health officials are preparing for a high-stakes challenge of their own: protecting against infectious diseases.
For the first time, the tournament will span 16 host cities across three countries — the United States, Canada and Mexico — and feature 48 teams, making it the largest World Cup in history. The event also comes amid an Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda that the World Health Organization has designated a “public health emergency of international concern.”
Despite those worries, the risk of widespread Ebola transmission during the tournament is low, infectious disease experts told CNBC. Public health departments, hospitals and other partners are also well equipped to respond to a range of potential threats — even after sweeping cuts to critical federal agencies and the U.S. exiting from the WHO under the Trump administration.
“Ebola and hantavirus, I worry about a lot less,” Dr. Shruti Gohil, the associate medical director for University of California, Irvine Health Epidemiology and Infection Prevention, said in an interview. “The overall likelihood of risk is not nonzero, but it’s low, very low, because it is not easy to transmit person to person.”
Instead, experts say more contagious threats could pose greater challenges during the tournament and other large events this summer, particularly because international visitors could move through multiple venues and cities in a matter of days.
Those threats include measles — one of the world’s most contagious diseases — as well as respiratory viruses such as Covid-19 and influenza. The concern comes after the U.S. recorded its highest number of measles cases in decades last year, driven in part by growing vaccine hesitancy and declining immunization rates.
Some experts also pointed to arboviruses spread by infected insects, such as dengue, while others highlighted heat-related and foodborne illnesses as notable risks beyond infectious diseases.
Preparing for the World Cup has involved scaling up existing programs, such as wastewater monitoring, and adding new tools to track infectious disease threats. Those systems will face their first major test when the tournament kicks off on June 11, but public health officials say they are ready to take on the challenge.
“Public health prides itself in being the invisible shield, but I don’t want that to get lost in the actual Herculean effort it takes to have an operational invisible shield, so that people can enjoy events like the World Cup and feel safe and secure in their public health when they’re here,” said Dr. Theresa Tran, director for the Houston Health Department.
“That’s a system that I’m extraordinarily proud about … we are absolutely working so hard every single day in preparation for things like this,” said Tran, who is overseeing the response in a host city.
Ebola risk is low despite current outbreak
Doctors Without Borders health workers wearing personal protective equipment move through the isolated red zone to monitor patients, provide medical care and ensure sanitation at the Ebola Treatment Center in Munigi in Congo on June 2, 2026.
Jospin Mwisha | AFP | Getty Images
Ebola does not spread as easily as Covid and other respiratory diseases, making it less of a threat during the World Cup despite the growing outbreak, experts said.
Global health authorities have confirmed more than 260 cases and are investigating 1,100 more possible infections in Congo and Uganda, according to the WHO. The current strain of Ebola, the Bundibugyo virus, is an often fatal form of the disease with no approved treatment or vaccine.
But there were no cases of Ebola in the U.S. as of Wednesday. Virus transmission requires direct, close contact with the bodily fluids or blood of someone who is already showing symptoms, said Dr. Amesh Adalja, adjunct assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in an interview. Patients with Ebola are “going to be very sick” and will likely stay at home or in the hospital rather than attend large events with other people, he added.
“It’s not a respiratory virus; it’s not something that thrives in crowds that don’t have exposure to blood and body fluids, so I don’t think that it poses an objective threat to the World Cup,” Adalja said.
Still, federal and local public health officials are gearing up to respond to Ebola risks.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has implemented enhanced entry measures for travelers from countries linked to the outbreak. Anyone arriving in the U.S. after spending time in Congo, Uganda or South Sudan within the previous 21 days is required to enter through designated airports in Atlanta, Houston, New York or the Washington area, where they will undergo public health screening.
During those screenings, CDC staff will survey individuals about their travel history and symptoms, check their temperatures and collect contact information for follow-ups by state and local public authorities if needed, the agency’s website says. Individuals are also monitored for Ebola’s full incubation period of 21 days, not only the day they arrive in the U.S., UCI’s Gohil said.
The screening protocol extends beyond the airport. Local health departments are notified when travelers from affected regions arrive in their jurisdictions, enabling officials to monitor them for signs of illness, said Dr. Marvia Jones, director of the health department for Kansas City, a host city.
In Dallas County, Texas, where World Cup games will also be played, the health department has coordinated with emergency responders and local hospitals to ensure any traveler who develops Ebola symptoms can be safely transported and treated, county health Director Dr. Phil Huang told CNBC. The plans include identifying which facilities would receive patients, preparing those places for infection-control protocols and arranging specialized transportation if needed.
Huang said the county also held a session to educate local healthcare providers on the lessons learned from Dallas’ 2014 Ebola case, including the importance of obtaining travel histories, recognizing symptoms and following established procedures for patient transport, isolation, contact tracing and the use of personal protective equipment.
Ebola “is definitely top of mind as a heavy thing with our history,” Huang said.
In a statement to CNBC, FIFA said it is aware and monitoring the Ebola outbreak and continues to work with all three host countries’ governments to “ensure a safe and secure tournament.” FIFA is also informing ticket holders residing in Congo, South Sudan and Uganda of travel considerations ahead of the event.
Measles, respiratory diseases raise concern
Measles is “our biggest concern” in terms of infectious diseases at the World Cup since it is one of the most contagious viruses, said James Garrow, communications director for Philadelphia’s Department of Public Health.
“We’re seeing outbreaks throughout the U.S. and overseas, and when you have a disease that’s as infectious as this, people just have to be in the same plane for an hour or two and all of a sudden you have an outbreak that’s transferred to somewhere else,” Garrow told CNBC.
Philadelphia health officials have focused on ensuring healthcare providers can quickly identify measles cases, share information and coordinate response efforts as the city prepares to host matches, he said. But international visitors pose a particular challenge because they often travel to numerous locations in a short period of time, increasing the number of potential exposures to the virus compared to a local.
FIFA World Cup signage is seen at the PATH train station at the World Trade Center transportation hub in New York on May 27, 2026.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images
The U.S. had more measles cases in 2025 than in any other year since 1991, with more than 2,100 confirmed cases. Cases were reported in 45 jurisdictions in 2025, and there were 48 outbreaks, compared with 16 the previous year, according to the CDC.
The U.S. eliminated measles in 2000, but cases have risen as misinformation spreads and vaccination rates decline. About 93% of confirmed measles cases last year were among people who were unvaccinated or whose vaccination status was unknown, CDC data shows.
Besides measles, Houston’s Tran said she’s concerned about other diseases at risk of higher spread as vaccination rates drop in the U.S., such as Covid and the flu.
“The transmissibility being airborne makes them so much more likely to cause a public health threat than Ebola,” she said.
But Houston, Tran said, has professional epidemiologists who are monitoring and contract-tracing individuals anytime there is a vaccine-preventable disease that could become an outbreak.
Norovirus, food-borne and heat-related illnesses as well as sexually transmitted infectious could also pose challenges during the tournament, some public health officials told CNBC.
But public health departments have been working to ensure that food vendors at the World Cup and related gatherings have the proper permits to sell to the public, said Dr. Monika Roy, the deputy health officer and infectious disease and response branch director for Santa Clara County, California. The county outside of San Francisco will also host matches.
In addition to keeping an eye on permitting, Houston has teams of registered sanitarians ready to investigate any foodborne illnesses, and it has prepared public health campaigns related to heat-related illness and prevention given the high humidity in the city.
Expanding surveillance efforts
This year’s World Cup brings “added layers of challenges,” and not only because of the scale of the event, said Dr. Rebecca Katz, who leads Georgetown University’s Center for Global Health Science and Security. She said the tournament comes after resource cuts to public health and the U.S. withdrawal from the WHO earlier this year, which has “strained” international mechanisms for disease sharing.
Trump cut roughly 10% of the CDC’s workforce in early 2025, leaving fewer epidemiologists and scientific staff to do boots-on-the-ground work or coordinate responses across governments. There is currently no permanent CDC director or U.S. surgeon general, both positions that play a critical role in responding to disease threats.
Despite the cuts, the CDC said it is “actively engaged in World Cup preparedness as part of the federal coordination structure led by the White House FIFA World Cup 2026 Task Force” and is engaging with public health departments in host cities, other federal agencies and partner organizations. The CDC has also developed a World Cup data dashboard, which is in final development, to give state and local health departments greater visibility into disease trends across jurisdictions, an agency spokesperson said in a statement.
Still, “there have been cuts to public health at all levels and the folks who are in those jobs are working really, really hard, often with a smaller budget and less personnel, so there’s an opportunity for the rest of the community to help support that” and “try to jump in and fill some of those information gaps,” Katz said.
That’s one reason why Katz in May launched the Health Security Operations Center, a hub for monitoring potential infectious disease threats that will distribute daily situation reports starting Thursday to hundreds of state and local health officials, federal agencies, tournament organizers and hospital emergency managers, among others. It’s part of the National Center for Health Security and Resilience, a joint effort between Georgetown University and MedStar Health.
Among the center’s efforts is participating in daily stand-up calls hosted by the Pan American Health Organization, a regional office of the WHO, and sharing that information directly with local, state and federal jurisdictions, Katz said. PAHO is coordinating data between Mexico and Canada as well, she noted.
At the local level, health departments are ramping up their surveillance efforts.
Many World Cup host cities and counties are leaning on wastewater surveillance, a public health tool that gained prominence during the Covid pandemic. The approach enables officials to detect signs of disease spreading in a community through sewage samples, often before outbreaks are identified through traditional testing.
For example, Dallas is increasing its wastewater sample sites to cover nearly the entire county, Huang said. The county is also implementing metagenomic testing, which is broadly extracting and sequencing sewage samples to identify every bacteria, virus and fungus rather than a specific one, he added.
Huang said Dallas is also enhancing its mosquito surveillance by monitoring not only for West Nile virus, which is endemic in the region, but also diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and Zika.
Meanwhile, Philadelphia is deploying a new mobile lab that can test samples on site, speeding up the detection of potential health threats and reducing the need to send specimens to specialized labs elsewhere in the state or country, Garrow said. He noted that the lab, which launched in June, aims to boost testing capacity and reach areas less centrally located.
Dr. Margaret Aldrich, a pediatric epidemiologist at NYU Langone, said she believes in the U.S. “we’re actually better prepared, honestly, than we ever have been for high-consequence infectious diseases.”
“There’s a very robust system in the United States,” Aldrich said. “The departments of health are really continuing to maintain that hard work and ensuring that, as we always say, if we’re doing our job, you don’t see it.”
Business
EasyJet rejects takeover offer from US investment firm Castlelake
EasyJet has rejected a fourth takeover offer worth £4.93bn from Castlelake.
The low-cost Luton-based airline said the US investment firm’s bid was worth £6.50 a share, compared with the previous offers of £5.60, £6 and £6.25 a share.
A spokesperson said it was giving Castlelake until 17:00 BST on 5 July to make a firm offer or walk away.
“Having carefully reviewed it with its advisers, the board of EasyJet continues to regard the fourth proposal as substantially undervaluing the company and its prospects and continuing to give rise to significant questions of deliverability,” said EasyJet.
EasyJet said the takeover interest came at a time when its share price had been pushed down by concerns about the consequences of the Iran war.
The FTSE 250 firm’s shares had dropped by about 30% over the past year, before news of Castlelake’s interest.
EasyJet said it remained “concerned” about Castlelake’s ownership structure and ability to deliver any offer, adding the investor would need to provide “satisfactory assurances and commitments” on those issues.
Castlelake has assets under management worth $36bn (£27.3bn).
Under the deal, EasyJet would be 49% owned by Castlelake and co-investors including Brookfield Asset Management, and 51% owned by individual European Union investors.
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How you can save money on your energy bill as debts rise
The amount of money owed to energy suppliers by customers has risen again to a new record high of £4.79bn.
Regulator Ofgem said that total debt and arrears in England, Wales and Scotland had risen by 15% in a year.
The data, external is updated every three months, with the newly-published figures covering the period from January to the end of March. They relate to energy customers who have been in debt for more than three months.
Average arrears for those without a repayment plan hit £1,876 for electricity and £1,623 for gas – more than twice the amount as those who have a repayment agreement.
Energy prices will rise for millions of households in July – driven by the increase in the cost of gas.
Experts say there are options to cut bills, even though people may feel they have already made every saving possible.
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AbbVie Shares Trade Flat as Pharmaceutical Giant Maintains Focus on Immunology and Oncology Pipeline
AbbVie Inc. shares closed virtually unchanged on Wednesday, finishing at $234.89 after a modest gain of $0.13, as investors assessed the company’s position in a competitive pharmaceutical landscape marked by patent expirations and pipeline developments.
The stability in trading reflected continued confidence in AbbVie’s core immunology franchise, particularly its flagship product Humira’s successors and growing oncology portfolio. The biopharmaceutical company has navigated the loss of exclusivity for its biggest product through strategic diversification and acquisitions.
AbbVie’s performance demonstrates resilience in a sector facing pricing pressures, regulatory scrutiny and competition from biosimilars. Its focus on specialty medicines and innovative therapies has supported revenue stability despite challenges in its legacy portfolio.
The company continues investing heavily in research and development, with emphasis on advancing treatments for autoimmune diseases, cancer and neurological disorders. Recent data readouts and regulatory milestones have generated interest among analysts and investors.
Key Product Performance
Humira, once the world’s best-selling drug, continues facing biosimilar competition, but AbbVie has successfully transitioned patients to newer immunology assets like Skyrizi and Rinvoq. These products have shown strong uptake and expanded indications, helping offset revenue declines.
Oncology remains a growth driver, with medicines like Imbruvica and Venclexta maintaining significant market presence. Pipeline candidates in solid tumors and blood cancers could provide additional catalysts in coming years.
Aesthetics and eye care products, including Botox and Restasis, contribute diversified revenue streams less exposed to patent cliffs. These consumer-facing businesses provide stability amid volatility in specialty pharmaceuticals.
Strategic Initiatives
AbbVie’s acquisition strategy has played a key role in portfolio renewal. Strategic purchases have bolstered capabilities in targeted therapy areas and expanded its global footprint.
The company maintains a disciplined approach to capital allocation, balancing R&D investment with shareholder returns through dividends and buybacks. Its strong cash flow generation supports these priorities.
Digital transformation and data analytics initiatives aim to enhance clinical development efficiency and commercial execution. These efforts position AbbVie to compete effectively in an increasingly technology-driven healthcare environment.
Industry Challenges
The pharmaceutical sector faces ongoing pressures from drug pricing debates, patent expirations and regulatory requirements. AbbVie’s experience navigating the Humira transition provides lessons for managing future losses of exclusivity.
Biosimilar competition has intensified, requiring innovative defense strategies and lifecycle management. Companies with robust pipelines and diversified portfolios are better positioned to weather these cycles.
Global healthcare spending trends, reimbursement policies and demographic shifts influence demand for AbbVie’s products. Aging populations in developed markets support long-term growth in chronic disease treatments.
Investment Outlook
AbbVie attracts investors seeking dividend growth and exposure to innovative medicines. Its yield and history of increases appeal to income-focused portfolios.
Valuation metrics reflect expectations for pipeline success and margin management. Risks include clinical trial outcomes, regulatory decisions and competitive dynamics.
Longer-term prospects remain positive given AbbVie’s established franchises and development programs. Successful commercialization of new therapies could drive renewed growth.
Analysts monitor upcoming clinical data and regulatory milestones closely. Execution on commercial strategies for key products will influence financial performance.
Research and Development Focus
AbbVie’s pipeline spans multiple therapeutic areas with several candidates in late-stage development. Advances in immunology, oncology and neuroscience could yield significant new treatments.
Collaboration with academic institutions and biotechnology companies expands innovation reach. These partnerships accelerate discovery while sharing development risks.
Precision medicine approaches and biomarker-driven therapies represent growing areas of emphasis. Such strategies aim to improve efficacy and safety profiles for patients.
Investment levels in R&D remain substantial, reflecting commitment to long-term value creation. Balancing near-term financial targets with pipeline investment requires careful management.
Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability
AbbVie engages in initiatives addressing healthcare access, diversity and environmental impact. These efforts enhance reputation and align with stakeholder expectations.
Patient assistance programs and global health partnerships demonstrate commitment beyond commercial activities. Such initiatives support brand value and talent attraction.
Sustainability reporting covers environmental footprint, supply chain practices and governance standards. Transparency in these areas has become increasingly important for investors.
Outlook
AbbVie’s recent share price performance reflects typical market dynamics in the healthcare sector. The company’s strategic direction and execution capabilities will determine its ability to deliver sustained growth.
Upcoming catalysts include clinical trial results, regulatory decisions and commercial updates. Management will continue balancing innovation investment with financial discipline.
The pharmaceutical industry’s evolution toward personalized medicine and advanced therapies creates opportunities for established players like AbbVie. Its strong foundation in immunology and expanding oncology presence position it favorably.
As the company navigates patent landscapes and competitive pressures, focus remains on delivering value for patients and shareholders. AbbVie’s track record suggests capability to adapt and thrive in changing healthcare environments.
Business
The Things Business Owners Overlook When Scaling (and How to Stay Ahead)
Growth feels like the goal, right up until the new problems arrive. More staff, bigger premises and more equipment all bring obligations that were never an issue when the business was small, and most of them are easy to miss in the rush.
Here are the things business owners overlook when scaling, and what to put in place before they catch you out.
What do business owners overlook when scaling?
The duties that catch growing businesses out are usually the ones nobody flags in advance: statutory inspection of new equipment, gaps in insurance cover, tighter cashflow despite rising sales, and the HR obligations that arrive with a bigger team. Each is manageable on its own. Together, they account for most growing-pain headaches.
The items worth checking as you scale:
- Statutory examination duties on machinery and equipment
- Insurance that has quietly fallen behind the size of the business
- Cashflow that gets tighter as you grow, not looser
- HR and employment obligations that scale with headcount
- Premises duties like fire risk assessments and electrical safety
The first one is the one almost nobody sees coming.
New equipment brings new legal duties
When a business takes on bigger kit, it takes on responsibilities that go well beyond keeping it running. Certain equipment must be independently inspected by law, at set intervals, by a competent person. This is separate from servicing, and a quick check by a member of staff does not satisfy it.
Take on a forklift, a compressor or a mezzanine floor and you have taken on legal duties most owners have never heard of. Equipment like this needs regular statutory examination under regulations such as LOLER and PUWER, carried out by an independent inspection firm such as Nexus Examination, not just a quick once-over by a member of staff.
The intervals vary. Equipment used to lift people is typically examined every six months, other lifting equipment every twelve, and pressure systems under a written scheme. The report you receive is your evidence of compliance, so it matters as much as the inspection itself.
Cashflow gets harder, not easier
It catches owners by surprise, but growth eats cash. Bigger orders mean buying more stock and paying more wages before the customer has paid you, so a profitable business can still run short of money in the bank.
Watch the gap between money going out and money coming in. Keep a cash buffer, chase invoices properly, and be wary of taking on a large contract that ties up more cash than you can spare. Rising revenue is not the same as healthy cashflow.
The insurance you had is probably not enough
The cover that suited a one-person operation rarely fits a growing one. Employers’ liability insurance becomes a legal requirement the moment you hire staff, and the penalties for trading without it are steep.
Beyond that, more premises, vehicles, equipment and people change your exposure across the board. Review public liability, contents, business interruption and professional indemnity as you grow, rather than assuming the original policy still does the job.
HR obligations multiply with headcount
A handful of hires turns employment law into a real consideration. Written terms of employment, paying at least the national minimum or living wage, and enrolling eligible staff into a workplace pension all become non-negotiable.
As the team grows, so does the need for clear contracts, basic policies and a fair process for managing people. Accidents at work may also need reporting under RIDDOR. None of it is complicated, but it does need doing properly before a dispute forces the issue.
A quick checklist before your next growth step
Before you sign the lease, place the order or make the hire, run through this:
- List every new piece of equipment and confirm what statutory examinations it requires.
- Review every insurance policy against the current size of the business.
- Forecast cashflow for the growth, not just the extra revenue.
- Check your employment paperwork, pay rates and pension duties.
- Sort premises duties such as fire risk assessments and electrical safety.
Work through it once and most of these become routine.
Scaling rewards the owners who plan for the obligations as well as the opportunities. The growth itself is rarely the hard part. The exposure comes from the duty you never knew had landed on your desk.
Business
Researcher, Inventor and Founder of Cluster Solutions
Lee Lorenzen is the founder and CEO of Cluster Solutions, a California-based research and development company focused on clustered water technology.
With a background in biology, pharmacology and biomedical consulting, Lorenzen has spent decades studying the structure of water and its role in hydration and cellular function.
Born and raised in Northern California as one of eight children, Lorenzen developed an early interest in science and the natural world. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of California, Berkeley, before continuing graduate studies in biology at California State University, Fullerton. He also completed advanced graduate work under the supervision of Hoang Van Duc, M.D.
Lorenzen began his professional career in 1974 as a Graduate Instructor in Biology at Chapman College. He later joined the Department of Pharmacology at the University of California, Irvine, as a Research Associate. From 1976 to 1989, he worked in biomedical consulting, gaining experience in research and applied science.
A major turning point in his life came after his wife Stephanie developed serious health issues in the 1980s. The experience led Lorenzen to study water behaviour at the cellular level and eventually develop clustered water technology. In 1989, he founded Cluster Solutions to continue that research and product development.
Over the years, Lorenzen has received several U.S. patents related to clustered water processes, including U.S. Patents Nos. 5,711,950 and 6,033,678. His work has also been recognised by the Microsoft Alumni Foundation for research connected to AIDS and diabetes.
Today, Lorenzen continues to work with physicians, researchers and technical advisers while leading ongoing studies into water structure and hydration science.
Q: What first led you into science and research?
I grew up in Northern California as one of eight children, and I was always curious about how things worked. I enjoyed nature, biology and the outdoors from an early age. That interest eventually led me to study biology at the University of California, Berkeley. Later, I continued graduate studies in biology at California State University, Fullerton.
Early in my career, I worked as a Graduate Instructor in Biology at Chapman College and later as a Research Associate in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of California, Irvine. Those experiences gave me a strong foundation in research and scientific thinking.
Q: What originally sparked your interest in clustered water technology?
The biggest turning point was personal. My wife Stephanie became seriously ill during the 1980s. That experience pushed me to start asking different questions about health, hydration and biological systems.
At the time, I felt there were gaps in the traditional models I was studying. I remember thinking, “Something is missing with this model.” That thought stayed with me for years.
Eventually, I became interested in the structure of water itself and how water behaves inside living cells.
Q: Was there a specific moment when your research changed direction?
Yes. I remember reading work by Nobel Prize winner Albert Szent-Györgyi about cellular water. That research helped connect several ideas for me.
Later, I began studying natural healing springs around the world, including Lourdes in France. I noticed geological similarities in places where people reported unusual water properties. That led me deeper into research on water clustering and molecular structure.
The goal became understanding whether those natural conditions could be reproduced in a stable and controlled way.
Q: You founded Cluster Solutions in 1989. What was your original vision for the company?
The goal was to create a company focused entirely on research and development related to clustered water technology. I wanted a structure where the science could continue long-term.
My role has always been both scientific and operational. I oversee research direction, product development and strategic partnerships. I also stay directly involved in testing and evaluating the technology.
Q: What makes clustered water different from other hydration products?
Most hydration products focus on adding ingredients to water, such as minerals, electrolytes or supplements. Our focus has always been on the structure of water itself.
We study how water molecules organise and how that organisation may affect hydration and nutrient transport at the cellular level. The research is centred on stabilising smaller molecular clusters rather than simply adding substances.
Q: Has it been difficult working in a field that challenges traditional thinking?
At times, yes. When ideas challenge existing assumptions, they are often questioned early on. That is part of scientific history.
You can look at people like Otto Ampferer or Jacques Benveniste. Their work faced resistance before parts of it were revisited later. Even major scientific figures have made incorrect predictions about what was or was not possible.
That does not mean every new idea is correct. But it does mean research should be evaluated carefully and openly.
Q: How do you approach scientific credibility and long-term trust?
Consistency and transparency are very important. I work with physicians, researchers and technical advisers who can independently evaluate results.
I also believe in documentation and long-term testing. Research is not a one-time event. It is a continuous process of refinement, feedback and observation.
Over time, trust comes from staying involved and being willing to answer difficult questions directly.
Q: What challenges have shaped your leadership approach?
Patience has probably been the biggest lesson. Research takes time. Acceptance takes time. You have to stay focused on the work itself rather than short-term reactions.
I have also learned that leadership requires structure. Discovery alone is not enough. You need systems for testing, collaboration and maintaining scientific integrity over many years.
Q: What keeps you motivated after all these years?
Research and development still motivate me. I enjoy solving problems and continuing to learn.
I also value hearing feedback from people who use the products or study the technology. Those conversations often lead to new ideas or new areas of research.
Outside work, I enjoy spending time with my family and grandchildren and being outdoors. That balance is important.
Q: What advice would you give to people pursuing unconventional ideas?
Be prepared for scepticism. Document your work carefully and stay committed to the process.
Many discoveries take years to be fully understood. Patience, persistence and integrity matter more than quick recognition.
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