कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

CAN ONE FOUNDATION CHANGE LIFE ON EARTH?

Fortune US

|

June - July 2025

IT’s JUST a routine checkup, standard for participants in a clinical trial, but when Alice, a South African shop clerk in her forties, visits the Be Part Yoluntu Centre for research, she wears her best outfit: trousers, a blouse, and short heels.

- BY ALEXA MIKHAIL

CAN ONE FOUNDATION CHANGE LIFE ON EARTH?

She wants to be “presentable,” she tells Fortune, because the clinic in Mbekweni, a township northeast of Cape Town, is a special place to her: “What I've seen is that your health matters more when you come here.”

For Alice and the other participants in a global clinical trial for a new tuberculosis vaccine, it’s “not just an injection of IV,” explains Dr. Ronald Kapp, a physician and investigator at the center. “It’s also an injection of dignity.”

In this TB hotspot, with its high unemployment rates and poverty, almost everyone has a friend, neighbor, or relative who has been sick or died from the bacterial lung disease. It’s an awful death: Once known as “consumption,” the world’s deadliest infectious disease appears to consume the human body from within, sometimes filling sufferers’ lungs with fluid. Alice (a pseudonym used to protect her identity and the integrity of the clinical trial), a mother of three, says she is proud to participate in the Phase III trial of what could be the first new tuberculosis vaccine in a century—which health researchers hope will eventually eradicate TB worldwide. Efforts like this one, funded by the Gates Foundation in faraway Seattle, alongside Wellcome, are “going to save the world,” Alice tells Fortune.

A preventable disease that nevertheless killed 1.25 million people in 2023 is a tragedy that to the philanthropist Bill Gates is also an opportunity: “It’s amazing how little work has been done on any tools for TB—TB diagnostics, drugs, and vaccines,” the Microsoft cofounder noted. “TB gets ignored because it’s only in poor countries.” Speaking like the methodical tech pioneer he famously is, Gates explained that the foundation intends to change that, pulling off “breakthroughs in all three of those areas.”

And as Gates told

Fortune US से और कहानियाँ

Fortune US

Fortune US

MCKINSEY ALUMS DOMINATE THE WORLD'S C-SUITES. WILL AI DRY UP THE FIRM’S CEO PIPELINE?

THE CONSULTING GIANT HAS PRODUCED MORE FORTUNE 500 CEOs THAN ANY OTHER INSTITUTION. NOW IT'S SPRINTING TO RETHINK HOW IT TRAINS LEADERS.

time to read

15 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

WANNA BET? WHY INVESTORS ARE GAMBLING ON KALSHI AND POLYMARKET

THE 2024 ELECTIONS SHOWED THE POTENTIAL AND POPULARITY OF “PREDICTION MARKETS.” BUT THE STARTUPS AND THEIR HEADSTRONG YOUNG FOUNDERS STILL FACE LONG ODDS.

time to read

13 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

RESTORING THE AURA OF RALPH LAUREN

A DECADE AGO, RALPH LAUREN THE COMPANY WAS JEOPARDIZING ITS LUXURY REPUTATION AND WATCHING PROFITS PLUMMET. THE SOLUTION: FINDING THE RIGHT PARTNER FOR RALPH LAUREN, THE MAN. HOW PATRICE LOUVET HELPED AMERICA’S MOST IMPORTANT FASHION COMPANY GET ITS GROOVE BACK.

time to read

13 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

RAMP WANTS TO SHAKE UP CORPORATE CREDIT CARDS. INVESTORS BELIEVE THAT'S A $22.5 BILLION IDEA

The fintech startup is aspiring to change the way companies spend—and taking aim at American Express. But can Ramp live up to the hype?

time to read

13 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

PASSIONS: BE OUR (ONLY) GUEST

AFTER THE MANGOSTEEN daiquiri misted tableside with lime oil, the cheesy garlic naan, the broccoli salad with pistachios and mint, the pink peppered pineapple soda, the tandoori half-chicken with tingling green chutney, the crock of thick, savory, buttery black dal—after all that, served in the celadon-green Permit Room in Notting Hill, no, I did not need dessert.

time to read

3 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

THE BATTLE TO SAVE INTEL

BUOYED BY EMERGENCY INVESTMENTS FROM THE U.S. GOVERNMENT AND INDUSTRY PEERS, ONE OF AMERICAʼS GREATEST TECH COMPANIES IS IN THE FIGHT OF ITS LIFE.

time to read

10 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

THE FUTURE 50: FAST-GROWING COMPANIES THAT INVESTORS SHOULD WATCH—AND LEADERS SHOULD EMULATE

BUSINESSES WORLDWIDE have weathered a chaotic year so far in 2025. Shifting global trade and tariff dynamics and the AI race have made the pace of change even more relentless than usual. Costs have risen, and bankruptcies are up. Still, across sectors, some companies are not just staying afloat, but thriving—and in many markets, buoyant share prices show that investors retain their optimism.

time to read

4 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

FEAR ON THE FARM

BIG AGRICULTURE WRESTLES WITH THE WHITE HOUSE IMMIGRATION CRACKDOWN.

time to read

10 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

TECH: THE AI OF THE HURRICANE

WHEN NASA and its Soviet rivals launched the first meteorological satellites into space in the 1960s, weather forecasts on Earth changed forever. With a constellation of eyes in the sky, forecasters could suddenly monitor conditions over oceans and remote landmasses, filling in major gaps in their models and providing an early warning system about potential storms forming far away.

time to read

4 mins

October - November 2025

Fortune US

Fortune US

WHEN THE MACHINES CAME FOR AMERICAN JOBS

“FARM MECHANIZATION HAS JUST BEGUN,” proclaimed the cover of Fortune's October 1948 edition. And indeed, the rise of machines such as the tractor was causing profound changes in the American workforce, the accompanying article explained: “In 1800 three out of four in the working population were in agriculture... In 1948 only one in seven U.S. workers is needed to provide the nation’s food.” That trend continued: In 2003, Fortune reported that the agricultural workforce made up just 2% of employment—yet farms still produced a more-than-adequate bounty for American consumption and export.

time to read

1 min

October - November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size