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Nigeria Develops Vaccine for Malaria

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Nigeria Develops Vaccine for Malaria

(3 Minutes Read)

Before expanding nationwide, a trial rollout will begin in two states with the highest malaria burden, Kebbi in the north and Bayelsa on the coast. A balance of 153,800 more doses is expected in the country on 26 October, bringing the number of available vaccines to a million.

Nigeria will become one of the first countries to roll out a new malaria vaccine after receiving the first batch of 846,200 doses. Developed by scientists at the University of Oxford in England, the R21 vaccination was produced by the Serum Institute of India and Novavax.

The Nigerian Health Minister, Muhammad Ali Pate, says the doses represent a significant milestone in the country’s efforts to eliminate malaria. Mosquitoes, which spread the disease to humans through bites, breed in water and are especially plentiful during the rainy season.

Malaria remains a major public health challenge in Nigeria, affecting some 97 percent of the population.  According to the World Health Organization, it is the world’s worst-affected country, accounting for 31 percent of global deaths from the disease. The health ministry says the inoculations, which were procured in partnership with the International Vaccine Alliance, Gavi, will be administered freely.

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Before expanding nationwide, a trial rollout will begin in two states with the highest malaria burden, Kebbi in the north and Bayelsa on the coast. A balance of 153,800 more doses is expected in the country on 26 October, bringing the number of available vaccines to a million.