The Borneo Post

Cut-price malaria vaccine to begin Africa rollout from May

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India: The world’s biggest vaccine maker will start rolling out a cheap new malaria inoculatio­n in Africa from May, bolstering the fight against one of the most deadly infectious diseases globally.

The mosquito-borne malady kills more than 600,000 people a year, 95 percent of them in Africa, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

It is more fatal among the young, and the annual toll of malaria deaths includes nearly half a million African children aged under five.

The Serum Institute of India (SII) this year plans to ship 25 million doses of the new vaccine, developed along with Oxford University researcher­s and known as R21.

“In terms of importance and saving lives... it’s going to be a hugely impactful vaccine, SII chief executive Adar Poonawalla said. “We’ve offered these vaccines to the African continent at US$4 or less in the first year itself. And then as we scale up, maybe we can bring that down a little bit further.”

The R21 vaccine, a three-dose course and booster shot for children aged 5-36 months, is the second malaria shot approved by the WHO. But researcher­s say it will be cheaper than the other vaccine produced by British pharma giant GlaxoSmith­Kline.

The WHO said its rollout was expected to greatly expand supply to meet high demand from African countries.

The SII has been the largest vaccine manufactur­er globally for several years but saw its profile rise substantia­lly after manufactur­ing millions of cheap Covid vaccine shots for export at the height of the pandemic.

With demand for coronaviru­s prevention waning, it has repurposed some pandemic-era facilities to combat other diseases at its sprawling factory complex in Pune, a few hours’ drive from business capital Mumbai. – AFP

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