Soap may be newest weapon for malaria
Gutsy volunteers take part in a Burkina Faso project aimed at creating cheap and accessible product to repel mosquitoes
OUAGADOUGOU // Thrusting their arms into a box full of mosquitoes, brave volunteers in a Burkina Faso laboratory test a weapon in the fight against malaria – soap.
The team behind the Faso Soap project aims to create a cheap, accessible product to repel mosquitoes and protect people from a disease that claimed nearly half a million lives last year, most of them in Africa.
With one eye on a stopwatch, Gerard Niyondiko, the Burundian researcher behind the special soap, watches the behaviour of about 100 female mosquitoes.
The volunteers wait to be bitten but the odorous liquid – a mix of local plant oils – applied to their skin protects them from the cloud of insects.
In the small laboratory in Burkina Faso’s National Centre for Malaria Research and Training in Ouagadougou, Mr Niyondiko has been working since June to test the effectiveness of the soap and refine the recipe using different oils.
In West Africa, malaria kills a child every two minutes, he says. Of the 214 million people infected with malaria last year, 88 per cent of cases were registered in Africa, according to the World Health Organisation. Among them, 438,000 died and children are the most vulnerable. The idea of using soap came from seeing that malaria continued to spread despite the distribution of mosquito nets.
“Nets offer protection during sleep but they keep the heat, and the most vulnerable populations can’t afford to buy repellent for the whole family to protect them the rest of the time,” Mr Niyondiko says.
“So we thought about a product used in the everyday life of these populations, which doesn’t require any change of habits.”
Soap is ideal because “it’s a product that even the poorest households buy and the whole family can share it”, he says.
“If we manage to integrate [malaria] prevention into this product which is already available at an accessible price, it will mean we can save people who are un- willing or unable to spend more to protect themselves.”
The project is targeting the six countries worst affected by malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa, which includes Burkina Faso. “We are working on prevention with a new tool: bringing together two things that don’t at first glance have anything in common: hygiene and malaria,” says Lisa Barutel, 28, one of Mr Niyondiko’s two associates on the project.
By using local essential oils as repellent, Mr Niyondiko and his team hope to keep costs to a minimum.
“Our aim is not to get rich. We want to save 100,000 lives by 2020,” he says, echoing the project’s slogan.
After training as a chemist, Mr Niyondiko won a bursary to leave Burundi and study for a master’s degree at the International Institute for Water and Environmental Engineering in Ouagadougou.
There, in 2013, he met Ms Barutel, a Frenchwoman who was in charge of helping students with their projects. She set up an incubator for projects with a social aspect in Ouagadougou and helped Mr Niyondiko gather funding.
Faso Soap hit the headlines in 2013 when it won the US$25,000 ( Dh91,812) Global Social Venture Competition, an award run by a network of business schools around the world.
But a lack of funding put the project on hold until last year,
‘ Our aim is not to get rich. We want to save 100,000 lives by 2020 Gerard Niyondiko Faso Soap project researcher
when it relaunched with a more scientific approach and partnered with a French start-up specialising in microencapsulation, a technique to allow the soap’s active ingredients to work effectively for longer.
A crowdfunding drive this year raised $73,000.
The laboratory tests now are being done in line with a scientific protocol so that the soap can be approved by WHO and used in other countries.
There are two stages of development to go before the soap can be released to the public, and Ms Barutel says she hopes to “help a whole country” with their “invention for everyone”.