Is malaria invincible? The only vaccine candidate being tested is less than 40 percent effective in clinical trials. This article is being republished on the occasion of World Malaria Day.
You know what the number 1 public health enemy across the world is?
It’s not AIDS or tuberculosis – but malaria.
95% of India’s population resides in malaria-endemic areas. What’s worse, more than 50,000 Indians and over 6 lakh people globally die not because of something intuitively monstrous – like wild crocodiles that lurk in dense African forests – but from mosquito bites that spread malaria.
So why is it that there is still no perfect defence against a preventable disease we know everything about?
Anti-malarial drugs are losing their teeth against malaria in India, Myanmar, Cambodia. Scientists at the National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR) traced a deadly mutation in the parasite.
History tells us what will happen then.
There are no new anti-malaria drugs in the pipeline, no unused replacement drugs on the horizon.
Malaria already kills more than 6.6 lakh people annually, most of them kids under the age of 5. Without radical measures to curb the disease, drug resistance will become too big and impossible to contain in a populous country like India.
The World Health Organisation says that more than one-fifth of all global malaria deaths are because of fake drugs.
A shocking 10-year study published in the medical journal The Lancet in 2013, found that:
According to the latest World Malaria Report, 70% of India’s population faces the risk of getting malaria and fake, poor quality medicines could spell doom for India’s fight against the deadly disease.
The consequences of this can be multifold.
The malaria parasite is extremely diverse across the globe. The type which affects India is not the same as Cambodia, and that in turn differs from the parasite in Africa. With global travel, the different strains regularly mate and the genes spill over.
Scientists have now found that some malaria parasites have mutations that make them prone to mutating!
That also explains why it’s so goddamn hard to come up with an effective vaccine. The parasites keep changing in lab settings; by the time a vaccine candidate is ready, the vector has evolved in fifth gear, leaving the vaccine ineffective.
Many vaccines are in development, but none are consistently effective. Some experts wonder if an effective vaccine will ever be made, given that surviving a natural infection does not produce lifelong immunity.
Though the number of deaths is staggeringly high, progress has been made against malaria.
Hundreds of experts are building innovative ways to combat the deadly malaria mosquito. We have the science to defeat malaria. We just have to put concentrated measures together before it defeats us.
Related Read: Mutant Mosquitoes Are Here To Wipe off Malaria!
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