Vaccine group invites African states to apply for malaria shot support
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[July 21, 2022]
LONDON (Reuters) - Nine months after
the world's first malaria vaccine was recommended for use, international
vaccine alliance Gavi invited countries to apply for financial support
to roll out the jab, particularly targeting young children in Africa.
The World Health Organization endorsed GSK Plc's four-dose Mosquirix
shot in October last year, saying it could save thousands of lives.
Now Gavi, which has $155.7 million available over 2022-2025 for the
initial roll-out of the vaccine, has invited countries to apply for
funding and support to distribute the shot.
It is a step forward for the vaccine, which has taken decades to
develop. Malaria, on average, kills a child every minute.
However the roll-out is expected to start slowly, with supply falling
far below the vast demand for several years, a recent Reuters
investigation found.
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A nurse holds malaria vaccine vials before administering the jab to
an infant at the Lumumba Sub-County hospital in Kisumu, Kenya, July
1, 2022. REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File Photo
Ghana, Kenya and Malawi - African
nations that have been involved in pilot progammes using the vaccine
- can apply first, by September, to broaden their use of the shot.
Other countries can apply by the end of this year, Gavi said in a
statement.
"The work towards a malaria vaccine has been long and hard," said
Seth Berkley, chief executive of Gavi. Alongside the existing
interventions like bed nets, Berkley said he hoped that the new tool
would now "allow us to save more lives in countries hit hardest by
this killer disease."
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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