Close Menu
The Shade RoomThe Shade Room
  • CELEBS
  • NEWS
  • BEAUTY & STYLE
  • SHOWS
  • TSR TEENS
  • TSR SHOP
  • NEWSLETTER
  • CAREERS
  • MEDIA KIT
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Snapchat
Trending
  • Embed Test
  • Test Death Kill Porn Murder Test
  • TSR Live with Claudia Jordan, A.B. Burns, Wendy Osefo, and Joe E. Collins III death
  • Instagram Embed Test
  • Vertical Image
  • Test 2: TSR Teens
  • Newsbreak video
  • Colossus Test
  • Prayers Up! Michael Strahan’s 19-Year-Old Daughter Reveals Brain Tumor Diagnosis
  • Oop! Charlamagne Tha God & DJ Envy Express Confusion Over Getting A New ‘Breakfast Club’ Co-Host
The Shade RoomThe Shade Room
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok Snapchat
  • SHOWS
  • CELEBS
  • NEWS
  • BEAUTY & STYLE
  • TSR TEENS
  • TSR SHOP
The Shade RoomThe Shade Room
Button
Home » Latest Tea » World Health Organization Approves Second-Ever Malaria Vaccine To Help ‘Close The Huge Supply-And-Demand Gap’
Health and Wellness

World Health Organization Approves Second-Ever Malaria Vaccine To Help ‘Close The Huge Supply-And-Demand Gap’

Nick FenleyBy Nick FenleyOctober 2, 2023No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
World Health Organization Approves Second-Ever Malaria Vaccine To Help 'Close The Huge Supply-And-Demand Gap'
Sergii Iaremenko/Science Photo Library/Getty Images
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The World Health Organization (WHO) has officially approved the world’s second-ever malaria vaccine. It was developed at the University of Oxford and will cost between $2 and $4 USD per dose.

The New Vaccine Will Help “Protect More Children Faster”

The WHO announced the news through a statement on Monday (Oct. 2). Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus — the organization’s director-general — declared he used to “dream” of this moment.

“As a malaria researcher, I used to dream of the day we would have a safe and effective vaccine against malaria. Now we have two.”

He added, “This second vaccine is a vital additional tool to protect more children faster, and to bring us closer to our vision of a malaria-free future.”

The WHO’s Regional Director for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, further highlighted this sentiment. He noted that the two WHO-approved vaccines “can help bolster malaria prevention and control efforts” in Africa.

“This second vaccine holds real potential to close the huge demand-and-supply gap. Delivered to scale and rolled out widely, the two vaccines can help bolster malaria prevention and control efforts and save hundreds of thousands of young lives in Africa from this deadly disease.”

For context, the WHO notes that malaria “places a particularly high burden on children in the African Region, where nearly half a million children die from the disease each year.”

However, AP News reports that John Johnson of Doctors Without Borders points out that the vaccine isn’t a sure-fire solution.

“This is one more tool we will now have, but it’s not going to replace bed nets and spraying insecticides. This is not the vaccine that’s going to stop malaria.”

Reuters notes that the vaccine was developed at the University of Oxford, and it will become available by mid-2024.

Today is a great day for health, a great day for science, and a great day for vaccines:@WHO is recommending a second vaccine to prevent #malaria in children at risk of the disease, called R21/Matrix-M.

Demand for the RTS,S vaccine far exceeds supply, so the R21 vaccine is a… pic.twitter.com/1trR6fmYMc

— Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) October 2, 2023

The WHO Approved The First Malaria Vaccine In 2021

This noteworthy development comes nearly two years after the WHO officially endorsed the first-ever malaria vaccine.

AP News reports the “historic” decision came as a result of researchers tracking more than 800,000 Ghanaian, Kenyan, and Malawian children who received the vaccine since 2019.

The vaccine, Mosquirix, was initially conceived in 1987 and boasts a 30% effectiveness rate. Nonetheless, Dr. Julian Rayner of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research said the “imperfect vaccine” was a “huge step forward.”

In the WHO’s recent statement on a second, cheaper vaccine being approved, the organization declared, “Both vaccines are shown to be safe and effective in preventing malaria in children and, when implemented broadly, are expected to have high public health impact.”

RELATED: At Least 74 Perish During Devastating Building Fire In South Africa
What Do You Think Roomies?
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0
+1
0

Comments are closed.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

LIVE

TSR Live with Claudia Jordan, A.B. Burns, Wendy Osefo, and Joe E. Collins III death

July 31, 2024
EXCLUSIVE DETAILS

Prayers Up! Michael Strahan’s 19-Year-Old Daughter Reveals Brain Tumor Diagnosis

January 11, 2024
BREAKING NEWS

Oop! Charlamagne Tha God & DJ Envy Express Confusion Over Getting A New ‘Breakfast Club’ Co-Host

January 11, 2024
Latest Posts

Embed Test

March 26, 2025

Test Death Kill Porn Murder Test

March 12, 2025
LIVE

TSR Live with Claudia Jordan, A.B. Burns, Wendy Osefo, and Joe E. Collins III death

July 31, 2024

Instagram Embed Test

July 30, 2024

All Tea. No Shade.

Subscribe below to our official newsletter.

About
About

TSR is the culture's definitive source for trending celeb news, exclusive interviews, videos, and more.

NMSDC CERTIFIED

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok Snapchat Threads
Featured Posts
LIVE

TSR Live with Claudia Jordan, A.B. Burns, Wendy Osefo, and Joe E. Collins III death

July 31, 2024
EXCLUSIVE DETAILS

Prayers Up! Michael Strahan’s 19-Year-Old Daughter Reveals Brain Tumor Diagnosis

January 11, 2024
BREAKING NEWS

Oop! Charlamagne Tha God & DJ Envy Express Confusion Over Getting A New ‘Breakfast Club’ Co-Host

January 11, 2024
Latests Posts

Embed Test

March 26, 2025

Test Death Kill Porn Murder Test

March 12, 2025

Instagram Embed Test

July 30, 2024
© 2025 The Shade Room
  • Celebs
  • News & Politics
  • Beauty & Style
  • Shows
  • TSR Teens
  • TSR Shop
  • Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.