‘You get goosebumps from the data’: hopes rise for new malaria vaccine
The disease is a leading killer of under fives across Africa. But trials for a new vaccine suggest an end to the death toll could be in sightWhen Annah Kadhenghi had her first child last year, she named him Brighton Ushindi Baraka:baraka meaning “blessing” in Swahili,ushindi meaning victory. Last month, at the age of seven months, Brighton fought his first battle against an enemy that plagues millions of the world ’s poorest: malaria.“His temperature was very high; he was vomiting. I took him to the hospital,” says Kadhenghi, a schoolteacher in Kilifi, eastern Kenya. Brighton defeated the mosquito-borne disease, and now sits contentedly at the weigh-in clinic at Kilifi county hospital.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Lizzy Davies in Kilifi. Photography by Luis Tato for the Guardian Tags: Malaria Global development Kenya Africa World news Vaccines and immunisation Infectious diseases Health Medical research Source Type: news
More News: African Health | Child Development | Children | Hospitals | Infectious Diseases | Kenya Health | Malaria | Malaria Vaccine | Research | Science | Vaccines