one of the vaccine’s creators, professor katie ewer, told bbc news that this is the fourteenth malaria jab she’s worked on. “this is not like covid where we have seven vaccines straight away that will work… it’s much, much harder,” she told the outlet.
malaria causes headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, sweats or chills and stomach or muscle pain. it can be difficult to track because symptoms often appear quite a while after exposure — sometimes up to a week later, health canada says.
it’s generally treated with prescription drugs that will fight off the parasite. but if malaria isn’t treated “urgently and aggressively,” the agency says, it may cause seizures, coma, renal failure or respiratory failure.
finally achieving a successful malaria vaccine after all this time has been “incredibly gratifying,” ewer said.
“the potential achievement that this vaccine could have if it’s rolled out could be really world-changing.”
anti-malarial drugs can have severe side effects