TheEconomistMarch19th 2022
Graphic detail Malaria
81
Anothervaccine
victory?
W
henitcomestocovid19vaccines,
poor countries in Africa have been
stuck at the back of the queue. However,
the continent’s long wait for another im
munological miracle appears to be draw
ing to a close. Later this year, the world’s
first malaria vaccine is scheduled for a roll
out. Although the current version leaves
much to be desired—it requires four doses,
is hard to manufacture at scale and reduces
severe infections by a mere 30%—better al
ternatives may be on the way. A jab devel
oped by scientists at Oxford has shown
77% effectiveness. If clinical trials go well,
they aim to apply for prequalification
from the World Health Organisation in
September. Production at a rate of up to
200m doses per year could follow swiftly.
Malaria has proved to be a stubborn ad
versary. In mosquitorich environments, it
is 520 times more contagious than the
Omicron variant of sarscov2. The dis
easewasonceendemicacrossmostofthe
world, sweeping through the Americas in
the 1600s and reaching as far north as Rus
sia’s Arctic coast and as far east as Japan.
Past efforts to defeat malaria using vac
cines have failed, largely because the life
cycle of the parasite that causes it has 12
stages. Each presents a different target. In
stead, rich countries in cool regions have
eradicated the disease by attacking the
mosquitoes that spread it, both by spraying
insecticides and by destroying breeding
grounds. Poorer, tropical countries have
fared worse. In 2020 malaria killed 627,000
people, of whom 96% lived in Africa.
New vaccines are just one element of a
threepronged strategy to vanquish malar
ia. Some triedandtrue tools, like install
ing insecticideimpregnated bed nets and
distributing therapeutic drugs, can still
reach more people. Another scientific ad
vance could prove even more valuable than
vaccines: genetically modified mosquitoes
that cannot reproduce sustainably, which
could cause the insects that spread the dis
ease to die out. Such “gene drives” could
damage ecosystems, and a regulatory pro
cess needs to be set up before they can be
approved. But big donors like the Gates
Foundation support them. Modellers at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine reckon that, with enough re
sources, by 2030 these tactics could jointly
cut deaths caused by malaria by 75%.
Partly because Africa’s population is
growing so fast, when projected into the
future such gains would have a remarkable
impact. By 2034 the annual number of
deaths averted would exceed the current
yearly toll from breast cancer. In total, 20m
lives would be saved during the next three
decades—the same number as The Econo-
mist’s estimate of the global increase in
deaths during the covid19 pandemic. And
measured in years of life, this effect would
dwarf covid’s. Whereas covid mainly kills
the elderly, around 80% of those felled by
malaria are aged five or younger.
The economic benefits are nearly as im
pressive. On average, adults who catch ma
laria lose three days of work. Cutting the
number of cases by 75% would yield 14bn
extra workdays over two decades, the
equivalent of the current annual labour
supply of Nigeria. Productivity might also
improve, since nonfatal cases of malaria
in children can stunt growth and hinder
cognitive development, in part by induc
ing comas. A hidden factor holding back
economic growth inAfrica may be the last
ing impact of thedisease on survivors—
call it “long malaria”.n
Squashing malaria could save as many
lives as covid-19 has taken
0.9m
0
0.3m
0.6m
1.2m
2000 10 20 30 40 50
19.4mlives
2020 2050 2020 2050
23.1bn days
14.2bndaysworked
inNigeriain 2020
17.9mdeathsfrom
cardiovasculardisease
globallyin 2021
→ A big push to fight malaria could save nearly 2m lives over the next three decades
Annual deaths from malaria Malaria* incidence per 1,000 people, 2019
Witha 75%dropinmalariaincidence
Totaldeathsaverted Total workdays gained
*Plasmodiumfalciparum Sources:Malaria Atlas Project; Our World in Data; UN; WHO; World Bank; The Economist
↓ 2000-19
Better drugs, more accurate
diagnoses and more bed nets
reduce malaria deaths by 37%
↓ 2020-22
Covid-19disruptsanti-malaria
efforts,asmedicalresourcesare
divertedtofightthepandemic
↑2020-30baselinescenario
If theinfectionrateremains
constant,populationgrowthwill
causethedeathtolltorise
↓2020-30“bigpush”scenario
Infectionratefallsby75%from215 to 23,
thankstovaccines,geneticallymodified
mosquitoesandbetteruseofexisting tools
Nigeria
Congo
Uganda
Mozambique
Rest of sub-
Saharan Africa
Rest of world Deaths averted
50
250
500
Mozambique
Uganda
Congo
Nigeria