Monday Jan 06, 2014
Global child health: The past, present and future of malaria vaccines
Despite advances in prevention, rapid diagnosis and treatment and
being a focus disease for the Millenium Development Goals, malaria
continues to claim an unacceptable number of lives.
The first experiments in malaria vaccinology date back several
decades. There was excitement on the release of the Colombian Spf66
vaccine in the 1980s but this was followed by disappointed as the
trial results did not translate into the expected effictiveness on the
ground. Since then, molecular advances have seen a new wave of
candidate vaccines including the RTS.
In this podcast, ADC's global health editor Nick Brown discusses with Lorenz von Seidlein, an eminent malariologist at Menzies School of Health Research, Australia, the reasons why an effective vaccine has proved so elusive, the range of new candidates and hopes for the future.
Read Lorenz's full article here: http://adc.bmj.com/content/98/12/981.full