An afterthought on
early malaria vaccination
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
May 17, 2019
The early malaria vaccination program,
currently underway in Ghana, is as bad an idea
as fixing Band-Aid on a festering wound; without
first treating the underlying condition.
Yet, there is
a push for urgency in implementation by the
project promoters, while the
fundamentals as to why there is malaria
prevalence in Ghana is overlooked.
And as
usual, there is no lack of zeal in the pursuit
and no want of spokesmen to
justify this early vaccination mission.
So, Mosquirix, the early
malarial vaccine program, has been given green
light by our government and the approach
for early vaccination is on.
We must
notice the haste
to execute the program and it should be
worrisome.
This haste explains how we
normally tackle our unique problems.
Usually, the fundamentals, the drivers
of the problem, are left in place to
worsen in the haste, while we chase after the novel
approach.
That's why sadly in the end,
we come up short, with our missions badly
unaccomplished.
So here comes Dr.
Anthony Nsiah-Asare, Director General of Ghana
Health Services, who has supported the Mosquirix project
with a statement like, the early vaccine “will reduce
the number of children who die from the disease
by 40% yearly.”
Next, a Prof. Evelyn
Ansah, Head of Malaria Center at University of
Health and Allied Sciences, has also been quoted
as saying, the vaccine “provides additional
protection of 40% to children against severe
malaria.”
Thus, she says ”400,000 die
of malaria every year and a 40% reduction can be
very significant.”
So, 400,000 malaria
deaths from Ghana?
Hard to believe,
except nowhere in the reasoning of both Dr. Nsiah-Asare and Prof. Ansah are the fundamentals
for malaria infestation mentioned.
And nowhere is it
mentioned, as Dr. Nii Bonney Andrews would
notice later, "that malaria infestation is a
civil engineering problem."
Why there are 400,000
deaths by malaria every year is obviously because of
the acutely worsening
environmental conditions in our communities.
Vaccines cannot clean
our environment, nor alter the fundamental
condition for mosquito infestation.
That
Prof Ansah claims, “all children are protected
against 13 deadly childhood diseases, including
diphtheria, measles, poliomyelitis...” by
vaccines does not negate the fundamental problem
of the dirty and unhealthy environment of our
communities.
And, that there are workable
vaccines in other areas of disease control, as
cited by some other authorities, does
not make it permissible to maintain the current
unhygienic attitude that grows mosquito
population in
the country.
Dr. Nii Bonney Andrews, a neurosurgeon
based in Ghana and Morocco, seems to
understand the problem. That the danger of
the failure to
tackle the fundamental condition first, before
anything else, poses to the early
vaccination program itself.
By this, he
is pointing to the conditions of our drainage systems,
which are choked with debris and waste.
Pools of
dirty standing water in gutters, erstwhile
streams and lagoons have turned into brews of
stench and
the verdant breeding grounds for the mosquito
that causes malaria.
So why not seek to
eradicate the nourishing grounds of the mosquito
first, before jumping to the early
vaccination drive against malaria, Dr. Andrews
asks.
Fact is we have
promoted dirty environments in our communities, a condition which is a boon
for the mosquito, but one which has proven
lethal for humans.
Rather than eradicating
filth,
we are rushing to dress up the festering problem
with the early malaria vaccination program.
And we promote this
drive as a boon to child health.
Even in this, Dr, Andrews points out
a
potential risk: A damage to the condition called
"adaptive childhood"
immunity, which the early vaccination proposed
program may cause.
Is there a
misperception about childhood adaptive immunity
conditions, with regard to malaria, that our so called experts fail to note?
This is a question a
scientist must answer. But the ethical
implications of that question should
be open for all.
Dr. Andrews
points to a research done on
“Malaria
Vaccine and Child Mortality,” published on
October 31, 2015, which found “a significant
increase in mortality of 50%” at the end of the
study in a group of early vaccine subjects.
He wonders whether early vaccination
might have interrupted the normal development of
adaptive immunity in the children exposed to the
program and whether the increase in mortality
rate found in the above
study can be attributed as cause.
And if so, why is the
information on the finding of increase in
mortality missing in the push for the early vaccination
program?
The justifications offered so
far, that others have the
vaccine program, so Ghana must also have it;
that, the project will ameliorate the impact of
malaria on kids, as other vaccines have in other
areas of disease control, arguably, is a stretch
of reasoning but nothing approaching the
scientific.
But Dr.
Andrews is still willing to give the vaccine
project a try.
In a missive, he responds
that, “the vaccine may prove useful within the
context of other important preventative
measures.”
And indeed, the preventative
measures must make sense.
It makes sense to bring
our energies to bear on the fundamentals that
cause the mosquito infestation in our
communities first. This, as said Dr. Andrews, is
mainly a civil engineering job.
Additionally important also is a civic education
aspect of the civil engineering phase.
Instead of
wasting precious broadcast media on religious
fraudsters, we can help ourselves a bit better
by preaching the merits of a cleaner environment
for malaria control on our airwaves.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com , Washington,
DC, May 17, 2019
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce,
with credits, unedited. If posted at a website, email a copy of
the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com . Or don't publish at
all.
|