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Two University Students Invent Malaria Fighting Soap

Ayazika Phillips by Ayazika Phillips
9 years ago
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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It is especially exciting to see some of Africa’s sharpest minds go to work in search of life-saving solutions.Enter Moctar Dembélé of Burkina Faso and Gérard Niyondiko of Burundi. The two former students made history , when they beat “650 competitors from nearly 40 countries” to become not only the first Africans but the first non-American team to win the Global Social Venture Competition (GSVC).

Their brilliant idea? Faso Soap – a malaria fighting soap they invented using shea butter, citronella and other insect-repelling herbs sourced locally from Burkina Faso. The inventors say they chose soap as a way to protect a wide variety of users because it is low cost and widely used by people of all backgrounds, so it doesn’t require people to accept a whole new behavior:

“On this continent Africa the majority of the population lives below the poverty line,” Niyondiko explained to CNN, “so we thought of a repellent and larvicidal mosquito soap which will be accessible and affordable to the majority of the population, seeing that soap is a commodity product and especially not going to add other additional costs to the population.”

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The soap is designed to leave an insect-repelling scent on users skin after bathing; dirty water containing the soap residue will also drive mosquitoes away from standing water, which is a popular breeding ground for the bloodthirsty pests. “Our soap will fulfill the desire of the population to be clean, as well as protect them from malaria, without any additional cost to them,” Niyondiko :

According to the Blum Center for Developing Economies at the University of California, Berkeley, the Faso Soap team won $25,000 for the grand prize and another $1,500 for the Center’s People’s Choice Award. The product has been awaiting clinical testing since that time to prove its safety and effectiveness before it can be distributed to the public.

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Three years later, Niyondiko, who studied at Burkina Faso’s International Institute for Water and Environmental Engineering, has teamed up with a Stanford graduate and a social entrepreneur to launch “100,000 Lives” – a crowdfunding campaign aimed at raising $113,000 to cover the cost of product testing and development. “Our goal is that our soap is widely distributed to reach the largest possible number in sub-Saharan Africa and other parts of the world affected by malaria,” says Niyondiko.

With nine days remaining in the campaign, supporters have already exceeded the first fundraising milestone, but there are two milestones left to the project’s most ambitious goal: a laboratory dedicated exclusively to Faso Soap research. Developers hope to complete testing in time to introduce the soap by 2018. Let’s hope Faso Soap turns out to be the miracle that so many have been waiting for.

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Ayazika Phillips

Ayazika Phillips

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