Zuwaira Muhammad sat beside her emaciated 10-month-old twins on a clinic bed in northern Nigeria, caring for them as they battled malnutrition and malaria.
She would have her babies vaccinated if they regain their strength, but for many in Kano — a hotbed of anti-vaccine sentiment — the choice is not an obvious one. The infants have been admitted to the 75-bed clinic in the Unguwa Uku neighbourhood, one of only two in the city of 4.5 million run by French aid agency Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
Kano has the highest malaria burden in Nigeria, but the city has long been known for a deep-seated suspicion of vaccinations against several diseases.
Photo: AP
People in the conservative north of the country tend to look to the guidance of their own religious leaders, given in their native Hausa language, over international campaigns associated with federal authorities.
Last month, Nigeria secured 846,000 doses of malaria vaccine in its campaign to fight the parasitic scourge, long a major concern in Africa’s most populous nation.
The malaria vaccine, which requires four doses, should be administered to children under one year as part of Nigeria’s routine immunization schedule, according to UNICEF.
It remains to be seen if Kano can put aside its doubts.
“I will allow them to receive the malaria vaccine when the immunization starts, because I know how bad malaria is,” Zuwaira Muhammad, 26, said.
“I almost lost them to malaria but for the intervention I received here,” she said.
Malaria is caused by a plasmodium parasite which is transmitted by the bite of infected mosquitoes. It is characterized by chills, fever and sweating and can be fatal if not treated quickly.
Nigeria accounts for 27 percent of the global malaria burden, the highest in the world, the WHO said in its World Malaria Report 2022.
It also accounts for 31 percent of global malaria mortality: In 2021, Nigeria recorded 68 million malaria cases and 194,000 deaths, with 80 percent of the mortality among children younger than five, WHO data showed.
Kano has the highest number of cases in Nigeria, recording 6.8 million or 10 percent of all infections in 2021, the Malaria Consortium, a UK-based medical charity working to eradicate malaria in Kano, says on its Web site.
Kano is a breeding ground for mosquitoes due to poor sanitation. Ubiquitous refuse dumps and open sewers crisscross the city, which the charity blames for a malaria prevalence rate of 32.4 percent, the highest in Nigeria.
The state government’s free distribution of insecticide-treated mosquito nets has not contained the disease.
“Malaria is a concern, there is a correlation between malnutrition and malaria,” MSF project coordinator Hemmed Lukonge said. “For every 10 malnutrition cases we receive, eight come with malaria.”
Kano has seen a 15-percent increase in infant malaria deaths this year compared with last year, Lukonge said.
“The malaria vaccine is a game changer,” he said.
Kano has a history of suspicion and rejection of vaccines. The state suspended polio immunization for 13 months in 2003 and 2004 following claims that polio vaccine was laced with substances that could render girls infertile as part of a Western plot to depopulate Africa.
The suspension made Kano the epicenter of the transmission of the virus to other regions of the world that had already been declared polio-free.
Although authorities have now resumed polio vaccination, suspicion about vaccine safety persists.
Last year, two mothers created a stir in the city when they appeared on a local radio station claiming their children developed kidney and renal complications after taking a diphtheria vaccine.
Health authorities in the city admitted the claim did substantial damage to their fight against a diphtheria epidemic they were trying to contain.
“I will not take the malaria vaccine, nor will I administer it to my child, because I’m not convinced it has no adverse effects,” Lubabatu Abubakar said.
“I agree malaria is a huge health problem, but it can be contained if the government takes care of the mountains of refuse everywhere which breed mosquitoes,” the 40-year-old mother of six said.
Kano resident Umar Shehu said the government was putting the “cart before the horse” by prioritizing malaria vaccination over easing the high costs of living.
“We need to get rid of malaria, but hunger is a more pressing problem. How can vaccine work on starving people?” the 34-year-old father asked. “Many people will not be keen to take the vaccine.”
Nigeria is experiencing economic turmoil following the liberalization of its currency and the end of a decades-long fuel subsidy under government economic reforms.
However, MSF’s Lukonge said he was confident that vaccine resistance would be overcome with the Kano government’s reactivation of a special task force for routine immunization and health education promotion to combat vaccine misinformation.
Ibrahim Musa, a consultant hematologist at Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital in the city, agreed.
“With adequate groundwork engagement with the people through the media and religious leaders, a substantial number of people will take the vaccine,” Musa said.
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