Vaccinology in sub-Saharan Africa

Author:

Moïsi Jennifer,Madhi Shabir AhmedORCID,Rees Helen

Abstract

We undertook a landscape analysis of vaccinology research and training in sub-Saharan Africa in order to identify key gaps and opportunities for capacity development in the field . We conducted interviews with regional and global immunisation experts, reviewed university and research centre websites, searched the scientific literature and analysed donor databases as part of our mapping exercise. We found that (1) few vaccinology training programmes are available in the region; (2) vaccinology research sites are numerous but unevenly distributed across countries and subregions and of widely varying capacity; (3) donor funding favours HIV, tuberculosis and malaria vaccine development over other high-burden diseases; (4) lack of vaccine design, manufacturing and regulatory capacity slows the progress of new vaccines through the research and development pipeline and (5) vaccine implementation research garners limited support. Regional efforts to strengthen African vaccinology expertise should develop advanced vaccinology training programmes, support clinical trial and implementation research sites in geographic areas with limited capacity and conduct multidisciplinary research to help design, license and roll out new vaccines.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference17 articles.

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5. World Health Organization, . Malaria vaccine implementation programme, 2016. Available: https://www.who.int/immunization/diseases/malaria/malaria_vaccine_implementation_programme/about/en/

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