Could a vaccine get rid of malaria for good?
Seventeen-year-old Victoline was hospitalised with malaria in 2017. She lives in Kenya, a country that sees around 3.5 million new clinical cases of the disease each year. She wants to know if a vaccine could eradicate it in Africa and stop hundreds of thousands of children dying annually.
鈥淕ood health and wellbeing鈥 is goal three in the UN鈥檚 Sustainable Development Goals, a set of targets announced in 2015 to transform lives around the world by 2030. The UN want diseases such as malaria to be eradicated by the end of the decade.
This video is part of Project 17, a World Service series produced in collaboration with the Open University, in which 17-year-olds look at progress on the UN鈥檚 17 goals.
Video Journalists: Njoroge Muigai and Eleanor Layhe
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
Watch: World Service videos—91热爆 World Service special collections
A snapshot of great experiences, solutions and situations
More clips from Project 17
-
How rising sea levels are threatening my home
Duration: 03:46
-
'Bushfires make you realise climate change is real'
Duration: 04:29
-
Solving the food waste problem in Singapore
Duration: 04:02
-
The photograph that united a family
Duration: 03:40