Medicine:Faso soap

From HandWiki

Faso soap or Fasoap is the brand of a Burkina Faso-manufactured type of soap, in the development stage, which ostensibly repels mosquitoes and thus protects from mosquito-borne diseases. The company has shifted its focus from the Faso soap to a mosquito-repellent ointment called Maïa.[1]

Origins

Faso soap was developed in 2013[2] by two Institut International d'Ingénierie de l'Eau et de l'Environnement (International Institute of Water and Environmental Engineering) students-turned-entrepreneurs, Moctar Dembélé, from Burkina Faso, and Gérard Niyondiko, from Burundi.[3]

Composition and development

According to its developers, Faso soap is made of shea butter, lemongrass, African marigold and other "natural ingredients" that can be found in Burkina Faso.[3] The soap's purpose is to leave an insect-repelling odor on the user's skin after washing.[4]

The intent is to repel mosquitoes and thus prevent mosquito bites that can transmit diseases such as malaria, chikungunya, yellow fever, or dengue.[4]

In April 2016, a crowd funding campaign was initiated[5] in order to finance large-scale testing of the product and an amount of over 70,000 Euros was reportedly collected.[6]

Other soaps

A similar mosquito-repellent soap is in development at Johns Hopkins. The program, headed by Dr. Soumyadipta Acharya, uses permethrin in its soap. Permethrin is a shorter-lived compound that can "comfortably reside on [the] skin."[4]

See also

References

  1. Marchildon, Jackie (23 April 2019). "Maïa: A Mosquito-Repellent Lotion to Protect People from Malaria". Global Citizen. https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/mosquito-repellent-lotion/. 
  2. "Faute de financement, le premier savon anti-malaria s’en remet au crowdfunding" ("Without finances, anti-malaria soap turns to crowd funding") by Marion Garreau, Le Monde, 2 March 2016 (in French)
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Could this soap stop malaria?" by Jenni Marsh, CNN, 28 September 2016
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "How soap, chairs and clothing could stop mosquito bites -- and diseases" by Meera Senthilingam, CNN, 16 February 2017
  5. "Burkina Faso anti-malaria soap aims to save 100,000 lives by end-2018", MSNBC Africa, 10 May 2016
  6. "Faso Soap - Un savon pour sauver 100.000 vies". faso-soap.info. http://www.faso-soap.info/?lang=en. Retrieved 2017-02-17. 

External links