Good for having āMalariaā in name, however it seems they mostly distribute to bednets or seasonal chemoprevention. Thus it comes down to a discussion on charity governance.
The aim of the event is to inspire attendees to investigate different mechanisms for tackling malaria, and how they feel about those mechanisms from the stance of a donor. I was hoping to get nets, chemoprevention, and vaccines, as Iām aware that malaria treatment is pretty well known to be less cost-effective than prevention. I know vaccines are currently less headline effective than bednets and chemoprevention⦠but maybe not, when their downstream effects are accounted for.
One organization that GiveWell has made some grants to is PATH, they do work on vaccines (as well as some other things). You might want to look into them.
Good for having āMalariaā in name, however it seems they mostly distribute to bednets or seasonal chemoprevention. Thus it comes down to a discussion on charity governance.
The aim of the event is to inspire attendees to investigate different mechanisms for tackling malaria, and how they feel about those mechanisms from the stance of a donor. I was hoping to get nets, chemoprevention, and vaccines, as Iām aware that malaria treatment is pretty well known to be less cost-effective than prevention. I know vaccines are currently less headline effective than bednets and chemoprevention⦠but maybe not, when their downstream effects are accounted for.
(or at least, theyāre within the threshold of an interesting philosophy discussion)
Here is a list of all malaria-related grants GiveWell has made.
One organization that GiveWell has made some grants to is PATH, they do work on vaccines (as well as some other things). You might want to look into them.