ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sonia Shah - Science writer
Science historian Sonia Shah explores the surprisingly fascinating story behind an ancient scourge: malaria.

Why you should listen

Aided by economics, culture, its own resilience and that of the insect that carries it (the mosquito), the malaria parasite has determined for thousands of years the health and course not only of human lives, but also of whole civilizations. In her book The Fever, author Sonia Shah outlines the epic and devastating history of malaria and shows how it still infects 500 million people every year, and kills half a million, in a context where economic inequality collides with science and biology.

Shah’s previous book The Body Hunters established her as a heavy hitter in the field of investigative human rights reporting. She is a frequent contributor to publications such as Scientific American, The Nation and Foreign Affairs.

More profile about the speaker
Sonia Shah | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2013

Sonia Shah: 3 reasons we still haven’t gotten rid of malaria

Filmed:
1,233,836 views

We’ve known how to cure malaria since the 1600s, so why does the disease still kill hundreds of thousands every year? It’s more than just a problem of medicine, says journalist Sonia Shah. A look into the history of malaria reveals three big-picture challenges to its eradication. Photos: Adam Nadel.
- Science writer
Science historian Sonia Shah explores the surprisingly fascinating story behind an ancient scourge: malaria. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
So over the long course of human history,
0
822
3435
00:16
the infectious disease that's killed more humans
1
4257
2492
00:18
than any other is malaria.
2
6749
2486
00:21
It's carried in the bites of infected mosquitos,
3
9235
2861
00:24
and it's probably our oldest scourge.
4
12096
2209
00:26
We may have had malaria since we evolved from the apes.
5
14305
3887
00:30
And to this day, malaria takes a huge toll on our species.
6
18192
3602
00:33
We've got 300 million cases a year
7
21794
2451
00:36
and over half a million deaths.
8
24245
2992
00:39
Now this really makes no sense.
9
27237
2965
00:42
We've known how to cure malaria
10
30202
2652
00:44
since the 1600s.
11
32854
1640
00:46
That's when Jesuit missionaries in Peru
12
34494
2297
00:48
discovered the bark of the cinchona tree,
13
36791
2902
00:51
and inside that bark was quinine,
14
39693
1873
00:53
still an effective cure for malaria to this day.
15
41566
3338
00:56
So we've known how to cure malaria for centuries.
16
44904
2901
00:59
We've known how to prevent malaria since 1897.
17
47805
3184
01:02
That's when the British army surgeon Ronald Ross
18
50989
2273
01:05
discovered that it was mosquitos that carried malaria,
19
53262
3358
01:08
not bad air or miasmas, as was previously thought.
20
56620
4192
01:12
So malaria should be a relatively simple disease to solve,
21
60812
5283
01:18
and yet to this day, hundreds of thousands of people
22
66095
3930
01:22
are going to die from the bite of a mosquito.
23
70025
3475
01:25
Why is that?
24
73500
1245
01:26
This is a question that's
25
74745
1530
01:28
personally intrigued me for a long time.
26
76275
2155
01:30
I grew up as the daughter of Indian immigrants
27
78430
2759
01:33
visiting my cousins in India every summer,
28
81189
2259
01:35
and because I had no immunity to the local malarias,
29
83448
3188
01:38
I was made to sleep under this hot, sweaty mosquito net every night
30
86636
4234
01:42
while my cousins, they were allowed to sleep
31
90870
1691
01:44
out on the terrace and have
32
92561
1229
01:45
this nice, cool night breeze wafting over them.
33
93790
2762
01:48
And I really hated the mosquitos for that.
34
96552
3524
01:52
But at the same time, I come from a Jain family,
35
100076
3368
01:55
and Jainism is a religion that espouses
36
103444
2314
01:57
a very extreme form of nonviolence.
37
105758
3138
02:00
So Jains are not supposed to eat meat.
38
108896
3328
02:04
We're not supposed to walk on grass,
39
112224
1857
02:06
because you could, you know,
40
114081
1261
02:07
inadvertently kill some insects when you walk on grass.
41
115342
1900
02:09
We're certainly not supposed to swat mosquitos.
42
117242
2777
02:12
So the fearsome power of this little insect
43
120019
3716
02:15
was apparent to me from a very young age,
44
123735
1979
02:17
and it's one reason why I spent five years as a journalist
45
125714
3271
02:20
trying to understand, why has malaria
46
128985
2688
02:23
been such a horrible scourge for all of us for so very long?
47
131673
4540
02:28
And I think there's three main reasons why.
48
136213
2657
02:30
Those three reasons add up to the fourth reason,
49
138870
2468
02:33
which is probably the biggest reason of all.
50
141338
2811
02:36
The first reason is certainly scientific.
51
144149
2961
02:39
This little parasite that causes malaria,
52
147110
2315
02:41
it's probably one of the most complex
53
149425
1927
02:43
and wily pathogens known to humankind.
54
151352
2591
02:45
It lives half its life inside the cold-blooded mosquito
55
153943
3340
02:49
and half its life inside the warm-blooded human.
56
157283
4402
02:53
These two environments are totally different,
57
161685
2998
02:56
but not only that, they're both utterly hostile.
58
164683
3016
02:59
So the insect is continually trying to fight off the parasite,
59
167699
4007
03:03
and so is the human body continually trying to fight it off.
60
171706
2961
03:06
This little creature survives under siege like that,
61
174667
3750
03:10
but not only does it survive, it has thrived.
62
178417
3075
03:13
It has spread. It has more ways to evade attack than we know.
63
181492
4322
03:17
It's a shape-shifter, for one thing.
64
185814
2114
03:19
Just as a caterpillar turns into a butterfly,
65
187928
3159
03:23
the malaria parasite transforms itself like that
66
191087
2639
03:25
seven times in its life cycle.
67
193726
3223
03:28
And each of those life stages not only looks totally different from each other,
68
196949
4257
03:33
they have totally different physiology.
69
201206
3064
03:36
So say you came up with some great drug
70
204270
1992
03:38
that worked against one stage of the parasite's life cycle.
71
206262
2940
03:41
It might do nothing at all to any of the other stages.
72
209202
3465
03:44
It can hide in our bodies, undetected,
73
212667
2863
03:47
unbeknownst to us, for days, for weeks,
74
215530
2364
03:49
for months, for years, in some cases even decades.
75
217894
3799
03:53
So the parasite is a very big scientific challenge to tackle,
76
221693
4384
03:58
but so is the mosquito that carries the parasite.
77
226077
3205
04:01
Only about 12 species of mosquitos
78
229282
2298
04:03
carry most of the world's malaria,
79
231580
1934
04:05
and we know quite a bit about the kinds of
80
233514
2476
04:07
watery habitats that they specialize in.
81
235990
2925
04:10
So you might think, then, well, why don't we just
82
238915
2282
04:13
avoid the places where the killer mosquitos live? Right?
83
241197
3156
04:16
We could avoid the places where the killer grizzly bears live
84
244353
2278
04:18
and we avoid the places where the killer crocodiles live.
85
246631
2759
04:21
But say you live in the tropics
86
249390
3230
04:24
and you walk outside your hut one day
87
252620
3273
04:27
and you leave some footprints in the soft dirt
88
255893
2022
04:29
around your home.
89
257915
1923
04:31
Or say your cow does, or say your pig does,
90
259838
3230
04:35
and then, say, it rains,
91
263068
2134
04:37
and that footprint fills up with a little bit of water.
92
265202
2368
04:39
That's it. You've created the perfect
93
267570
2081
04:41
malarial mosquito habitat that's right outside your door.
94
269651
3578
04:45
So it's not easy for us to extricate ourselves from these insects.
95
273229
2862
04:48
We kind of create places that they love to live
96
276091
2634
04:50
just by living our own lives.
97
278725
1999
04:52
So there's a huge scientific challenge,
98
280724
1379
04:54
but there's a huge economic challenge too.
99
282103
2207
04:56
Malaria occurs in some of the poorest
100
284310
1935
04:58
and most remote places on Earth,
101
286245
1939
05:00
and there's a reason for that.
102
288184
1845
05:02
If you're poor, you're more likely to get malaria.
103
290029
2700
05:04
If you're poor, you're more likely to live
104
292729
2153
05:06
in rudimentary housing on marginal land that's poorly drained.
105
294882
4069
05:10
These are places where mosquitos breed.
106
298951
2589
05:13
You're less likely to have door screens or window screens.
107
301540
3600
05:17
You're less likely to have electricity
108
305140
1903
05:19
and all the indoor activities that electricity makes possible,
109
307043
3006
05:22
so you're outside more.
110
310049
1233
05:23
You're getting bitten by mosquitos more.
111
311282
2332
05:25
So poverty causes malaria,
112
313614
1625
05:27
but what we also know now is that malaria itself
113
315239
3033
05:30
causes poverty.
114
318272
1647
05:31
For one thing, it strikes hardest during harvest season,
115
319919
2651
05:34
so exactly when farmers need to be out in the fields
116
322570
2756
05:37
collecting their crops, they're home sick with a fever.
117
325326
3909
05:41
But it also predisposes people to death
118
329235
2861
05:44
from all other causes.
119
332096
1785
05:45
So this has happened historically.
120
333881
1360
05:47
We've been able to take malaria out of a society.
121
335241
3382
05:50
Everything else stays the same,
122
338623
1457
05:52
so we still have bad food, bad water, bad sanitation,
123
340080
2675
05:54
all the things that make people sick.
124
342755
1761
05:56
But just if you take malaria out,
125
344516
2144
05:58
deaths from everything else go down.
126
346660
3812
06:02
And the economist Jeff Sachs has actually quantified
127
350472
2711
06:05
what this means for a society.
128
353183
2185
06:07
What it means is, if you have malaria in your society,
129
355368
2754
06:10
your economic growth is depressed
130
358122
2461
06:12
by 1.3 percent every year,
131
360583
3970
06:16
year after year after year, just this one disease alone.
132
364553
3799
06:20
So this poses a huge economic challenge,
133
368352
2564
06:22
because say you do come up with your great drug
134
370916
2184
06:25
or your great vaccine -- how do you deliver it
135
373100
2210
06:27
in a place where there's no roads,
136
375310
2570
06:29
there's no infrastructure,
137
377880
1193
06:31
there's no electricity for refrigeration to keep things cold,
138
379073
3334
06:34
there's no clinics, there's no clinicians
139
382407
2720
06:37
to deliver these things where they're needed?
140
385127
2534
06:39
So there's a huge economic challenge in taming malaria.
141
387661
4003
06:43
But along with the scientific challenge and the economic challenge,
142
391664
3056
06:46
there's also a cultural challenge,
143
394720
1812
06:48
and this is probably the part about malaria
144
396532
3385
06:51
that people don't like to talk about.
145
399917
2301
06:54
And it's the paradox that the people
146
402218
2711
06:56
who have the most malaria in the world
147
404929
1808
06:58
tend to care about it the least.
148
406737
2580
07:01
This has been the finding of medical anthropologists again and again.
149
409317
3412
07:04
They ask people in malarious parts of the world,
150
412729
2767
07:07
"What do you think about malaria?"
151
415496
2056
07:09
And they don't say, "It's a killer disease. We're scared of it."
152
417552
3909
07:13
They say, "Malaria is a normal problem of life."
153
421461
5338
07:18
And that was certainly my personal experience.
154
426799
1766
07:20
When I told my relatives in India
155
428565
2019
07:22
that I was writing a book about malaria,
156
430584
1484
07:24
they kind of looked at me like
157
432068
1967
07:26
I told them I was writing a book about warts or something.
158
434035
2701
07:28
Like, why would you write about something so boring,
159
436736
3047
07:31
so ordinary? You know?
160
439783
1666
07:33
And it's simple risk perception, really.
161
441449
2728
07:36
A child in Malawi, for example,
162
444177
2435
07:38
she might have 12 episodes of malaria before the age of two,
163
446612
4812
07:43
but if she survives,
164
451424
2053
07:45
she'll continue to get malaria throughout her life,
165
453477
2614
07:48
but she's much less likely to die of it.
166
456091
2723
07:50
And so in her lived experience,
167
458814
1952
07:52
malaria is something that comes and goes.
168
460766
3331
07:56
And that's actually true for most of the world's malaria.
169
464097
2030
07:58
Most of the world's malaria comes and goes on its own.
170
466127
3577
08:01
It's just, there's so much malaria
171
469704
3124
08:04
that this tiny fraction of cases that end in death
172
472828
3771
08:08
add up to this big, huge number.
173
476599
2961
08:11
So I think people in malarious parts of the world
174
479560
1993
08:13
must think of malaria the way
175
481553
1522
08:15
those of us who live in the temperate world
176
483075
1659
08:16
think of cold and flu. Right?
177
484734
2251
08:18
Cold and flu have a huge burden on our societies
178
486985
3406
08:22
and on our own lives,
179
490391
1681
08:24
but we don't really even take
180
492072
1264
08:25
the most rudimentary precautions against it because
181
493336
2542
08:27
we consider it normal to get cold and flu
182
495878
2721
08:30
during cold and flu season.
183
498599
2237
08:32
And so this poses a huge cultural challenge in taming malaria,
184
500836
4412
08:37
because if people think it's normal to have malaria,
185
505248
3774
08:41
then how do you get them to run to the doctor
186
509022
3458
08:44
to get diagnosed, to pick up their prescription,
187
512480
3146
08:47
to get it filled, to take the drugs,
188
515626
1522
08:49
to put on the repellents, to tuck in the bed nets?
189
517148
3479
08:52
This is a huge cultural challenge in taming this disease.
190
520627
4667
08:57
So take all that together.
191
525294
1502
08:58
We've got a disease. It's scientifically complicated,
192
526796
4452
09:03
it's economically challenging to deal with,
193
531248
2428
09:05
and it's one for which the people who stand
194
533676
1645
09:07
to benefit the most care about it the least.
195
535321
2304
09:09
And that adds up to the biggest problem of all,
196
537625
2088
09:11
which, of course, is the political problem.
197
539713
2949
09:14
How do you get a political leader to do anything
198
542662
2858
09:17
about a problem like this?
199
545520
2061
09:19
And the answer is, historically, you don't.
200
547581
4625
09:24
Most malarious societies throughout history
201
552206
2133
09:26
have simply lived with the disease.
202
554339
2116
09:28
So the main attacks on malaria have come
203
556455
2003
09:30
from outside of malarious societies,
204
558458
2624
09:33
from people who aren't constrained
205
561082
1794
09:34
by these rather paralyzing politics.
206
562876
2979
09:37
But this, I think, introduces a whole host of other kinds of difficulties.
207
565855
3295
09:41
The first concerted attack against malaria
208
569150
2420
09:43
started in the 1950s.
209
571570
1746
09:45
It was the brainchild of the U.S. State Department.
210
573316
3090
09:48
And this effort well understood the economic challenge.
211
576406
3037
09:51
They knew they had to focus on cheap, easy-to-use tools,
212
579443
3481
09:54
and they focused on DDT.
213
582924
1775
09:56
They understood the cultural challenge.
214
584699
1439
09:58
In fact, their rather patronizing view was that
215
586138
3005
10:01
people at risk of malaria shouldn't be asked to do anything at all.
216
589143
2903
10:04
Everything should be done to them and for them.
217
592046
3722
10:07
But they greatly underestimated the scientific challenge.
218
595768
3120
10:10
They had so much faith in their tools
219
598888
2327
10:13
that they stopped doing malaria research.
220
601215
2991
10:16
And so when those tools started to fail,
221
604206
2468
10:18
and public opinion started to turn against those tools,
222
606674
2700
10:21
they had no scientific expertise to figure out what to do.
223
609374
4194
10:25
The whole campaign crashed, malaria resurged back,
224
613568
3451
10:29
but now it was even worse than before
225
617019
1814
10:30
because it was corralled into the hardest-to-reach places
226
618833
2761
10:33
in the most difficult-to-control forms.
227
621594
3186
10:36
One WHO official at the time actually called that whole campaign
228
624780
3299
10:40
"one of the greatest mistakes ever made in public health."
229
628079
5057
10:45
The latest effort to tame malaria started in the late 1990s.
230
633136
2507
10:47
It's similarly directed and financed primarily
231
635643
3712
10:51
from outside of malarious societies.
232
639355
2148
10:53
Now this effort well understands the scientific challenge.
233
641503
2504
10:56
They are doing tons of malaria research.
234
644007
2221
10:58
And they understand the economic challenge too.
235
646228
2453
11:00
They're focusing on very cheap, very easy-to-use tools.
236
648681
3560
11:04
But now, I think, the dilemma is the cultural challenge.
237
652241
3892
11:08
The centerpiece of the current effort is the bed net.
238
656133
3634
11:11
It's treated with insecticides.
239
659767
1776
11:13
This thing has been distributed across the malarious world
240
661543
2370
11:15
by the millions.
241
663913
1433
11:17
And when you think about the bed net,
242
665346
2232
11:19
it's sort of a surgical intervention.
243
667578
2559
11:22
You know, it doesn't really have any value
244
670137
2146
11:24
to a family with malaria except that it helps prevent malaria.
245
672283
3663
11:27
And yet we're asking people to use these nets every night.
246
675946
4009
11:31
They have to sleep under them every night.
247
679955
1277
11:33
That's the only way they are effective.
248
681232
2037
11:35
And they have to do that
249
683269
1353
11:36
even if the net blocks the breeze,
250
684622
3086
11:39
even if they might have to get up in the middle of the night
251
687708
3145
11:42
and relieve themselves,
252
690853
1534
11:44
even if they might have to move all their furnishings
253
692387
2249
11:46
to put this thing up,
254
694636
1467
11:48
even if, you know, they might live in a round hut
255
696103
2853
11:50
in which it's difficult to string up a square net.
256
698956
3737
11:54
Now that's no big deal if you're fighting a killer disease.
257
702693
4938
11:59
I mean, these are minor inconveniences.
258
707631
2331
12:01
But that's not how people with malaria think of malaria.
259
709962
3839
12:05
So for them, the calculus must be quite different.
260
713801
4880
12:10
Imagine, for example, if a bunch of well-meaning Kenyans
261
718681
3918
12:14
came up to those of us in the temperate world and said,
262
722599
2081
12:16
"You know, you people have a lot of cold and flu.
263
724680
2822
12:19
We've designed this great, easy-to-use, cheap tool,
264
727502
3128
12:22
we're going to give it to you for free.
265
730630
1070
12:23
It's called a face mask,
266
731700
1433
12:25
and all you need to do is
267
733133
3873
12:29
wear it every day during cold and flu season
268
737006
2410
12:31
when you go to school and when you go to work."
269
739416
2754
12:34
Would we do that?
270
742185
1930
12:36
And I wonder if that's how people
271
744115
2136
12:38
in the malarious world thought of those nets
272
746251
2066
12:40
when they first received them?
273
748317
1703
12:42
Indeed, we know from studies
274
750020
3398
12:45
that only 20 percent of the bed nets
275
753418
2678
12:48
that were first distributed were actually used.
276
756096
3168
12:51
And even that's probably an overestimate,
277
759264
1711
12:52
because the same people who distributed the nets
278
760975
2422
12:55
went back and asked the recipients,
279
763397
1491
12:56
"Oh, did you use that net I gave you?"
280
764888
2473
12:59
Which is like your Aunt Jane asking you,
281
767361
2612
13:01
"Oh, did you use that vase I gave you for Christmas?"
282
769973
2961
13:04
So it's probably an overestimate.
283
772934
1866
13:06
But that's not an insurmountable problem.
284
774800
3324
13:10
We can do more education,
285
778124
1830
13:11
we can try to convince these people to use the nets.
286
779954
2675
13:14
And that's what happening now.
287
782629
1275
13:15
We're throwing a lot more time and money
288
783904
1704
13:17
into workshops and trainings and musicals and plays
289
785608
4517
13:22
and school meetings,
290
790125
2413
13:24
all these things to convince people
291
792538
2295
13:26
to use the nets we gave you.
292
794833
2484
13:29
And that might work.
293
797317
2140
13:31
But it takes time. It takes money.
294
799457
2678
13:34
It takes resources. It takes infrastructure.
295
802135
2780
13:36
It takes all the things that that cheap,
296
804915
2682
13:39
easy-to-use bed net was not supposed to be.
297
807597
2779
13:42
So it's difficult to attack malaria from inside malarious societies,
298
810376
3404
13:45
but it's equally tricky when we try to attack it
299
813780
2538
13:48
from outside of those societies.
300
816318
2810
13:51
We end up imposing our own priorities
301
819128
1787
13:52
on the people of the malarious world.
302
820915
1544
13:54
That's exactly what we did in the 1950s,
303
822459
2794
13:57
and that effort backfired.
304
825253
1878
13:59
I would argue today,
305
827131
1631
14:00
when we are distributing tools that we've designed
306
828762
4230
14:04
and that don't necessarily make sense in people's lives,
307
832992
3753
14:08
we run the risk of making the same mistake again.
308
836745
3553
14:12
That's not to say that malaria is unconquerable,
309
840298
1808
14:14
because I think it is,
310
842106
1463
14:15
but what if we attacked this disease
311
843569
2208
14:17
according to the priorities of the people who lived with it?
312
845777
3543
14:21
Take the example of England and the United States.
313
849320
2436
14:23
We had malaria in those countries for hundreds of years,
314
851756
3171
14:26
and we got rid of it completely,
315
854927
2158
14:29
not because we attacked malaria. We didn't.
316
857085
3009
14:32
We attacked bad roads and bad houses
317
860094
4107
14:36
and bad drainage and lack of electricity and rural poverty.
318
864201
4882
14:41
We attacked the malarious way of life,
319
869083
3317
14:44
and by doing that, we slowly built malaria out.
320
872400
5720
14:50
Now attacking the malarious way of life,
321
878120
1638
14:51
this is something -- these are things people care about today.
322
879758
3562
14:55
And attacking the malarious way of life,
323
883320
2387
14:57
it's not fast, it's not cheap, it's not easy,
324
885707
4759
15:02
but I think it's the only lasting way forward.
325
890466
3068
15:05
Thank you so much.
326
893534
1293
15:06
(Applause)
327
894827
5447

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sonia Shah - Science writer
Science historian Sonia Shah explores the surprisingly fascinating story behind an ancient scourge: malaria.

Why you should listen

Aided by economics, culture, its own resilience and that of the insect that carries it (the mosquito), the malaria parasite has determined for thousands of years the health and course not only of human lives, but also of whole civilizations. In her book The Fever, author Sonia Shah outlines the epic and devastating history of malaria and shows how it still infects 500 million people every year, and kills half a million, in a context where economic inequality collides with science and biology.

Shah’s previous book The Body Hunters established her as a heavy hitter in the field of investigative human rights reporting. She is a frequent contributor to publications such as Scientific American, The Nation and Foreign Affairs.

More profile about the speaker
Sonia Shah | Speaker | TED.com