Keep Mailing
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
[ ::: ♥Keep_Mailing♥ ::: ]™ Could this soap stop malaria? - Faso Soap
Faso Soap is the brainchild of Moctar Dembélé, of Burkina Faso, and Gérard Niyondiko, of Burundi.
Comprised of Shea butter, lemongrass, African marigold and other natural resources that are plentiful in Burkina Faso, it is designed to leave an insect-repelling odor on the user's skin after washing.
It could be used to prevent against a wide range of mosquito-transmitted conditions -- perhaps eventually even Zika.
"Soap is one product you can find in all African family homes, no matter how poor they are," Niyondiko tells CNN. "Most people wash in the evening and you want to be protected before you go to bed at night."
The majority of Africans, he adds, do not have access or the financial means to buy expensive repellents.
Suds that stick around.
"When you use soap, you tend to rinse it off. So part of the effects of Faso Soap would be thrown away," says Franck Langevin, campaigns director for the Ouagadougou-based outfit.
"We decided to combine the latest cosmetic technology with natural repellent ingredients ... we put the natural ingredients into micro-capsules around 100 to 150 micrometers in size, embedded in the soap. These are small enough to stick onto the skin's pores.
"After the soap is rinsed, the capsules remain and gradually break and release the repellent little by little over a six to eight hour period."
In 2013, Dembélé and Niyondiko became the first African winners of the Global Social Venture Competition at the University of California Berkeley, winning $25,000.
Since then, Faso Soap has been partnering with organizations that have "competencies we don't", such as market-leading soap manufacturers in West Africa, NGOs including Doctors Without Borders for distribution opportunities, and taking their product through rigorous scientific testing so they can bring it to market.
They have set a goal for Faso Soap to save 100,000 lives by 2018.
full article in the link below:
http://edition.cnn.com/2016/05/18/africa/faso-soap-malaria-bukrina-faso/index.html
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