In this article, Bloomberg claims that undisclosed manufacturing changes at one of the largest producers of anti-malaria bednets have led to distribution of hundreds of millions of ineffective (or less-effective) bednets, and that this problem is linked to an increase in malaria incidence in the places where these nets were distributed.
The manufacturer is Vestergaard and the Against Malaria Foundation is among their clients.
Bloomberg has a steep paywall but the link here gives free access until March 2.
Wow thanks for the fascinating article. I'm amazed these kinds of failures are tolerated without stronger action. The way the article paints it at least, companies might be getting away with cutting costs on net production and almost causing deaths through inadequate insecticide infusion. In this article the WHO "WHO sent a letter of concern to Germany-based Mainpol GmbH because some of its nets contained too much or too little insecticide." Is that really strong enough action? Surely you cut the supplier, investigate and maybe sue them if they haven't met a standard?
Tesla recalls tens of thousands of cars for a minor manufacturing defect that might cause a death or two, while the WHO just writes letters about defects that could be killing thousands?
Although it wasn't clear, there might also be a "DDT" effect here - where concern about the environmental effects of a chemical means they switch to an inferior one.
"The original coating contained PFAS, dubbed forever chemicals because they’re so slow to break down. While PFAS are still widely used to make shoes and backpacks water resistant and to produce firefighting foams, they’ve been linked to increased cancer risk, decreased fertility and developmental delays in children.Their use has been restricted in many countries and industries have been seeking alternatives."
Are we willing to do some potential harm in order to do more good? Always a tricky question.
According to the article, there are high-performing PFAS alternatives, but they are more expensive. So instead Verstergaard allegedly went with the cheaper, lower-performing option.