Helping protect families from insect-borne disease for 70 years
Using our decades of entomological expertise, we have been helping protect people from insects and the diseases they may carry since the 1950s. Today, we are making more progress than ever, as we continue to bring new strategies and innovations to the fight against insect-borne disease for families and communities around the globe.

Here is why it matters
cases of malaria annually, resulting in over 610,000 deaths, mostly in children under 5 years old
people at risk of contracting dengue, with an estimated 100–400 million cases per year
Malaria claims the lives of hundreds of thousands of children every year, and yet it remains one of the most neglected diseases on the planet.Fisk Johnson
Chairman and CEO
Our mission to help end malaria
By leveraging our entomological expertise and capabilities, we have developed breakthrough spatial repellent tools like SC Johnson Guardian™, which can significantly reduce the presence of mosquitoes in households.

We are building on decades of expertise
For more than six decades, SC Johnson has been working to understand and manage the insects that may carry diseases.

We are working to help protect communities around the globe
In 2013, we created a programme that specifically focuses on preventing insect-borne disease for the world’s most vulnerable people.

We share tips from our experts to help you protect yourself
Review our frequently asked questions and other advice to help protect yourself and your family from mosquitoes that can carry disease.

Our impact starts with expertise

Get to know the SC Johnson Center for Insect Science and Family Health™
We opened our first insect research centre way back in 1957. Six decades later, our scientists keep working to develop products and solutions that help protect families.

See how our team is working to help the most vulnerable families
We leverage the best of commercial, philanthropic and entomological strategies to maximise our impact helping communities where mosquito-borne diseases hit the hardest.