| 11 Juin 2018
San José / Geneva, 11 June 2018 – The World Health  Organization (WHO) today certified Paraguay as having eliminated  malaria, the first country in the Americas to be granted this status  since Cuba in 1973.
 
 “It gives me great pleasure today to certify that Paraguay is officially  free of malaria,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director  General, in a recorded statement. “Success stories like Paraguay’s show  what is possible. If malaria can be eliminated in one country, it can be  eliminated in all countries.”
 
 In 2016, WHO identified Paraguay as one of 21 countries with the  potential to eliminate malaria by 2020. Through the “E-2020 initiative,”  WHO is supporting these countries as they scale up activities to become  malaria-free. Other E-2020 countries in the Americas include Belize,  Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico and Suriname.
 
 “I take pride in saying that PAHO has accompanied Paraguay in the  crusade of malaria elimination since the beginning,” said Dr Carissa F  Etienne, Director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), WHO  regional office for the Americas. “This is a powerful reminder for the  region of what can be achieved when countries are focused on an  important goal, and remain vigilant after achieving that goal. We are  hopeful that other countries will soon join Paraguay in eliminating  malaria”.
 
 Achieving malaria-free status in Paraguay 
 
 From 1950 to 2011, Paraguay systematically developed policies and  programmes to control and eliminate malaria, a significant public health  challenge for a country that reported more than 80 000 cases of the  disease in the 1940s. As a result, Paraguay registered its last case of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in 1995, and P. vivax malaria in 2011.
 A five-year plan to consolidate the gains, prevent re-establishment of  transmission and prepare for elimination certification was launched in  2011. Activities focused on robust case management, engagement with  communities, and education to make people more aware of ways to prevent  malaria transmission, and about diagnosis and treatment options.
 “Receiving this certification is a recognition of more than five decades  of hard work in Paraguay, both on the part of public sector workers, as  well as the community itself, who have collaborated time and time again  in order to achieve the elimination of malaria,” said Dr Carlos Ignacio  Morínigo, Minister of Health of Paraguay. “Reaching this goal also  implies that we must now face the challenge of maintaining it.  Therefore, Paraguay has put in place a solid surveillance and response  system in order to prevent the re-establishment of malaria.”
 
 In 2016, in the next phase of the elimination drive, the Ministry of  Health launched a three-year initiative to build Paraguay’s front-line  health workers’ skills. Backed by The Global Fund to Fight AIDS,  Tuberculosis and Malaria, the country strengthened its capacity to  prevent disease, identify suspected malaria cases, accurately diagnose  malaria and provide prompt treatment – key strategies to tackle the  on-going threat of malaria importation from endemic countries elsewhere  in the Americas and sub-Saharan Africa.
 
 “Paraguay’s success demonstrates the importance of investing in robust,  sustainable systems for health, and I’m very pleased that the Global  Fund supported this achievement,” said Peter Sands, Executive Director  of the Global Fund. “We need to remain vigilant and prevent resurgence,  but we also need to celebrate this victory.”
 
 In April 2018, the independent Malaria Elimination Certification Panel   concluded that Paraguay had interrupted indigenous malaria transmission  for the requisite 3 years and had the capacity to prevent the  re-establishment of transmission. The Panel recommended the WHO  Director-General certify the country malaria-free.
 
 They highlighted factors such as the quality and coverage of health  services, including malaria awareness among front-line health workers,  the universal availability of free medical treatment, and a strong  malaria surveillance system.
 
 Between 1960 and 1973, seven countries and territories from the Americas  were certified malaria-free: Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Saint  Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago, and the northern part of Venezuela. In the  Region of the Americas, malaria cases declined by 62%, and  malaria-related deaths decreased by 61% between 2000 and 2015. However,  the rise of malaria cases reported in several countries in 2016 and 2017  show that major challenges remain, including the diagnosis, treatment,  and investigation of malaria cases, particularly in remote areas.
 
 Further information on malaria elimination progress 
 
 The official certification announcement will be made today at the Second annual global forum of malaria-eliminating countries, convened by WHO in San José, Costa Rica from 11-13 June.
 
 WHO is also releasing a progress update on elimination efforts in E-2020  countries, providing – for the first time – preliminary malaria case  numbers for 2017. Ten more countries are on track to eliminate malaria  by 2020. However, eight other E-2020 countries saw increases in  indigenous malaria cases in 2017, reflecting the global malaria trends  reported in the latest WHO World malaria report. WHO is  publishing country briefs for the 21 eliminating countries, offering an  overview of progress, key malaria data and an assessment of what is  needed to reach the 2020 elimination target.