| 19 Novembre 2018
19 November, 2018 ¦ MAPUTO/GENEVA: Reductions in malaria cases have stalled after several years of decline globally, according to the new World malaria report 2018. To  get the reduction in malaria deaths and disease back on track, the  World Health Organization (WHO) and partners are joining a new  country-led response, launched today, to scale up prevention and  treatment, and increased investment, to protect vulnerable people from  the deadly disease.
 
 For the second consecutive year, the annual report produced by WHO  reveals a plateauing in numbers of people affected by malaria: in 2017,  there were an estimated 219 million cases of malaria, compared to 217  million the year before. But in the years prior, the number of people  contracting malaria globally had been steadily falling, from 239 million  in 2010 to 214 million in 2015.
 “Nobody should die from malaria. But the world faces a new reality: as  progress stagnates, we are at risk of squandering years of toil,  investment and success in reducing the number of people suffering from  the disease,” says Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.  “We recognise we have to do something different – now. So today we are  launching a country-focused and -led plan to take comprehensive action  against malaria by making our work more effective where it counts most –  at local level.”
 
 Where malaria is hitting hardest
 In 2017, approximately 70% of all malaria cases (151 million) and deaths  (274 000) were concentrated in 11 countries: 10 in Africa (Burkina  Faso, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana, Mali,  Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Uganda and United Republic of Tanzania) and  India. There were 3.5 million more malaria cases reported in these 10  African countries in 2017 compared to the previous year, while India,  however, showed progress in reducing its disease burden.
 Despite marginal increases in recent years in the distribution and use  of insecticide-treated bed nets in sub-Saharan Africa – the primary tool  for preventing malaria – the report highlights major coverage gaps. In  2017, an estimated half of at-risk people in Africa did not sleep under a  treated net. Also, fewer homes are being protected by indoor residual  spraying than before, and access to preventive therapies that protect  pregnant women and children from malaria remains too low.
 
 High impact response needed
 In line with WHO’s strategic vision to scale up activities to protect  people’s health, the new country-driven “High burden to high impact”  response plan has been launched to support nations with most malaria  cases and deaths. The response follows a call made by Dr Tedros at the  World Health Assembly in May 2018 for an aggressive new approach to  jump-start progress against malaria. It is based on four pillars:
Catalyzed by WHO and the RBM Partnership to End Malaria, “High burden to  high impact” builds on the principle that no one should die from a  disease that can be easily prevented and diagnosed, and that is entirely  curable with available treatments.
 “There is no standing still with malaria. The latest World malaria  report shows that further progress is not inevitable and that business  as usual is no longer an option,” said Dr Kesete Admasu, CEO of the RBM  Partnership. “The new country-led response will jumpstart aggressive new  malaria control efforts in the highest burden countries and will be  crucial to get back on track with fighting one of the most pressing  health challenges we face.”
 Targets set by the WHO Global technical strategy for malaria 2016–2030 to reduce malaria case incidence and death rates by at least 40% by 2020 are not on track to being met.
 
 Pockets of progress
 The report highlights some positive progress. The number of countries  nearing elimination continues to grow (46 in 2017 compared to 37 in  2010). Meanwhile in China and El Salvador, where malaria had long been  endemic, no local transmission of malaria was reported in 2017, proof  that intensive, country-led control efforts can succeed in reducing the  risk people face from the disease.
 In 2018, WHO certified Paraguay as malaria free, the first country in  the Americas to receive this status in 45 years. Three other countries –  Algeria, Argentina and Uzbekistan – have requested official  malaria-free certification from WHO.
 India – a country that represents 4% of the global malaria burden –  recorded a 24% reduction in cases in 2017 compared to 2016. Also in  Rwanda, 436 000 fewer cases were recorded in 2017 compared to 2016.  Ethiopia and Pakistan both reported marked decreases of more than
 240 000 in the same period.
 “When countries prioritize action on malaria, we see the results in  lives saved and cases reduced,” says Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional  Director for Africa. “WHO and global malaria control partners will  continue striving to help governments, especially those with the highest  burden, scale up the response to malaria.”
 
 Domestic financing is key
 As reductions in malaria cases and deaths slow, funding for the global  response has also shown a levelling off, with US$ 3.1 billion made  available for control and elimination programmes in 2017 including US$  900 million (28%) from governments of malaria endemic countries. The  United States of America remains the largest single international donor,  contributing US$ 1.2 billion (39%) in 2017.
 To meet the 2030 targets of the global malaria strategy, malaria  investments should reach at least US$6.6 billion annually by 2020 – more  than double the amount available today.