 
				
				
						
		| 04 Décembre 2019
4 December 2019 – Geneva. The number of pregnant women and children in sub-Saharan Africa  sleeping under insecticide-treated bed nets and benefiting from  preventive medicine for malaria has increased significantly in recent  years, according to the World Health Organization’s World malaria report 2019.
 
 However, accelerated efforts are needed to reduce infections and deaths  in the hardest-hit countries, as progress stalls. Last year, malaria  afflicted 228 million people and killed an estimated 405 000, mostly in  sub-Saharan Africa.
 
 Pregnancy reduces a woman’s immunity to malaria, making her more  susceptible to infection and at greater risk of illness, severe anaemia  and death. Maternal malaria also interferes with the growth of the  fetus, increasing the risk of premature delivery and low birth weight – a  leading cause of child mortality.
 
 “Pregnant women and children are the most vulnerable to malaria, and we  cannot make progress without focusing on these two groups,” said Dr  Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “We’re seeing  encouraging signs, but the burden of suffering and death caused by  malaria is unacceptable, because it is largely preventable. The lack of  improvement in the number of cases and deaths from malaria is deeply  troubling.”
 
 In 2018, an estimated 11 million pregnant women were infected with  malaria in areas of moderate and high disease transmission in  sub-Saharan Africa. As a result, nearly 900 000 children were born with  a low birthweight.
 
 Despite the encouraging signs seen in the use of preventive tools in  pregnant women and children, there was no improvement in the global rate  of malaria infections in the period 2014 to 2018 in the hardest-hit  countries.
 
 Inadequate funding remains a major barrier to future progress. In 2018,  total funding for malaria control and elimination reached an estimated  US$ 2.7 billion, falling far short of the US$ 5 billion funding target  of the global strategy.
 
 “High burden to high impact”
 
 Last year, WHO and the RBM Partnership to End Malaria launched “High  burden to high impact” (HBHI), a targeted response aimed at reducing  cases and deaths in countries hardest hit by malaria. The HBHI response  is being led by 11 countries that accounted for about 70% of the world’s  malaria burden in 2017. By November 2019, the HBHI approach had been  initiated in nine of these countries. Two reported substantial  reductions in malaria cases in 2018 over the previous year: India (2.6  million fewer cases) and Uganda (1.5 million fewer cases).
 
 Protecting women and children 
 
 An estimated 61% of pregnant women and children in sub-Saharan Africa  slept under an insecticide-treated net in 2018 compared to 26% in 2010.
 
 Among pregnant women in the region, coverage of the recommended 3 or  more doses of intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp),  delivered at antenatal care facilities (ANC), increased from an  estimated 22% in 2017 to 31% in 2018.
 
 WHO recommends the use of effective vector control (insecticide-treated  nets or indoor residual spraying) and preventive antimalarial medicines  to protect pregnant women and children from malaria. Robust health  services that provide expanded access to these and other proven malaria  control tools – including prompt diagnostic testing and treatment – is  key to meeting the goals of the Global technical strategy for malaria 2016-2030 (GTS).
 
 Still, too many women do not receive the recommended number of IPTp  doses, or none at all. Some women are unable to access antenatal care  services. Others who reach an ANC facility do not benefit from IPTp as  the drug is either not available or the health worker does not prescribe  it.
 
 For children under five living in Africa’s Sahel subregion, WHO  recommends seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) during the  high-transmission rainy season. In 2018, 72% of children who were  eligible for the preventive medicine benefited from it.
 
 Another recommended strategy – intermittent preventive treatment in  infants (IPTi) – calls for delivering antimalarial medicines to very  young children through a country’s immunization platform. The tool is  currently being pioneered in Sierra Leone.
 
 “IPTi offers a tremendous opportunity to keep small children alive and  healthy,” said Dr Pedro Alonso, Director of WHO’s Global Malaria  Programme. “WHO welcomes Unitaid’s new drive, announced today, to  accelerate the adoption and scale-up of IPTi in other malaria-endemic  countries in sub-Saharan Africa.”
 
 Timely diagnostic testing and treatment are vital. But many children  with a fever are not brought for care by a trained health provider.  According to recent country surveys, 36% of children with fever in  sub-Saharan Africa do not receive any medical attention.
 
 Integrated community case management for malaria, pneumonia and  diarrhoea can bridge gaps in clinical care in hard-to-reach communities.  Although 30 countries now implement the approach, most sub-Saharan  African countries struggle to do so, mainly due to bottlenecks in health  financing.
 
 The World malaria report 2019 and embargoed information package can be found at https://who.canto.global/v/malaria.