| 25 Avril 2016
GENEVA -- A year after the World Health Assembly resolved to eliminate malaria from at least 35 countries by 2030, the World Health Organization (WHO) is releasing a World Malaria Day report that shows this goal, though ambitious, is achievable.
The efficacy of the tools that secured the gains against malaria in the early years of this century is now threatened. Mosquito resistance to insecticides used in nets and indoor residual spraying is growing. So too is parasite resistance to a component of one of the most powerful antimalarial medicines.
Further progress against malaria will likely require new tools that do not exist today, and the further refining of new technologies.
Last year, for the first time, the European Medicines Agency issued a positive scientific opinion on a malaria vaccine. In January 2016, WHO recommended large-scale pilot projects of the vaccine in several African countries, which could pave the way for wider deployment in the years ahead.
Strong political commitment and funding are vital
“New technologies must go hand in hand with strong political and financial commitment,” Dr Alonso added.
Vigorous leadership by the governments of affected countries is key. Governments must strengthen surveillance of cases to identify gaps in coverage and be prepared to take action based on the information received. As countries approach elimination, the ability to detect every infection becomes increasingly important.
Reaching the goals of the Global Technical Strategy will require a steep increase in global and domestic funding—from $2.5 billion today to an estimated $8.7 billion annually by 2030.
Through robust financing and political will, affected countries can speed progress towards malaria elimination and contribute to the broader development agenda as laid out in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
The report can be accessed from the following link:
http://www.who.int/malaria/publications/atoz/eliminating-malaria/en/
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