| 13 Décembre 2016
GENEVA - 13 December 2016 - The World Health Organization’s (WHO) World Malaria Report 2016 reveals that children and pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa have  greater access to effective malaria control. Across the region, a steep  increase in diagnostic testing for children and preventive treatment for  pregnant women has been reported over the last five years. Among all  populations at risk of malaria, the use of insecticide-treated nets has  expanded rapidly.
 An unfinished agenda
 
 Malaria remains an acute public health problem, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.
 According to the report, there were 212 million new cases of malaria and 429 000 deaths worldwide in 2015.
 
 There are still substantial gaps in the coverage of core malaria control  tools. In 2015, an estimated 43% of the population in sub-Saharan  Africa was not protected by treated nets or indoor spraying with  insecticides, the primary methods of malaria vector control.
 
 In many countries, health systems are under-resourced and poorly  accessible to those most at risk of malaria. In 2015, a large proportion  (36%) of children with a fever were not taken to a health facility for  care in 23 African countries.
 
 “We are definitely seeing progress,” notes Dr Pedro Alonso, Director of  the WHO Global Malaria Programme. “But the world is still struggling to  achieve the high levels of programme coverage that are needed to beat  this disease.”
 
 
 Global targets
 
 At the 2015 World Health Assembly, Member States adopted the Global  Technical Strategy for Malaria 2016-2030. The Strategy set ambitious  targets for 2030 with milestones every five years to track progress.
 
 Eliminating malaria in at least 10 countries is a milestone for 2020.  The report shows that prospects for reaching this target are bright: In  2015, 10 countries and territories reported fewer than 150 indigenous  cases of malaria, and a further 9 countries reported between 150 and  1000 cases.
 
 Countries that have achieved at least 3 consecutive years of zero  indigenous cases of malaria are eligible to apply for the WHO  certification of malaria elimination. In recent months, the WHO  Director-General certified that Kyrgyzstan and Sri Lanka had eliminated  malaria.
 
 But progress towards other key targets must be accelerated. The Strategy  calls for a 40% reduction in malaria case incidence by the year 2020,  compared to a 2015 baseline. According to the report, less than half  (40) of the 91 countries and territories with malaria are on track to  achieve this milestone. Progress has been particularly slow in countries  with a high malaria burden.
 
 
 An urgent need for more funding
 
 Sustained and sufficient funding for malaria control is a serious  challenge. Despite a steep increase in global investment for malaria  between 2000 and 2010, funding has since flat-lined. In 2015, malaria  funding totalled US$ 2.9 billion, representing only 45% of the funding  milestone for 2020 (US$6.4 billion).
 
 Governments of malaria-endemic countries provided about 31% of total  malaria funding in 2015. The United States of America is the largest  international malaria funder, accounting for about 35% of total funding  in 2015, followed by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern  Ireland (16%).
 If global targets are to be met, funding from both domestic and international sources must increase substantially.