World Malaria Day, on 25 April, is an opportunity for the global community to collectively raise our voice in unison to keep malaria high on the global health agenda. We must raise a sense of URGENCY and communicate the OPTIMISM for what we can achieve together, IF WE ACT NOW.
The RBM Partnership’s top advocacy goal for this year is to align and activate the global community to support a fully replenished Global Fund of at least US$18 billion for programs between 2024-2026. Achieving this goal will ensure that the majority of global malaria programs are fully financed and that we can:
- Reduce malaria cases by 66% by 2026 and malaria deaths by 62% between 2020 and 2026
- Increase coverage of insecticide-treated nets in Africa by 19% by 2026
- Ensure all eligible pregnant women receive at least three doses of preventive malaria treatment by 2025
- Treat 500 million malaria cases through public sector systems between 2021 and 2026
- Eliminate malaria from an additional 6 countries
World Malaria Day 2022 will reinforce the Global Fund Investment Case using the theme “ADVANCE EQUITY. BUILD RESILIENCE. END MALARIA.” This will reinforce how investments in ending malaria save lives and are a pathway to improving economic growth, and preparing for future health threats, to achieve A SAFER WORLD. These themes resonate with donors and endemic countries as we look to make the strongest case for GLOBAL FUND REPLENISHMENT.
The 2020 World Malaria Report highlighted that we are at A PRECARIOUS JUNCTURE in the malaria fight. New methodology for children under 5 deaths estimated a higher burden of malaria than had been previously calculated. Coverage of preventive treatment for pregnant women has remained low, at only 30%. While countries made impressive efforts to mitigate service disruptions due to COVID-19, the pandemic led to a 12% increase in malaria deaths. Increasing drug and insecticide resistance, humanitarian emergencies and new invasive species and gene mutations are challenges that can and must be addressed.
While the malaria fight may have been knocked back, COUNTRIES ADVANCED THEIR ABILITY TO FIGHT MALARIA, and to do so smarter, equipped with INNOVATIVE APPROACHES and OPTIMIZATION OF INTERVENTIONS as well as a robust PIPELINE OF TRANSFORMATIVE TOOLS.
By raising our voices together, we can make the strongest case for how increasing investments in malaria will rapidly drive down malaria cases and deaths in high burden countries, while continuing to sprint towards elimination in low burden countries. And, how working together we can #EndMalaria and achieve A MORE EQUAL WORLD.
HOW WE WILL #ENDMALARIA
MOBILIZING NEW FUNDING
HARNESSING DATA TO SCALE UP AND OPTIMIZE EFFECTIVE CURRENT AND NEWER TOOLS
ADVANCING A ROBUST PIPELINE OF TRANSFORMATIVE TOOLS
BUILDING STRONGER HEALTH SYSTEMS AND INCREASING SURVEILLANCE
INCREASING COUNTRY OWNERSHIP AND ACTIVATING NEW CHAMPIONS
#FIGHTFORWHATCOUNTS
#ZEROMALARIASTARTSWITHME
#ENDMALARIA
World Malaria Day
April 25th 2022
Time now: 11:46:52
Time now: Europe/Berlin
Events
ICT4D for Malaria Elimination Conference
Unique Pharma and Centre Medical De Botour (CMB) World Malaria Day Campaign
Commemoration of World Malaria Day 2022 in India
Malaria in Africa: Translating Science into Practice World Malaria Day Symposium
PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) World Malaria Day 2022
Novartis Global Health: Fighting malaria through innovation and access
Save the Children World Malaria Day Webinar
PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) World Malaria Day Activities
Free malaria screening and treatment
Career talks: scientific research in malaria
Guinea Bissau Zero Malaria Starts with Me Launch
Zimbabwe Zero Malaria Starts with Me Launch
Ghana Zero Malaria Business Leadership Initiative launch
Zero Malaria Business Leadership Initiative Photo Exhibition
Virtual roundtable: Leveraging innovation to end malaria and save lives
High-level event hosted by US Kenyan Embassy and AU Mission to the US
Launch ceremony of the Media Group Engaged in the Fight against Malaria
High-level advocacy event with Cameroonian leaders
The annual Global Malaria Civil Society Forum 2022
To find more information about the World Malaria Day celebrations which took place in previous years please visit: