World Malaria Day, annual observance held on April 25 to raise
awareness of the global effort to control and ultimately eradicate malaria.
World Malaria Day, which was first held in 2008, developed from Africa Malaria
Day, an event that had been observed since 2001 by African governments. The
observance served as a time to assess progress toward goals aimed at
controlling malaria and reducing its mortality in African countries. In 2007,
at the 60th session of the World Health Assembly (a meeting sponsored by
the World Health Organization [WHO]), it was proposed that Africa
Malaria Day be changed to World Malaria Day to recognize the existence of
malaria in countries worldwide and to bring greater awareness to the global
fight against the disease.
Malaria exists in more than
100 countries worldwide, and some 900,000 people die from the disease each
year. However, malaria is preventable with the use of medicines and other
precautionary measures, such as insecticide -treated bed nets and
indoor insecticide spraying. On the first World Malaria Day the
secretary-general of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, emphasized the need
to increase the availability of bed nets, medicines, public health facilities,
and trained health workers to people in areas of the world affected
by malaria. Ban challenged global initiative programs, such as the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation, the Roll Back Malaria Partnership,
and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, by stating that he
expected such universal access to be in place by the end of 2010.
Ban’s call for action
prompted the formation of the Global Malaria Action Plan (GMAP), an
aggressive unified strategy designed to reduce the incidence of malaria
worldwide. The three components of this strategy are control, elimination, and
research. Research to develop new drugs and new approaches to prevention is
fundamental to efforts aimed at first controlling and then eliminating malaria
from areas severely affected by the disease. The long-term goal of the plan was
global eradication of the disease by 2015. However, progress toward this goal
slowed significantly because of inadequate funding and health care,
particularly in difficult-to-reach areas, which had the highest proportion of
cases. By 2019, infection rates in places with the greatest malaria burden
remain largely unchanged, and an analysis of global trends in malaria incidence
suggested that eradication could be achieved by 2050.
In addition to bringing together international
agencies and research institutions to discuss the progress of the GMAP, World
Malaria Day also provides health organizations and scientists with an
opportunity to communicate information about the disease and about current
research efforts to the public. This is accomplished through public educational
programs, charity events, and other community activities.
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