Global Malaria Programme launches new operational strategy

Word Health Organization

April 24, 2024

Ahead of World Malaria Day on April 25, the WHO Global Malaria Programme published a new operational strategy outlining its priorities and key activities up to 2030 to help change the trajectory of malaria trends and achieve the global malaria targets. The strategy outlines four strategic objectives on which WHO will focus its efforts, including developing norms and standards, introducing new tools and innovation, promoting strategic information for impact, and providing technical leadership of the global malaria response.

In recent years, progress toward critical targets of the WHO Global Technical Strategy for Malaria 2016-2030 has stalled, particularly in countries that carry a high burden of the disease. In 2022, there were an estimated 608,000 malaria-related deaths and 249 million new malaria cases globally, with young children in Africa bearing the brunt of the disease.

Millions of people continue to miss out on the services they need to prevent, detect, and treat malaria. Additionally, progress in global malaria control has been hampered by resource constraints, humanitarian crises, climate change, and biological threats such as drug and insecticide resistance.

“A shift in the global malaria response is urgently needed across the entire malaria ecosystem to prevent avoidable deaths and achieve the targets of the WHO global malaria strategy,” notes Dr Daniel Ngamije, Director of the Global Malaria Programme. “This shift should seek to address the root causes of the disease and be centered around accessibility, efficiency, sustainability, equity, and integration.”

Strategic objectives

The WHO Global Malaria Programme has an important role in leading the response to control and eliminate the disease worldwide. Through its direct actions and networks, including a presence in 150 countries, the Programme is well placed to shape the malaria ecosystem and achieve impact at the country level.

The new operational strategy includes four strategic objectives.

  1. Develop and disseminate norms and standards. Evidence-based technical recommendations are a cornerstone of the fight against malaria. Normative guidance supports the translation of evidence into action by aligning countries and partners under one common technical vision and strategic direction. The Global Malaria Programme has a core responsibility to guide the research agenda and analyze evidence that can inform global policy.
  2. Stimulate the development and timely introduction of new tools and innovation. While more progress can be achieved with currently available tools, new interventions are needed to accelerate the gains and counter emerging threats. The Global Malaria Programme plays a critical role in facilitating the evaluation and introduction of new malaria control tools. It works closely with multiple partners to provide an evidence base to inform their effective scale-up.
  3. Promote the use of strategic information for impact. The Global Malaria Programme’s work monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on trends in malaria burden, control, and elimination drives priorities and decision-making at all levels—from in-country actors to international donors and other partners. WHO’s work also includes global and national equity monitoring as well as support for local barrier assessments to understand better who is missing out on malaria interventions.
  4. Provide technical leadership of the global malaria response. WHO leads and coordinates the United Nations’ health agenda at the country and global levels. The Organization has a core responsibility to convene key stakeholders, define and advocate for priority activities, and empower communities and individuals to access quality health services. The Global Malaria Programme embodies this core WHO function in the malaria ecosystem.

Guiding principles

Three equity-oriented principles guide the new operational strategy:

  • Country ownership and leadership, with a whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach. Efforts to fight malaria must be fully owned and led by countries with adequate domestic resource investment and a multisectoral response. A country-led response further promotes inclusive governance, accountability, and specific interventions tailored to local contexts.
  • Resilient health systems to enable the success of national malaria responses. Ensuring the provision of malaria services relies on a strong primary healthcare system that can respond to emerging needs and provide quality care for all people, including those infected with malaria.
  • Equity in access to quality health services. All efforts to fight malaria should be rooted in the principles of equity, gender equity, and human rights to ensure that the most vulnerable are protected and have access to quality health services, including malaria interventions and information.

Equity in access to malaria services is the focus of this year’s World Malaria Day, which has the theme “Accelerating the fight against malaria for a more equitable world.” It is also a central tenet of the Yaoundé Declaration, signed in March 2024 by African Ministers of Health from some of the countries hardest hit by malaria.

In signing the declaration, Ministers committed, among other measures, to ensuring that all populations at risk of malaria consistently receive the appropriate tools—including those living in hard-to-reach areas and conflict humanitarian settings.

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Main photo: A mother and her baby beside an insecticide-treated bed net distributed by UNICEF. [UNICEF/Jan Grarup]


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