The fight against malaria is at a crossroads. After decades of historic progress, new threats — including reductions in international funding, drug and insecticide resistance and mutations that evade detection — are increasing the risk for widespread malaria resurgence.
But we are not unprepared for this moment. The America First Global Health Strategy recommits the U.S. to achieving the globally agreed goals against malaria by 2030 while accelerating transitions toward greater country ownership.
Our new report, co-published with Friends of the Global Fight Against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and United to Beat Malaria outlines principles and pathways to support a successful implementation of the America First Global Health Strategy for malaria, including insights from country case-studies in El Salvador, Indonesia, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania.
If transitions are data-driven, evidence-based and tailored to country capacity, this approach could propel us to the future we all want — in which national governments and their partners can lead the effort to protect their own citizens so no one dies from a mosquito bite.
Making Country-Led Malaria Control a Reality
Innovating, Financing, and Managing Sustainable Transitions
About Malaria No More
Malaria No More envisions a world where no one dies from a mosquito bite. Twenty years into our mission, our work has helped drive historic progress toward this goal. Now, we’re mobilizing the political commitment, funding, and innovation required to achieve one of the greatest humanitarian accomplishments of our time — ending malaria for good.