Health
Funding Stalls Global Malaria Campaign
Recent gains in the fight against malaria could be reversed because funding has stalled, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.
Its latest World Malaria Report says 1.1 million lives were saved in the past decade but that the expansion in funding from 2004-09 halted in 2010-12. Less than half of the $5.1bn (£3.1bn) needed was spent last year.
The WHO said the paucity of funds meant “that millions of people living in highly endemic areas continue to lack access to effective malaria prevention, diagnostic testing, and treatment”.
Its report said the supply of “life-saving commodities” – such as long-lasting insecticidal nets and indoor spraying programmes – had slowed.
The report said 50 countries were on track to meet targets for cutting malaria cases but that these countries only represented 3% of malaria cases.
Fourteen nations account for an estimated 80% of malaria deaths and Robert Newman, director of the WHO Global Malaria Programme in Geneva, said these high-burden countries were “in a precarious situation and most of them need urgent financial assistance”.