- Global messaging briefing kit: World malaria report 2023
Most of the cases (82%) and deaths (94%) averted were in the WHO African Region, followed by the South-East Asia Region The pace at which cases and deaths were averted slowed during the COVID-19 pandemic; nevertheless, an estimated 549 million cases and 2 82 million deaths were averted in the period 2020 through 2022 1
- Global malaria mortality between 1980 and 2010: A systematic . . .
In 2010 there were an estimated 216 million episodes of malaria worldwide, mostly among children younger than 5 years in the African Region [17] The number of global malaria deaths was estimated
- Malaria Surveillance — United States, 2016 | MMWR
The African region accounts for an estimated 90% of malaria cases worldwide; 99% of cases in Africa are due to P falciparum, and 91% of all malaria deaths occur in Africa (2)
- 1. Malaria: Cases and Deaths, WHO estimates, 2020
number of cases and deaths In the African Region, at the end of 2019, according to 2020 World Malaria Report (WMR), about 215 million people were infected with malaria; this represented 16 million more new cases compared to 2015 384 000 people have died of Malaria However, since 2015, the number of deaths has fallen by about 2% annually
- World Malaria Report 2022: What You Need to Know
These figures compare actuals to estimated malaria burden if rates remained at 2000 levels Regions and populations most at-risk Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) carries the heaviest malaria burden, with an estimated 234 million cases (95%) and 593,000 deaths (96%) in 2021 The top 16 most malaria-affected countries, by cases, are all in SSA
- History of Malaria in Timeline - Popular Timelines
In 2022, approximately 249 million cases of malaria worldwide resulted in an estimated 608,000 deaths, with a significant number of cases and deaths occurring in sub-Saharan Africa
- Malaria: Global progress 2000 – 2015 and future challenges
Malaria programme financing rose from an estimated US$ 960 million globally in 2005 to US$ 2 5 billion in 2014, which represents an unprecedented increase but still falls short of the estimated US$ 5 1 billion needed annually to attain international targets for malaria control and elimination (Fig 2)
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