Malaria's Deadly Toll: Over 6 Lakh Lives Lost in 2024 Amid Drug Resistance Threat

The World Health Organization's latest report delivers sobering news on the global fight against malaria. Despite vaccines preventing millions of cases, deaths rose to an estimated 610,000 last year. The situation is complicated by growing drug resistance and new mosquito threats that undermine current tools. However, the WHO chief insists a malaria-free world is still achievable with strong leadership and targeted investment.

Key Points: WHO Reports 610000 Malaria Deaths in 2024 as Drug Resistance Grows

  • Over 610,000 people died from malaria in 2024, with 95% of deaths in Africa
  • India accounted for 73.3% of cases in the WHO South-East Asia Region
  • Drug resistance is confirmed or suspected in at least 8 African nations
  • Insecticide-resistant mosquitoes now invade 9 countries, threatening urban control
  • Global funding has plateaued, limiting the reach of life-saving interventions
3 min read

Over 6 lakh lives lost due to malaria in 2024, drug resistance a major threat: WHO

WHO's 2024 report reveals 610,000 malaria deaths globally, with drug resistance and insecticide threats jeopardizing elimination efforts. India bears a heavy regional burden.

"New tools for prevention of malaria are giving us new hope, but we still face significant challenges. - Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General"

New Delhi, Dec 4

Malaria infected an estimated 282 million people and claimed 6,10,000 lives worldwide in 2024, according to the World Health Organization's (WHO) annual World Malaria Report on Thursday, which highlighted drug resistance as a major threat to elimination efforts.

While the WHO-recommended vaccines helped to prevent an estimated 170 million cases and one million deaths in 2024, this was roughly 9 million more than the previous year.

An estimated 95 per cent of these deaths were in the African Region, with most occurring among children under 5.

India accounted for 73.3 per cent of all cases in the WHO South-East Asia Region. The country also reported 88.7 per cent per cent of all deaths in the region.

The report showed that progress in reducing the malaria deaths -- a key target of the Global Technical Strategy for malaria 2016-2030 -- remains far off track.

It noted that antimalarial drug resistance has now been confirmed or suspected in at least 8 countries in Africa, and there are potential signs of declining efficacy of the drugs that are combined with artemisinin.

Other risks to malaria elimination efforts include the prevalence of malaria parasites with pfhrp2 gene deletions, undermining the reliability of rapid diagnostic tests, while confirmed pyrethroid resistance in 48 countries is reducing the effectiveness of insecticide-treated nets.

At the same time, Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes -- resistant to many commonly used insecticides -- have now invaded 9 African countries, posing a serious challenge to urban malaria control efforts.

Notably, progress is also being made in eliminating malaria. To date, a total of 47 countries and one territory have been certified malaria-free by WHO -- Cabo Verde and Egypt were certified malaria-free in 2024, and Georgia, Suriname, and Timor-Leste joined them in 2025.

The report noted that the WHO approved the world's first malaria vaccines in 2021, and 24 countries have introduced the vaccines into their routine immunisation programmes.

"New tools for prevention of malaria are giving us new hope, but we still face significant challenges," said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

"Increasing numbers of cases and deaths, the growing threat of drug resistance, and the impact of funding cuts all threaten to roll back the progress we have made over the past two decades," Ghebreyesus added.

The report also noted other risks, such as extreme weather events -- changes in temperature and rainfall -- contributing to increased outbreaks of malaria; conflict and instability limiting access to care.

The challenge is further exacerbated by the plateauing of global funding over the last decade, limiting the reach of life-saving interventions.

"However, none of the challenges is insurmountable. With the leadership of the most-affected countries and targeted investment, the vision of a malaria-free world remains achievable," said the WHO chief.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Drug resistance is a terrifying prospect. Our public health system needs to be proactive, not reactive. We should invest more in indigenous vaccine research and strengthen our surveillance for these resistant strains before it's too late.
D
David E
Working in global health, I see this firsthand. The plateau in funding is a critical issue. Success stories like Cabo Verde show elimination is possible with sustained effort and investment. The world needs to recommit.
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Ananya R
While the numbers are grim, let's not ignore the progress mentioned. Vaccines prevented 170 million cases! We need to focus on scaling up what works—like bed nets and vaccines—while tackling new challenges like those invasive mosquitoes.
S
Suresh O
The link to extreme weather is crucial. With changing monsoon patterns, we can expect more outbreaks. Our disaster management and health departments need to integrate their planning. Community awareness is key—people must know the symptoms.
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Kavya N
Respectfully, I think our approach is sometimes too fragmented. We have brilliant scientists and ASHA workers, but coordination between states and the center on disease surveillance can be slow. We need a unified, tech-driven national malaria dashboard to track outbreaks in real-time.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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