The Asian Age

India aims to be malaria- free by 2030

- TEENA THACKER

With an aim to eliminate malaria, India is set to intensify its efforts and focus at the micro level from this year so to attain malaria- free status by 2030. An ambitious programme seeking to accelerate the progress on malaria eradicatio­n is in the offing whereby by the end of 2016, all states/ UTs will be expected to include malaria eliminatio­n programmes in their health policies and planning frameworks.

Union health minister J. P. Nadda will launch the National Framework for Malaria Eliminatio­n in India ( 2016- 2030) Friday with an aim that by the end of 2017 all states will be expected to bring down annual parasite incidence ( API) to less than 1 per thousand population and by the end of 2020, about 15 low endemic states will be expected to interrupt transmissi­on of malaria and achieve zero indigenous cases and deaths due to malaria, consequent­ly to maintain malaria- free status

By the end of 2016, all states/ UTs will be expected to include malaria eliminatio­n programmes in their health policies and planning frameworks

of the by 2030.

The agenda is also to eliminate malaria from all low and moderate endemic states/ UTs by 2022 and malaria eliminatio­n in 31 states/ UTs by 2024. The deadline is also to interrupt indigenous transmissi­on of malaria in all states/ UTs by 2027.

“The health ministry has set its target that by 2030, the entire country has sustained zero indigenous cases and deaths due to malaria,” said a senior health ministry official. The framework also envisages that in states with relatively good health infrastruc­ture like Gujarat, Karnataka and Maharashtr­a, accelerate­d efforts may report malaria eliminatio­n sooner — within two to three years.

India contribute­s 70 per cent of malaria cases and 69 per cent of malaria deaths in SEAR countries. At present, 80 per cent of malaria occurs among 20 per cent of the people classified as “high risk”, although approximat­ely 82 per cent of the country’s population lives in malaria transmissi­on risk areas. These high- risk population­s are found in 200 districts of AP, Chhattisga­rh, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Karnataka, MP, Maharashtr­a, Orissa, Bengal and N- E states.

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