Infectious Diseases of Poverty (May 2022)

Could China’s journey of malaria elimination extend to Africa?

  • Duoquan Wang,
  • Shan Lv,
  • Wei Ding,
  • Shenning Lu,
  • Hongwei Zhang,
  • Kokouvi Kassegne,
  • Shang Xia,
  • Lei Duan,
  • Xuejiao Ma,
  • Lulu Huang,
  • Roly Gosling,
  • Joshua Levens,
  • Salim Abdulla,
  • Mutinta Mudenda,
  • Moses Okpeku,
  • Kenneth Kamwi Matengu,
  • Potiandi Serge Diagbouga,
  • Ning Xiao,
  • Xiao-Nong Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40249-022-00978-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract World Health Organization (WHO) certified China malaria-free on June 30, 2021, which brightens the goal of global malaria elimination efforts. China contributed its unique innovations to the global community: Artemisinin, discovered by Tu Youyou, has saved millions of lives globally; the “1-3-7” norm developed in 2012, has been adapted in the local contexts of countries in the Southeast Asia and Africa. How to the targets of Global Technical Strategy for Malaria (GTS) 2016−2030. By looking into the malaria control phase, towards elimination phase from 1960 to 2011 in sub-Saharan Africa and China, we found that the gap in malaria burden will widen unless the interventions in Africa are enhanced. It is imperative to identify the key China–Africa cooperation areas on malaria control and elimination, so that synergized efforts could be pooled together to help African countries achieve the elimination goal. The practices from China malaria control and elimination efforts could be leveraged to fast-track malaria elimination efforts in Africa, which makes it possible that the China’s journey of malaria elimination extends to Africa. Graphical Abstract

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