Who warns that climate change could spread malaria

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HEALTH

Pakistan faced heavy monsoon rains and severe flooding that displaced and killed many people, in addition driving an uptick in malaria

Climate change, and the extreme weather events it brings, could raise global malaria rates, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on 30 November 2023. “The changing climate poses a substantial risk to progress against malaria, particularly in vulnerable regions,” said WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “Sustainable and resilient malaria responses are needed now more than ever, coupled with urgent actions to slow the pace of global warming and reduce its effects.”

In its latest World Malaria Report, the WHO estimated that there were 249 million cases of the mosquito-spread disease in 2022, up from about 244 million in 2021 and a similar number in 2020. That was 16 million more cases than seen in 2019, when malaria cases hit a trough just before the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted malaria prevention efforts worldwide. Most of the 5 million additional malaria cases between 2021 and 2022 happened in five countries: Pakistan, Nigeria, Uganda, Ethiopia and Papua New Guinea. Pakistan saw the largest increase at 2.6 million cases, compared to 500,000 in 2021. The uptick was tied to the destructive flooding that plunged much of Pakistan underwater, providing new breeding grounds for mosquitoes.

“With the very heavy monsoons we expected these consequences, but not up to this magnitude,” Dr Muhammad Mukhtar, director of Pakistan’s national malaria control program, said. The standing

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