WHO officially declares China malaria-free

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The World Health Organisation (WHO), officially granted China a malaria-free certification on Wednesday, as a token of celebration of the country’s successful elimination of the disease after 70 years of its struggles against malaria.

The WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said, “Today we congratulate the people of China on ridding the country of malaria.

“Their successes were hard-earned and came only after decades of targeted and sustained action.”

From 30 million malaria cases in the 1940s, China brought down that number over the last decades, to have finally achieved no cases in the last four years.

China’s efforts against malaria started in the 1950s, as the disease was rampant in the southern part of the country, close to other hotspots in mainland Southeast Asia.

According to WHO, the 523 Project, a research programme launched in 1967, allowed Chinese Nobel Prize winner Tu Youyou to discover artemisinin, one of the most effective antimalarial drugs nowadays.

Over the last two decades, China ramped up its efforts and reduced the number of cases in the 1990s from 117,000 to 5,000 annually by providing staff training, laboratory equipment, antimalarial medicines and new methods to control mosquito propagation.

The 1-3-7 strategy one day to report a case, three days to confirm a case and seven days to prevent further spread of the disease was also a tool of success and was still used nowadays for travellers coming from malaria-infected countries.

No cases were reported in China in the last four years, warranting the malaria-free credential by the WHO.

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Kamila/Xinhua

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