Islamabad : The World Health Organisation (WHO) has urged the partners to prevent malaria resurgence in Pakistan and end malaria in our lifetime
An official handout issued by WHO office in Islamabad said Pakistan reduced malaria incidence by 10% in 2025 compared to 2024, but it still reported 1.8 million cases, as the country has not yet recovered from the surge triggered by the 2022 climate-driven floods.
The announcement added WHO experts in a health facility in Sindh, Pakistan, during a field visit to support a Government-led malaria programme review in April 2026. Photo credit: WHO Pakistan
25 April 2026, Islamabad, Pakistan – On World Malaria Day, the World Health Organization (WHO) calls on all partners to intensify the response to prevent a resurgence in Pakistan and stresses that, for the first time, ending malaria in our lifetime is possible. In 2025, Pakistan reduced malaria incidence by 10% compared to 2024, but it still reported 1.8 million cases, as the country has not yet recovered from the surge triggered by the 2022 climate-driven floods – from 399,097 confirmed infections in 2021 to a peak of 2.7 million in 2023.
Progress is at risk due to factors such as climate change, a massive global funding gap of US$ 5.4 billion and recent cuts in global health aid, which have disrupted health systems, surveillance, and campaigns, demonstrating how quickly hard-fought gains can be reversed.
As part of World Malaria Day celebrations, WHO and partners have launched a global campaign to seize the opportunity to protect lives now and fund a malaria-free future, under the theme “Driven to End Malaria: Now We Can. Now We Must.”
“With the tools and resources available today, together, we have the historic opportunity to offer a malaria-free world to our children and our grandchildren. WHO stands with Pakistan to continue strengthening the response, providing science-based technical support to build together a future where no family should lose a loved one to malaria.”
In April 2026, WHO supported a country-led malaria programme review that visited health facilities across different provinces. The goal: to collect evidence and lessons learned to continue reinforcing prevention, surveillance, case management, evidence-based vector control, data systems, and outbreak preparedness at the federal and the provincial levels.
In 2025, Pakistan screened about 16.9 million suspected cases and provided free treatment to most of the close to 1.8 million confirmed patients in collaboration with WHO, partners, the private sector and civil society – and with funding support from the Global Fund to defeat AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) and malaria.
Approximately 12 million nets to prevent mosquito bites were distributed in Pakistan over a three-year period from 2023 to 2025. In addition, community-based case management has been recently adopted and shows strong potential for hard-to-reach communities
In Pakistan, malaria transmission persists mainly in Balochistan, rural Sindh, and some districts in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).
2.3 billion cases and 14 million deaths averted globally since 2000
Since 2000, thanks to medical science and joint international and country-led efforts, 2.3 billion cases and 14 million deaths have been averted globally. To date, 47 countries have been certified malaria-free (of which two in 2024 and three in 2025), while 37 countries reported fewer than 1,000 cases in 2024.
WHO experts consider that eradicating malaria is within reach, particularly thanks to medical science and the development of new vaccines, treatments, malaria control tools and pioneering technologies – including genetic modification of mosquitoes and long-acting injectables.