Banjul - To mark World Malaria Day, the United States announced that the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) intends to form a partnership with The Gambia as part of its expansion efforts around the world. This will increase the number of PMI partner countries to 30, with 27 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and three in Southeast Asia. 

The Gambia is one of six countries in the Africa Region that has achieved the 2020 milestones of reducing malaria cases and deaths by 40 percent since 2015. This new partnership with PMI will support the Gambia’s effort to transition from malaria control to malaria elimination. 

An initial investment of $4 million is expected from PMI to kick-start the process in support of The Gambia’s National Malaria Strategy. The funds will be used to implement activities such as mosquito net distribution, insecticide application, treatment for pregnant women, and medicine distribution.

The expansion will also enable PMI to leverage existing U.S. government investments for maximum impact, including those in the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. 

Of the 247 million infections and 619,000 deaths from malaria globally in 2021, most were in Africa, and almost 80 percent of deaths were children under five.  Since 2000, PMI has helped lead global efforts that have saved 11.7 million lives and prevented more than 2 billion malaria infections. 

In a statement, US President Joe Biden said: “My Administration remains committed to ending malaria so that everyone across the globe can pursue healthy and prosperous lives free of one of humanity’s oldest and most devastating diseases.

Learn more on PMI's website at www.pmi.gov

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Women in Kenya Installing a Mosquito Net Over Her Bed