Malaria is a preventable & treatable disease that continues to have devastating impacts worldwide. Progress is at risk from drug resistance, funding cuts, conflict & more. On Saturday's #WorldMalariaDay, @WHO urges greater efforts to #EndMalaria. who.int/campaigns/worl … Load image 5 KB
Malaria doesn't wait. When funding falls and programmes weaken, it comes back fast, killing hundreds of thousands more children and reversing hard-won gains. This World Malaria Day: Grasp the moment. Protect lives now. Fund a malaria-free future. @ZeroMalaria Load image
Today is World Malaria Day 2026 Theme: "Driven to End Malaria: Now We Can. Now We Must." Today, I joined the outreach organized by Nasarawa State Ministry of Health. We sensitized communities, and Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs) will be distributed. Children will Show more Load image Load image Load image Load image
Went for an outreach today , in commemoration of World malaria Day. Proud to have participated in Point-of-Care Testing during the outreach, providing rapid malaria testing to support early detection and prompt care. Load image Load image
Today, Bwiza Initiative joined Kinyinya Sector during the monthly Umuganda, engaging the community on International Malaria Day under the theme “End of Malaria Starts with Me,” while raising awareness on preventing teenage pregnancies and promoting water, sanitation, and hygiene Load image Load image Load image Load image KINYINYA SECTOR and 9 others
TODAY IS WORLD MALARIA DAY To celebrate it we ( @my_dozages ) created a way for people to know the probable cause of their treatment failure. As pharmacists we may be blamed for giving wrong prescriptions or just selling medications to make money but we'd like them to know why Show more Load image 5 KB jae and 9 others
World Malaria Day 2026 Malaria is preventable. Malaria is treatable. At Healthicate Africa, we believe knowledge saves lives. Sleep under insecticide-treated nets Use repellents & eliminate stagnant water Get tested early Complete your treatment #ZeroMalaria Load image
MESSAGE ON WORLD MALARIA DAY 2026 (April 25, 2026). Today, on World Malaria Day, we reaffirmed our commitment to ending malaria and protecting the health of every individual. The 2026 theme, “United Against Malaria,” highlights the urgent need for sustained collaboration, Show more Load image 76 KB
— Sen Oluremi Tinubu, CON (@SenRemiTinubu) April 25, 2026
World Malaria Day History
World Malaria Day seeks to raise awareness about malaria, one of the world’s deadliest diseases. Malaria is a disease of the blood that is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium. This parasite lives within the female anopheles mosquito. It is the only mosquito capable of transmitting malaria and it is found primarily in tropical areas. It is found particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. This day aims to educate and inform people about malaria to help minimize the spread and prevent infections. According to malarianomore.org, this female mosquito primarily bites between the hours of 9:00 pm and 5:00 am.
World Malaria Day was established in 2007 by the World Health Organization. It is observed annually on April 25.
Top 8 Facts for World Malaria Day in 2026
The global community will observe World Malaria Day on April 25, 2026, under the official theme United Against Malaria, which emphasizes the critical need for sustained investment and equitable access to healthcare.
A significant breakthrough likely to drive interest is the recent Phase III clinical trial results for Ganaplacide/Lumefantrine, a next-generation non-artemisinin combination therapy designed to overcome the rising threat of drug-resistant parasites.
Researchers have launched new clinical trials in early 2026 for a multi-stage malaria vaccine in Burkina Faso that targets two distinct phases of the parasite's life cycle to provide broader protection than current single-stage vaccines.
Public health specialists are closely monitoring the impact of the R21/Matrix-M vaccine, which has significantly increased the global supply and affordability of prevention tools for millions of children across sub-Saharan Africa.
A landmark study published in the journal Nature in early 2026 projects that climate-driven extreme weather events, such as floods and cyclones, could cause 500,000 additional malaria deaths by 2050 due to the disruption of control measures.
For the first time, a dedicated malaria treatment has been approved specifically for newborn babies and young infants weighing less than 4.5 kilograms, addressing a long-standing "treatment gap" for the most vulnerable age group.
The recent certification of Egypt as malaria-free by the World Health Organization serves as a high-profile success story for the possibility of eliminating the disease in densely populated regions after a century of public health efforts.
Innovation in vector control has introduced gene-drive technologies and spatial mosquito repellents, which are currently being evaluated as transformational tools to suppress mosquito populations in both urban and rural settings.
In the News and Trending in the US for World Malaria Day