Urban Malaria Threat: How Anopheles Stephensi Challenges India’s 2030 Malaria Goal

Urban malaria driven by invasive Anopheles stephensi threatens India’s 2030 malaria elimination goal, demanding stronger surveillance and city-specific vector control.

Urban Malaria

Urban Malaria Latest News

  • India’s Malaria Elimination Technical Report, 2025 has flagged urban malaria driven by the invasive mosquito Anopheles stephensi as a growing national concern.
  • It could threaten India’s target of eliminating malaria by 2030, with an interim goal of zero indigenous cases by 2027, aligned with World Health Organisation strategy.

Urban Malaria A New Challenge

  • The spread of Anopheles stephensi in cities such as Delhi marks a shift from traditional rural malaria transmission.
  • The species thrives in urban environments, breeding in artificial containers like overhead tanks, tyres, and construction sites.
  • It efficiently transmits Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax, complicating malaria control efforts.

Why Anopheles Stephensi Is a Serious Threat

  • Recognised globally as an invasive vector.
  • Adapted to high population density, informal settlements, and fragmented urban healthcare systems.
  • Requires city-specific vector control and surveillance strategies, unlike conventional rural-focused approaches.

Persistent High-Burden Pockets

  • India has entered the pre-elimination phase, but malaria is now concentrated in specific pockets rather than widespread.
  • High-burden districts persist in Odisha, Tripura, and Mizoram.
  • Cross-border transmission from Myanmar and Bangladesh continues to affect northeastern border districts.

Key Drivers of Continued Transmission

  • Asymptomatic infections, making detection difficult.
  • Difficult terrain and remote tribal and forest areas.
  • Population mobility and migration.
  • Occupational exposure and uneven access to health services.

India’s Progress So Far

  • Malaria cases reduced from 11.7 lakh (2015) to ~2.27 lakh (2024).
  • Deaths declined by 78% over the same period.
  • Active surveillance intensified in tribal, forest, border, and migrant-population settings.

Health System Gaps Identified

  • Inconsistent reporting by the private sector.
  • Limited entomological capacity.
  • Drug and insecticide resistance.
  • Operational gaps in remote tribal regions.
  • Occasional shortages of diagnostics and treatment supplies.

Priority Actions and Research Areas

  • Strengthen surveillance systems and vector monitoring.
  • Improve supply-chain reliability for diagnostics and medicines.
  • Focus operational research on:
    • Asymptomatic malaria infections
    • Ecology and control of Anopheles stephensi
    • Drug and insecticide resistance
    • Optimisation of P. vivax treatment regimens

Strategic Frameworks Guiding Elimination

  • India’s success rests on a clear policy roadmap:
    • National Framework for Malaria Elimination (NFME), 2016: Target of zero indigenous cases by 2027.
    • National Strategic Plan for Malaria Elimination (2023–2027): Focus on enhanced surveillance, “test–treat–track” strategy, and real-time monitoring through the Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP).

Vector Control and Urban Malaria Management

  • Integrated Vector Management (IVM) has been central, including:
    • Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS)
    • Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs)
    • Special attention has been given to controlling the invasive Anopheles stephensi mosquito, strengthening urban malaria control.

Strengthening Diagnostics, Health Systems, and Communities

  • Establishment of National Reference Laboratories under the National Centre of Vector Borne Diseases Control (NCVBDC).
  • District-specific action plans for tribal, forested, and high-endemic areas.
  • Integration of malaria services into Ayushman Bharat, with Community Health Officers and Ayushman Arogya Mandirs delivering care at the grassroots level.

Capacity Building, Research, and Partnerships

  • Over 850 health professionals trained in 2024 through national refresher programmes.
  • Research on insecticide resistance and drug efficacy guiding evidence-based interventions.
  • Intensified Malaria Elimination Project–3 (IMEP-3) covering 159 districts in 12 states, focusing on vulnerable populations, Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs) distribution, entomological studies, and surveillance.

The Road Ahead 2030 Malaria-Free India

  • India remains committed to achieving zero indigenous malaria cases by 2027 and elimination by 2030, with safeguards against re-establishment. 
  • By combining strong policy frameworks, scientific interventions, community participation, and sustained funding, India is emerging as a global benchmark in malaria elimination.

Source: TH | PIB

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Urban Malaria FAQs

Q1. Why is urban malaria in India a growing concern?+

Q2. What makes Anopheles stephensi a dangerous mosquito?+

Q3. Which regions remain malaria hotspots in India?+

Q4. How much progress has India made in malaria reduction?+

Q5. What strategies is India using to achieve malaria elimination?+

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