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- Malaria Rate by Country 2025 - World Population Review
Improved sanitation and medical treatments can stop or significantly slow the transmission rate; hence, wealthier and more developed nations tend to have fewer malaria cases About 90 percent of the world’s malaria cases occur in Africa, and 96 percent of malaria deaths occur there
- Incidence of malaria (per 1,000 population at risk) - Australia
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- Malaria - Our World in Data
The map shows the number of new cases of malaria per 100,000 people across the world As the chart shows, malaria cases are most common in the central part of Africa north and south of the equator The history of malaria
- Malaria Threat Map - World Health Organization
Explore data about the major biological threats to malaria control and elimination Explore individual studies and site-level data for all the threats View summaries of the threats at different geographical levels Download the data behind the MTM for your own analysis
- Incidence of malaria - Our World in Data
How is this data described by its producer? Incidence of malaria is the number of new cases of malaria in a year per 1,000 population at risk World Health Organization (via World Bank) (2025) – processed by Our World in Data
- Malaria has returned to the Torres Strait. What does this mean for . . .
Historically, malaria cases were reported in many parts of the country, especially in the 1940s, including suburbs around Sydney when soldiers infected overseas returned to Australia
- World Malaria Day 2025: messages - World Health Organization (WHO)
In 2023, there were an estimated 263 million new malaria cases in 83 countries worldwide, up from 252 million in 2022 and 226 million in 2015 The global tally of malaria deaths reached 597 000 in 2023 compared to 578 000 in 2015
- Could climate change bring malaria back to Australia?
As climate change escalates and continues to cause widespread health impacts, there are fears that climate shifts could prompt a malaria resurgence – putting some areas of Australia that were previously climatically unsuitable for the Anopheles mosquito at risk
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