Invasive Mosquito Species Threatens India’s 2030 Malaria Elimination Goal

Context:
India has committed to eliminating malaria by 2030 in line with global targets. However, the emergence and rapid spread of an invasive mosquito species — Anopheles stephensi — especially in urban areas, poses a serious challenge to achieving this goal, as highlighted in the Malaria Elimination Technical Report 2025 released by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

Key Highlights:

  • Scientific / Epidemiological Background
  • Anopheles stephensi is traditionally an urban malaria vector, unlike rural-focused vectors in India.
  • It breeds in artificial water containers such as overhead tanks, construction sites, and informal settlements.
  • Capable of transmitting Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax.
  • Spread and High-Burden Pockets
  • Increasing presence in metros like Delhi and peri-urban areas.
  • Persistent high-burden districts in Odisha, Tripura, Mizoram, and cross-border regions near Bangladesh and Myanmar.
  • Urbanisation, migration, population density, and climate suitability aid transmission.
  • Data & Trends
  • Malaria cases reduced from 17.1 lakh (2015) to ~2.27 lakh (2024) — a 78% decline.
  • Despite progress, urban malaria and imported cases threaten reversal of gains.
  • Government & Technical Response
  • Intensified surveillance systems.
  • Improved vector monitoring and supply-chain reliability for diagnostics and drugs.
  • Focus on city-specific vector control strategies.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: Threat to malaria elimination due to invasive Anopheles stephensi.
  • Causes: Rapid urbanisation, poor water storage practices, informal settlements, climate adaptability.
  • Government Initiatives:
    • National Framework for Malaria Elimination (NFME).
    • Target of zero indigenous cases by 2027.
  • Benefits: Reduced mortality, improved public health outcomes, SDG alignment.
  • Challenges: Urban breeding habitats, insecticide resistance, diagnostic gaps, cross-border transmission.
  • Impact: Risk of resurgence in urban and peri-urban India.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Facts & Definitions:
    • Anopheles stephensi recognised globally as an invasive urban malaria vector by the World Health Organization.
  • Conceptual Linkages:
    • Urban health, climate change, migration, and vector ecology.
  • Governance & Policy Gaps:
    • Fragmented urban health delivery.
    • Limited entomological capacity and inconsistent private-sector reporting.
  • Way Forward:
    • Urban-centric malaria control policies.
    • Strengthening municipal capacity and inter-State coordination.
    • Community awareness on water storage and sanitation.
    • Cross-border surveillance cooperation.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS II: Government policies, health governance
  • GS III: Public health, science & technology, environmental challenges
  • GS I: Population dynamics, urbanisation

 

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