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Malaria in the Asia-Pacific region has been targeted for elimination by the year 2030. This article asks the question, "by what means?" in the context of proven technical strategies and tools against key challenges imposed by the distinct character of the Asia-Pacific malaria problem. The misperception of malaria in the Asia-Pacific region as a less serious but otherwise essentially similar problem to African malaria lulls us into rote application of the same tools and strategies. Those now mitigating the harm done by malaria in Africa will not suffice to eliminate malaria in the Asia-Pacific region - these tasks and the problems are fundamentally distinct. This article describes the singular characteristics of Asia-Pacific malaria and the bearing of those upon the technical strategy of malaria elimination. Most of the tools needed for that endeavour do not yet exist and spirited calls for elimination within the next 14years may discourage the patience and investments needed to conceive, optimise and validate them.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.ijpara.2016.06.006

Type

Journal article

Journal

Int J Parasitol

Publication Date

06/2017

Volume

47

Pages

371 - 377

Keywords

Asia-Pacific, Control, Diversity, Elimination, Malaria, Strategy, Tools, Asia, Disease Eradication, Epidemiological Monitoring, Humans, Malaria, Oceania, Plasmodium