Addressing a high-level roundtable on 'accelerating the elimination of Malaria in the South-East Asia Region', Nadda said here that with nearly three-fourth of the share of the regional burden, India's "successes" have significantly contributed to the reduction of malaria cases in the entire South-East Asia region.
The minister noted that the success to combat Malaria comes against the backdrop of the political leadership's commitment and support to health programmes in India.
The WHO report said that India accounted for six per cent of the 216 million new cases globally.
Nadda, however, said that majority of malaria cases in the country come from the bordering districts, forest and tribal areas, while most of the remaining parts of the country remain malaria free.
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Nadda said that focus on bordering districts and empowering local authorities with information, tools and knowledge will help in malaria reduction in India and its neighbours.
The Union health minister said that India as a hub for research and science would also support malaria implementation research, as well as capacity building in health research.
A World Health Organisation (WHO) report "World Malaria Report 2017" which was released today stated that only eight per cent of malaria cases were diagnosed last year in India, which accounted for six per cent of the 216 million new cases globally.
It also stated that surveillance mechanism in India was weak as it detected a mere eight per cent of Malaria cases.
India also witnessed a total of 331 malaria deaths in 2016, making it the highest number of deaths due to the disease in Southeast Asia region.
Nadda today launched a book "Addressing the challenge of controlling malaria across international border lines" and unveiled the Regional Action Plan (2017-2030).
The three-day ministerial roundtable is in consonance with the United Nations Assembly Resolution on consolidation and accelerating efforts to control and eliminate malaria.