Today’s Solutions: July 05, 2026

Mosquitos can be a pesky summertime problem, but for countries who have not eradicated malaria, they can be more than an itchy nuisance – they can be deadly. The good news: according to the Lancet Commission on malaria eradication, we have the technology required to eradicate the disease, and if we play our cards right, we could do so by 2050.

The key is accelerating the downward curve of malaria prevalence. Issues like poverty, political unrest, and increased temperatures can all stagnate malaria reduction, but three critical steps can keep us moving in the right direction:

  1. Enhance eradication software — give national malaria managers and staff the monitoring resources they need to visualize the crisis
  2. New eradication hardware — rapid diagnosis and vaccinations are key, but so are radical technologies like gene drives to reduce the prevalence of disease-carrying bugs
  3. Financial investment — increasing funds from $4 to $6 billion a year would be a crucial tipping point for malaria treatment

We have the tools at our disposal to make malaria a disease of the past. The key is using these tools effectively to mobilize medical treatment to areas where knowledge and implementation of treatment are lacking.

 

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Passive cooling techniques reduce AC strain by up to 80 percent

In the summer months, many of us are of two minds: we’re dying to keep it cool, but we’re also dying not to spend ...

Read More

Coping with transnational grief

For Amrita Chavan, leaving Mumbai for Canada at the age of 19 was the start of a new experience, but it also marked the ...

Read More

How to spot early signs of frailty and build strength for the long run

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Frailty may seem like an inevitable part of getting older, but it’s actually a diagnosable medical condition that ...

Read More

New stem cell treatment shows promise for reversing vision loss in macular de...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For millions living with age-related macular degeneration, seeing the world head-on becomes an exercise in frustration. Faces blur, ...

Read More