Malaria elimination certification process
Certification of malaria elimination is the official recognition by WHO of a country’s malaria-free status. WHO grants this certification when a country has proven, beyond reasonable doubt, that the chain of local transmission of all human malaria
parasites has been interrupted nationwide for at least the past 3 consecutive years, and that a fully functional surveillance and response system that can prevent re-establishment of indigenous transmission is in place.
Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination and Certification
The Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination and Certification (TAG-MEC) is an advisory body that advises WHO whether malaria-free certification should be granted to a country, upon the request of its government, and whether a country’s malaria-free certification should be removed.
Publications
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The Fourth Annual Global Forum of Malaria-Eliminating Countries was held in Cape Town, South Africa, from 24 to 26 January 2023. It brought together nearly...

Report of the third, fourth and fifth meetings of the Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination...
The Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination and Certification (TAG-MEC) was established to advise WHO on malaria-free certification, malaria elimination...

Report of the first and second meetings of the Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination and Certification,...
The Technical Advisory Group on Malaria Elimination and Certification (TAG-MEC) was established to advise WHO on malaria-free certification, malaria elimination...

Preparing for certification of malaria elimination, second edition
This document provides extended guidance to countries that are nearing malaria elimination on preparing for certification. It provides an overview of the...

A framework for malaria elimination
The malaria landscape has changed significantly in the last decade: funding has increased, coverage of life-saving tools has been scaled up, burden has...