Malaria’s Gender Divide: Why Women Bear the Brunt of a Global Health Crisis Inside View 24/04/2025 • Jemimah Njuki & Lizz Ntonjira Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window) A rollout of the malaria vaccine in Western African countries with a special focus on immunising children is an important step towards eliminating the disease. After the World Malaria Report 2024 was published, the global community confronted an undeniable and uncomfortable truth: while malaria affects entire communities, its burden is not equally distributed. Women, particularly in malaria-endemic regions, are disproportionately impacted. Their physical, social and economic health suffers more than others’ as they bear the brunt of caregiving responsibilities, suffer barriers to accessing healthcare, and face the compounding effects of climate change on disease transmission. Malaria is a preventable and treatable disease, yet the global tally of malaria deaths has risen in recent years. In 2023, the death count reached 597,000, up from 574,000 in 2018, in part due to antimalarial drug resistance, health systems weakening during COVID-19, and funding shortfalls. But the hardship that malaria causes goes beyond countries grappling with staggering death counts. The disease leaves profound and lasting indirect impacts on communities – falling disproportionately on women and girls. The hidden costs of malaria on women and girls Pregnancy weakens malaria immunity, increasing infection risk. For expectant mothers, malaria can cause severe anemia, pregnancy loss, premature birth, underweight newborns, or maternal death. / World Malaria Report 2024. The fight against malaria is hindered by deeply rooted gender inequalities. Women spend four times as many days on caregiving compared to men – a stark reality exacerbated by recurring malaria infections within families as poverty traps women in cycles of economic dependency and limits opportunities for education and employment. Women’s contributions to the global health system are estimated to be around 5% of global GDP. But around 50% of this work is unrecognised and unpaid. In malaria-endemic regions, this labour often takes the form of informal caregiving, as women provide care in up to 83% of malaria cases. For community health workers, 70% of whom are women, the imbalance is even larger. Female health workers spend significantly more unpaid hours than their male counterparts, despite forming the backbone of malaria detection, treatment, and prevention efforts in rural areas. Women and girls often lack decision-making power in their households, preventing them from accessing life-saving interventions like insecticide-treated nets or seeking timely healthcare. Cultural norms can dictate who uses a bed net or who receives care first, often leaving women and girls at greater risk. Malaria is a leading cause of death amongst adolescent girls in malaria-endemic countries. Many are forced to leave school to care for sick family members or themselves, disrupting their education and increasing their vulnerability to early marriage or exploitation. Without targeted interventions, these gendered gaps will continue to undermine global malaria eradication efforts. Climate change is catalysing inequality and disease Number of internally displaced people by endemic malaria region. Women and children face higher vulnerability during conflicts, natural disasters, and humanitarian crises. / World Malaria Report 2024 The accelerating effects of climate change are making the fight against malaria even harder. Rising temperatures and shifting rainfall patterns are expanding the habitats of malaria-transmitting mosquitoes, bringing the disease to new regions and intensifying its prevalence in existing hotspots. These environmental changes disproportionately harm women, who already face barriers to health information and services. Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable. In 2023, in 33 moderate-to-high transmission countries in the WHO African Region, there were an estimated 36 million pregnancies, of which 12.4 million (34%) were infected with malaria. Malaria during pregnancy exponentially increases risks to both mother and child, including anaemia, stunted growth, and severe illness. The consequences ripple across generations, perpetuating cycles of poor health and poverty. A gendered approach to malaria elimination Four-year-old Aitano Valentina of Guatemala City proudly holds her health booklet after receiving DPT and Polio vaccination. For the first time in history, the number of under-five deaths has fallen below 5 million. To accelerate progress against malaria and address these inequities, we must adopt a gender-responsive strategy that empowers women and girls as agents of change. Investing in women has far-reaching benefits – not just for malaria elimination but for broader health, economic, and societal outcomes. When women are empowered with resources, time and decision-making agency, malaria outcomes improve. Research shows that households where women have greater bargaining power are 16 times more likely to use mosquito nets effectively, reducing malaria transmission. It is equally important to address the structural barriers limiting women’s participation in the health workforce. Only 25% of women in the global health sector hold senior roles, despite making up 70% of the workforce. Providing pathways for professional advancement and fair compensation is essential to sustaining their contributions and ensuring a resilient healthcare system. Change won’t happen by itself WHO-recommended malaria vaccines are in the process of being rolled out across Africa, with over 10 million doses delivered in the first year of routine immunisation programmes in 2024. Addressing the impact of malaria on women and girls can contribute to both malaria eradication efforts and gender equality progress. Action is overdue. But if we commit now to putting economic resources in the hands of women, challenging gender norms, power imbalances and discriminatory laws, we can achieve a double dividend. This should see us increase women’s economic ability to take charge of their health, the representation of women in leadership roles within malaria programs, research, and policymaking, ensuring interventions reflect the realities faced by women and girls. Fair wages, adequate training, and professional development opportunities for female health workers are equally critical to building a robust and sustainable health workforce. Malaria interventions must also account for gender dynamics, ensuring equitable access to tools such as insecticide-treated nets and addressing the unique barriers faced by pregnant women and adolescent girls. Closing the gender data gaps is another essential step to enable a deeper understanding of malaria’s full impact on women and girls, and to facilitate more effective and targeted solutions. The fight against malaria is at a crossroads. With intentional investment in gender-focused strategies, we can eliminate this disease within a generation while empowering women and girls to lead healthier, more prosperous lives. The World Malaria Report 2024 leaves no room for doubt; achieving this vision will require bold leadership, innovative solutions, and an unwavering commitment to leaving no one behind. By placing women and girls at the centre of the malaria response, we can create a ripple effect of positive change that extends far beyond health, building stronger, more equitable communities worldwide. About the authors Dr. Jemimah Njuki is the Chief of Economic Empowerment at UN Women. Lizz Ntonjira is the co-chair of the Zero Malaria Campaign Coalition & Author, #YouthCan. Image Credits: WHO, UNICEF 2024 , WHO. 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