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Metadata Glossary
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World Development Indicators was updated on December 4, 2025
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Metadata Glossary
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Code
SH.MLR.INCD.P3
Indicator Name
Incidence of malaria (per 1,000 population at risk)
Short definition
Incidence of malaria is the number of new cases of malaria in a year per 1,000 population at risk.
Long definition
Incidence of malaria is the number of new cases of malaria in a year per 1,000 population at risk.
Source
Global Health Observatory Data Repository/World Health Statistics, World Health Organization (WHO), uri: http://apps.who.int/ghodata/
Topic
Health: Risk factors
Dataset
WDI
Unit of measure
Per 1000 population at risk
Periodicity
Annual
Reference period
2000-2023
Aggregation method
Weighted average
Statistical concept and methodology
Methodology: Confirmed malaria cases for countries and areas outside Africa, and for low-transmission countries and areas in Africa are adjusted for extent of health service use (treatment seeking), underreporting and lack of case confirmation (the likelihood that cases are parasite positive). In high transmission areas in which the quality of surveillance data does not permit a robust estimate from the number of reported cases, but good data on parasite prevalence is available, the number of cases can be estimated from parasite prevalence. The denominator is estimated, using official UN population and population at risk estimates for countries with sub-national endemicity. Statistical concept(s): Complete data on malaria cases reported through surveillance systems are the best source of data but are rarely available for large populations at high quality and accuracy. Reported data on malaria cases generally need to be adjusted for extent of health service use (treatment seeking), underreporting and lack of case confirmation (the likelihood that cases are parasite positive). WHO compiles data on reported confirmed cases of malaria and suspected cases tested with microscopy or RDT, submitted by national malaria control programmes. Underreporting is reported or estimated by countries. The extent of health service use (treatment seeking) data were obtained from nationally representative household surveys on health service use.
Development relevance
Malaria is a life-threatening disease caused by parasites that are transmitted to people through the bites of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes. It is preventable and curable. There are 5 parasite species that cause malaria in humans, and 2 of these species – Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax – pose the greatest threat.
Other notes
This is the Sustainable Development Goal indicator 3.3.3[https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/].
License URL
https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/public-licenses#cc-by
License Type
CC BY-4.0
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