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For the first time this century, global child deaths are projected to rise, a reversal that global experts describe as both alarming and preventable.
According to the 2025 Goalkeepers Report released by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the number of children dying before their fifth birthday will increase from 4.6 million in 2024 to 4.8 million in 2025. If global health funding cuts persist, up to 16 million more children could die by 2045.
For Uganda, where malaria remains a leading cause of illness and death, the warning comes as efforts are to fight malaria are being strengthened.
Among the African voices calling attention to the crisis is Ugandan entomologist and malaria advocate, Krystal Mwesiga Birungi, a Research & Outreach Associate at Target Malaria Uganda under the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI). Birungi warns that without urgent investment in prevention and innovation, “millions of lives on the line” could be lost.
Ugandan entomologist and malaria advocate, Krystal Mwesiga Birungi, a Research & Outreach Associate at Target Malaria Uganda under the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI). (Courtesy)
Bill Gates warns that although scientific tools are improving, the funding is not.
“Millions of lives are on the line,” he writes, adding that even in tight budgets, investments in vaccines, primary health care, and malaria innovations deliver the highest returns.
For malaria alone, the models are clear: next-generation tools could save 5.7 million children by 2045.
Uganda: where time matters
The urgency described in the report mirrors the reality in districts like Iganga, one of Uganda’s high malaria-burden areas. Here, the Ministry of Health’s 24.2 Hours Initiative works to ensure that every suspected malaria case is tested and treated within 24 hours, and within two hours of reaching a health facility.
The policy is saving lives, but the challenges facing families reveal why global financing still matters.
One mother, Nabirye Florence, walked part of a 30km journey in the rain to reach Namungalwe Health Centre III with her feverish child. Her baby tested positive for malaria, one of more than 3,000 cases reported weekly in Iganga in 2023.
Nankya Prossy prepares to take her feverish baby to the hospital. (Courtesy)
“In 2023, 94% of the world’s malaria cases and 95% of malaria deaths happened in Africa,” Birungi says. Most of these deaths are among children under five.
In Uganda, malaria killed about 2,700 people in 2023, with more than 12 million cases recorded. At any given health centre in high-burden districts, dozens of children arrive daily with symptoms.
Clinicians in Iganga say the 24.2 Initiative has sharply improved survival.
“We were losing many children here,” said clinical officer Munyira Micheal Gerald. “Since the initiative started, we have managed to save the lives of these children.”
But with shrinking global health spending — and Uganda facing economic pressure — sustaining these initiatives will be difficult.
“We cannot stop at almost”
The Goalkeepers Report emphasises that global health progress is fragile and at a critical turning point.
Gates warns, “We could be the generation with the most advanced science in history but without funding to ensure it saves lives.”
Birungi echoes this message, but with urgency born from lived experience as a childhood malaria survivor.
“My vision is not just scientific optimism; it is a call to collective responsibility,” she says. “African governments, global donors, researchers, and communities must invest, innovate, and lead together. Millions of children’s lives depend on it.”
Her warning aligns with what frontline health workers already know: in the fight against malaria, the clock is always ticking, and the world cannot afford to turn back.