Article’s

Malaria and the Epidemiological Triad: Strategic Pathways to Elimination in Gujarat, India

Dr. Kinjal G. Jani

(03 – 2026)

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19310077

 

Malaria remains a formidable public health and economic challenge in Gujarat, India, acting as a persistent barrier to regional productivity. Despite the national mandate for elimination by 2030, Gujarat presents a unique sub-national landscape defined by the intersection of rapid industrialization, diverse topography—from the arid Rann of Kutch to the tribal forest belts of the Dangs—and high internal migration. This paper utilizes the Epidemiological Triad—comprising the Agent (Plasmodium), the Host (Humans and Anopheles mosquitoes), and the Environment—to analyze the disease’s persistence. The paper identifies significant hurdles, including insecticide resistance and the rise of asymptomatic carriers. However, it also highlights strategic opportunities: the use of GIS-based digital surveillance for real-time outbreak mapping, genomic surveillance to track parasite origins, and public-private partnerships to integrate private clinics into the reporting net. By disrupting the equilibrium of the triad through these targeted interventions, Gujarat can transition from a high-burden state to a global model for malaria elimination in a developing economy.

 

 

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