Timeline of Schistosomiasis Control Initiative

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Year Month and date Event type Details Location
2002 " SCI was founded in 2002 through a $32 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation"[1]
2003 "SCI has worked in Uganda since 2003 "[1]
2006 ": In 2006, SCI received large grants from USAID and the Gates Foundation to support integrated NTD programs in eight countries for five years to treat lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, and trachoma, in addition to schistosomiasis and STH"[1]
2007 "SCI received a grant in 2007 to expand its work to Rwanda and Burundi."[1]
2010 "SCI began working in Côte d'Ivoire in 2010, but mapping and treatments did not begin until 2012 due to political turmoil."[1]
2010 "In 2010, SCI received £10.5 million64 (plus separate funding for drugs) from UK's Department for International Development for treating schistosomiasis and STH65 in eight countries over five years."[1]
2010 October "In 2010, SCI received £10.5 million64 (plus separate funding for drugs) from DFID for treating schistosomiasis and STH65 in eight countries over five years."[2][1]
2012 "SCI began working in Côte d'Ivoire in 2010, but mapping and treatments did not begin until 2012 due to political turmoil."[1]
2012 " SCI began conversations with the government of Ethiopia about starting a national schistosomiasis treatment program in 2012. "[1]
2012 SCI reaches median coverage for schistosomiasis treatment at 77% in Malawi.[3]
2013 "SCI began conversations with the government of Ethiopia about starting a national schistosomiasis treatment program in 2012. In 2013, it funded planning for the program"[1]
2013 SCI begins first round of treatment in Ethiopia.[1]
2013 – 2014 Between November 2013 and April 2014 SCI funds mapping in Ethiopia.[1]
2014 ". Starting in 2014, SCI began working with other partners in Côte d'Ivoire, including Sightsavers, the END Fund, and Helen Keller International on a more integrated neglected tropical diseases (NTD) program."[1]
2014 "In 2014, UK's Department for International Development awarded SCI an additional £16.6 million over four and a half years (June 2014 to December 2018) to extend the program and expand it to an additional two countries."[1]
2014 ACI reaches median coverage for schistosomiasis treatment at 69% in Malawi, 82% in Côte d'Ivoire, and 47% in Uganda.[3]
2014 – 2015 "SCI expected to fund about 4.9 million treatments during its 2014-15 budget year;4 it reported delivering 3.1 million treatments in Côte d'Ivoire in that period"[1]
2015 ACI reaches median coverage for schistosomiasis treatment at 81% in Mozambique, 93% in Zambia (2015), and 80% in Zanzibar.[3]
2015 – 2016 " During its 2015-16 budget year, SCI planned to deliver around 0.6 million treatments and reported delivering 1.4 million treatments in Côte d'Ivoire"[1]
2015 – 2016 Between April 2015 and March 2016 "SCI spent around $2.1 million in unrestricted funding and $0.8 million in restricted funding in Ethiopia between April 2015 and March 2016."[1]
2015 – 2016 "Between April 2015 and March 2016, SCI reports that it delivered 890,000 treatments in Uganda; 1.2 million treatments were planned"[1]
2016 January "Good Ventures awarded a grant of $1,000,000 to the Schistosomiasis Control Initiative (SCI) for general operating support in January 2016, in recognition of the organization’s earning a “top charity” ranking from GiveWell in 2015. See GiveWell’s review of SCI for more about its activities and to follow its progress."[4]
2016 August "GiveWell estimates that programs supported by SCI can deworm a person for approximately $1.26 based (including the estimated cost of SCI’s funding to country programs, SCI’s headquarters costs, cost of donated drugs, and local government involvement)."[3]
2017 January "Good Ventures awarded a grant of $13,500,000 to the Schistosomiasis Control Initiative (SCI) for general operating support in January 2017, in recognition of its earning a “top charity” ranking from GiveWell in 2016."[5]

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