DONATE

New health programme will protect 200 million people from disease

September 2019

A new UK aid programme has been launched to help protect 200 million people worldwide from debilitating neglected tropical diseases (NTDs).

The flagship programme, called Ascend, was announced by the UK’s international development minister Baroness Sugg at the NTD NGO conference 2019  in Liverpool. It will tackle six of the world’s worst diseases (lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, intestinal worms, visceral leishmaniasis and trachoma) in 25 of the world’s poorest countries. The programme will also help national governments to combat these diseases themselves in future.

Sightsavers is leading the West and Central Africa part of the programme, along with a consortium of partners including Schistosomiasis Control Initiative, the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and Mott MacDonald. Between 2019 and 2022, it aims to deliver 440 million treatments in 13 countries, and make major progress towards treating, controlling and eliminating these painful  conditions.

Baroness Sugg said: “These debilitating but preventable diseases stop sufferers from working, studying and leading prosperous, healthy lives. This new UK aid support will stop hundreds of millions of people suffering from their terrible effects, and will boost the economies of 25 of the world’s poorest countries.”

Simon Bush, Sightsavers’ director of neglected tropical diseases, said: “More than a billion people are at risk of neglected tropical diseases, a group of conditions that are completely preventable and easy to treat, yet cause agony, disability and often trap people in a cycle of poverty.

“Thanks to this new programme from the UK’s Department for International Development, we will be able to treat, control and even eliminate more of them than ever before, and make a long-lasting impact on global health.”

A child drinks water from a cup during a drug administration session in Nigeria.

How will Ascend change lives?

Sightsavers is leading the Ascend programme in West and Central Africa, which aims to deliver 440 million treatments in 13 countries to protect people from disease.

More about Ascend

Read all our latest news stories

News from Sightsavers
In an operating theatre, a surgeon and a nurse prepare baby Ebenezeri for her cataract operation. The medical staff are wearing green scrubs and surgical masks.

2024: Our year in pictures

These photos capture some highlights from our work in 2024. From disease treatment programmes to disability inclusion, we’ve seen lives transformed, attitudes changed and people supported to access their rights.

January 2025
12-year-old Fiza smiles after receiving glasses through an eye test at her school.

Sightsavers partners with AI tech company to improve rural eye care

OptikosPrime’s innovative app will help people living in lower income countries to access eye care by making it possible to have their eyes tested via smartphone.

January 2025
President Jimmy Carter smiles, with the US flag behind him.

Sightsavers pays tribute to President Jimmy Carter

The 39th president of the United States died on 29 December, aged 100. Sightsavers worked with President Carter and The Carter Center for many years to fight neglected tropical diseases.

January 2025

Learn about our work to save sight