D71TW012564
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Building capacity for global infectious disease research training in schistosomiasis in sub-Saharan Africa - program abstract.
This is an application for a two-year planning grant to build capacity for an international advanced research training in schistosomiasis in Uganda. The high burden of schistosomiasis in Uganda persists since the 1950's. Over 50% of the Ugandan population is at risk of exposure to Schistosoma species and its complications of fatal upper gastro-intestinal bleeding among adults.
Gaps in control of schistosomiasis remain due to limited number of scientists with capacity to conduct advanced research and training focused on schistosomiasis epidemiology, vector biology, immunology, vaccinology, therapeutics, genomics, computational biology to model the schistosomiasis transmission, data science and artificial intelligence to model population behavior and other predictors of disease severity, as well as local development and production of effective vaccine candidates, and the application of locally generated data to inform relevant interventions for disease surveillance and control interventions in the affected communities.
We propose to conduct a comprehensive needs assessment of the existing research and training capacity for schistosomiasis at Makerere University College of Health Sciences (MAKCHS) and the collaborating institutions in Uganda (Uganda Virus Research Institute-UVRI, the Ministry of Vector Control Division in charge of schistosomiasis and other medical schools in the country). Findings from the needs assessment will be used to develop of an innovative research training and career enhancement program to strengthen capacity of scientists and health research professionals to conduct independent, multi-disciplinary research in schistosomiasis.
During the two-year planning period, we will hold multiple stakeholder engagements and identify the research training resources, local and international faculty, scientific environment contributions and administrative processes needed to undertake a schistosomiasis research training program. We will establish a strong executive committee to oversee the design and preparation of advanced scientific didactic and methodology courses (physical and virtual) and research training resources for schistosomiasis epidemiology, disease management, prevention, and control.
We will also establish an international multi-disciplinary training advisory committee that will meet quarterly to guide and monitor the progress of the planning process against the set goals and milestones. The proposed planning grant will build on existing infection and immunity research training partnerships between MAKCHS and UVRI, and long-standing research training collaborations with our US partners (John Hopkins University and University of Washington).
We will reach out for new collaborations that may be required locally and abroad to establish a holistic, multi-disciplinary network of scientists with an effective organizational structure that will support the envisioned research training program, and resultant collaborative five-year training program (D43) application for better control schistosomiasis in Uganda.
This is an application for a two-year planning grant to build capacity for an international advanced research training in schistosomiasis in Uganda. The high burden of schistosomiasis in Uganda persists since the 1950's. Over 50% of the Ugandan population is at risk of exposure to Schistosoma species and its complications of fatal upper gastro-intestinal bleeding among adults.
Gaps in control of schistosomiasis remain due to limited number of scientists with capacity to conduct advanced research and training focused on schistosomiasis epidemiology, vector biology, immunology, vaccinology, therapeutics, genomics, computational biology to model the schistosomiasis transmission, data science and artificial intelligence to model population behavior and other predictors of disease severity, as well as local development and production of effective vaccine candidates, and the application of locally generated data to inform relevant interventions for disease surveillance and control interventions in the affected communities.
We propose to conduct a comprehensive needs assessment of the existing research and training capacity for schistosomiasis at Makerere University College of Health Sciences (MAKCHS) and the collaborating institutions in Uganda (Uganda Virus Research Institute-UVRI, the Ministry of Vector Control Division in charge of schistosomiasis and other medical schools in the country). Findings from the needs assessment will be used to develop of an innovative research training and career enhancement program to strengthen capacity of scientists and health research professionals to conduct independent, multi-disciplinary research in schistosomiasis.
During the two-year planning period, we will hold multiple stakeholder engagements and identify the research training resources, local and international faculty, scientific environment contributions and administrative processes needed to undertake a schistosomiasis research training program. We will establish a strong executive committee to oversee the design and preparation of advanced scientific didactic and methodology courses (physical and virtual) and research training resources for schistosomiasis epidemiology, disease management, prevention, and control.
We will also establish an international multi-disciplinary training advisory committee that will meet quarterly to guide and monitor the progress of the planning process against the set goals and milestones. The proposed planning grant will build on existing infection and immunity research training partnerships between MAKCHS and UVRI, and long-standing research training collaborations with our US partners (John Hopkins University and University of Washington).
We will reach out for new collaborations that may be required locally and abroad to establish a holistic, multi-disciplinary network of scientists with an effective organizational structure that will support the envisioned research training program, and resultant collaborative five-year training program (D43) application for better control schistosomiasis in Uganda.
Funding Goals
THE JOHN E. FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER (FIC) SUPPORTS RESEARCH AND RESEARCH TRAINING TO REDUCE DISPARITIES IN GLOBAL HEALTH AND TO FOSTER PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN U.S. SCIENTISTS AND THEIR COUNTERPARTS ABROAD. FIC SUPPORTS BASIC BIOLOGICAL, BEHAVIORAL, AND SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, AS WELL AS RELATED RESEARCH TRAINING AND CAREER DEVELOPMENT. THE RESEARCH PORTFOLIO IS DIVIDED INTO SEVERAL PROGRAMS THAT SUPPORT A WIDE VARIETY OF FUNDING MECHANISMS TO MEET PROGRAMMATIC OBJECTIVES.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Uganda
Geographic Scope
Foreign
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 100% from $108,318 to $216,636.
Makerere University College Of Health Sciences was awarded
Capacity Building Schistosomiasis Research Training in Sub-Saharan Africa
Project Grant D71TW012564
worth $216,636
from Fogarty International Center in July 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Uganda.
The grant
has a duration of 1 year 8 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.989 International Research and Research Training.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Planning Grant for Global Infectious Disease Research Training Program (D71 No Clinical Trials Allowed).
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 6/20/25
Period of Performance
7/18/23
Start Date
3/31/25
End Date
Funding Split
$216.6K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$216.6K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to D71TW012564
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
D71TW012564
SAI Number
D71TW012564-951042917
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NF00 NIH Fogarty International Center
Funding Office
75NF00 NIH Fogarty International Center
Awardee UEI
QSXBGHKN8KV6
Awardee CAGE
STR11
Performance District
Not Applicable
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
John E. Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0819) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $108,318 | 100% |
Modified: 6/20/25