Our 30 year timeline

Key advocacy moments

1994

Akhil and Richard sit at a table talkingSet up our work in India

Romania and Peru set up in 1999, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania in 2003,  Bangladesh in 2008 and Nepal in 2017.

1999

First accredited teacher training programme for deafblindness in India building understanding on how to support children with deafblindness to grow and learn.

2005

Pioneering programme in Romania to identify children with deafblindness as early as possible through sensory screening in maternity wards and specialised early intervention centres supporting those families.

2007

Romanian Government recognised deafblindness as a distinct disability categorising it as one of the most ‘severe’ disabilities, for which support should be made available. The Peru and Tanzanian governments followed in 2010, Bangladesh 2013, Nepal 2016, India 2017, Kenya (2018), Uganda (2020)

2018

A support assistant looks at the camera as children play behind herLearning Support Assistants model for inclusive education and inclusive curriculum is adopted by Tanzanian Government and the importance of this support for children with disabilities.

2018

Groundbreaking research, supported by Sense International, revealed that 0.2% to 2% of the global population have deafblindness – this is 157 million people globally.

2019

After years of dedicated advocacy, the Ugandan government finally began vaccinating children against rubella, a major cause of deafblindness. The Ministry of Health reached 18m children in the first year of implementation.

2019

First ID card mentioning ‘Deafblindness’ as disability was launched in India. Disability ID cards previously mentioned ‘multiple disability’ but not deafblindness as unique disability.

2020

Class teachers and support workers for newly-established deafblind classes now funded by the Nepalese government due to our influence

2023

Asha and Shruti smile for the cameraAsha and Shruti, both women with deafblindness, from our India programmes attended the UN World Data Forum in Bern, Switzerland to advocate for better data on deafblindness and accessibility for all.

2023

A Kenyan couple look at their babyInclusion of early screening and interventioninto Kenyan Health programming is rolled out to Kwale and Garissa counties through occupational therapists.

2023

Second Global Report on Deafblindness launched

2024

A young boyDevelopment of the National Eye Health Strategic Plan in Tanzania including occupational heatlh therapists across all regions to support early identification of deafblindness

2024

‘First Steps’ a guide to supporting parents of children with deafblindness launched in Romania