Kasyeba sowedi
ID: UNCST-2024-R015275
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PREVALENCE AND FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH THE UPTAKE OF LONG-ACTING REVERSIBLE CONTRACEPTIVES AMONG POST CAESAREAN DELIVERY MOTHERS AT MBARARA REGIONAL REFERRAL HOSPITAL
REFNo: HS5882ES
1.To determine the prevalence of uptake of long-acting reversible contraceptives among post caesarean delivery mothers at Mbarara regional referral hospital.
2.To determine the factors associated with the uptake of long acting reversible contraceptives among post caesarean delivery mothers at Mbarara regional referral hospital.
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Uganda |
2025-05-14 9:51:46 |
2028-05-14 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
Non-Clinical Trial |
Degree Award |
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Megan Schmidt-Sane Mila
ID: UNCST-2019-R001043
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Tackling inequities in HIV/AIDS treatment ‘failure’ and mortality in Kampala, Uganda through participatory research with young men on the social determinants of health
REFNo: SS3813ES
1. Use ethnographic methods to understand and evidence how key intersecting social determinants (e.g., gender, generation) shape young men’s HIV treatment failure and AIDS-related mortality, with a focus on health as persistently relational and embedded in social conditions.
2. Use a systemic participatory action research approach with community members, HIV service providers and policymakers to identify and map leverage points in the wider system, with a focus on deeper structural transformation.
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USA |
2025-05-14 9:43:23 |
2028-05-14 |
Social Science and Humanities |
Non-Clinical Trial |
Non-degree Award |
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Douglas Bulafu
ID: UNCST-2021-R011774
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Assessment of the Mpox Response in Uganda: Documenting Challenges, Lessons and Innovations to Strengthen Emergency Preparedness and Response Capacities
REFNo: HS6025ES
To assess and curate the response to the Mpox outbreak in Uganda including the policies, response interventions, strategies and challenges in order to generate lessons to inform the ongoing response and recovery as well as health system resilience to future public health emergencies. ,
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Uganda |
2025-05-14 9:39:35 |
2028-05-14 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
Non-Clinical Trial |
Non-degree Award |
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Gumisiriza Asaph Blair
ID: UNCST-2023-R006384
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Examining Institutional Support on Skills development for Youth Self-employment in Mbarara City: A study of Influences and Outcomes.
REFNo: SS3771ES
The study will be guided by the following objectives:
To investigate the relationship between institutional support and skills development initiatives for self-employment among youth in Mbarara City, Uganda, and to analyze the influences of this support on their self-employment ventures and the outcomes achieved.
1.5. Specific Objectives
i. To identify the types of institutional support mechanisms available to youth in Mbarara City as well as their effectiveness in promoting self-employment,
ii. To examine the perceptions and experiences of youth beneficiaries regarding institutional support for their self-employment endeavors in Mbarara City,
iii. To investigate the barriers and challenges encountered by youth in accessing self-employment even after training in Mbarara City,
iv. To propose actionable recommendations and strategies for enhancing the effectiveness of institutional support systems in Mbarara City to better foster youth self-employment
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Uganda |
2025-05-14 9:37:17 |
2028-05-14 |
Social Science and Humanities |
Non-Clinical Trial |
Degree Award |
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Anna Vitari
ID: UNCST-2024-R002485
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The nature of the firm revisited: Documenting Relational Contracts within and between firms in Uganda
REFNo: SS3360ES
Our end objective is to shed light on the constraints that prevent a myriad of micro-entrepreneurs from turning into salaried workers hired by firms. This would contribute to our understanding of structural change and how it fundamentally hinges on a transformation in the organization of labor (Bandiera et al. 2022). Moreover, we aim to investigate whether the evidence points to the existence of multiple equilibria and, if so, what the transition phase of moving from one equilibrium to another involves. In doing this, we will also shed light on the role that policymakers can play in creating coordination devices to select the “good equilibrium,In this proposal, we seek to deepen our understanding of the dynamics and payoffs that govern relational contracts in different industries operating in Kampala, Uganda. This will enhance our knowledge of the barriers to firm growth and specialization in developing countries, a well-known puzzle in the literature on structural transformation and growth (Hsieh and Olken 2014). In particular, by documenting the nature of the relationships between and within firms, we aim to understand the organizational frictions that prevent firms from merging, a necessary condition for countries’ structural transformation. ,
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Italy |
2025-05-14 9:36:07 |
2028-05-14 |
Social Science and Humanities |
Non-Clinical Trial |
Non-degree Award |
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