Approved Research This page provides a searchable list of all research protocols that have been reviewed and approved by the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology(UNCST).
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Name Title Nationality Approval Date Expiry Date Field of Science/Classification Trial Type Research Type  
Samuel Gonahasa
ID: UNCST-2023-R007310
Impact of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) treated with chlorfenapyr plus pyrethroid vs LLINs treated with piperonyl butoxide plus pyrethroid on malaria incidence in Uganda: a cluster-randomised trial
REFNo: HS3185ES


To evaluate the impact of chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid LLINs (PermaNet Dual), as compared to PBO-pyrethroid LLINs (PermaNet 3.0), on malaria incidence in Uganda. We will test the hypothesis that malaria incidence will be lower in intervention clusters (randomised to receive chlorfenapyr-pyrethroid LLINs) than in control clusters (randomised to receive PBO-pyrethroid LLINs).

Uganda 2023-10-04 13:38:57 2026-10-04 Medical and Health Sciences Non-Clinical Trial Non-degree Award
Asmaa Emara Elsayed
ID:
Instructional Supervision and Students’ Grades at Completion; The Moderating Effect Of Academic Staff Job Satisfaction In Private And Public Universities, Kampala- Uganda UCUREC-2023-535
REFNo: SS1902ES

iv. To establish whether academic staff job satisfaction moderates the relationship between instructional supervision and students’ grades at completion in private and public universities in Kampala, Uganda.,iii. To assess the relationship between academic staff job satisfaction and students’ grades at completion in private and public universities, Kampala Uganda.,ii. To find out the relationship between instructional supervision and academic staff job satisfaction in private and public universities in Kampala, Uganda.,i. To determine the relationship between instructional supervision and students’ grades at completion in private and public universities in Kampala, Uganda,
Egypt 2023-10-03 19:09:00 2026-10-03 Social Science and Humanities Non-Clinical Trial Degree Award
David Henning Johannes
ID:
The economic impact of tax compliance interventions
REFNo: SS1699ES

This study focuses on three problems.

The first problem is documenting what costs companies incur when receiving different compliance actions. While anecdotal evidence suggests these could be substantial, there has, to the best of our knowledge, not been no systematic survey documenting the costs incurred by companies.

The second problem is estimating where to optimally target what compliance actions bearing in mind the costs to companies and spillover effects. This involves three steps, 1) estimate the impact of compliance actions on the targeted company, 2) estimate the spillover effects of these compliance actions on the targeted company’s’ trading partners, 3) conduct heterogeneity analyses to understand which groups of taxpayer experience the highest/lowest impact. Gaining a good understanding of this problem will help increase the benefit-cost ratio of enforcement interventions.

Finally, if we find that firms change their tax filings after receiving a compliance intervention, we will seek to understand what drives this change in behavior. Theoretically, the mechanism behind a firms’ response is unclear. Firms could respond because they update their beliefs about the likelihood of being caught for tax evasion, because they realize that being caught is costlier, or because the intervention imposes a financial burden on the company mechanically change the amount of taxes they pay.

Germany 2023-10-02 16:24:09 2026-10-02 Social Science and Humanities Non-Clinical Trial Degree Award
Jennifer Moore Joy
ID:
'Good periods': Investigating how menstruation is constructed as a site of intervention
REFNo: SS1684ES

Investigate how menstruation is produced as a development concern at different sites by different stakeholders in the international development apparatus.

Examine how my interlocutors’ (NGO workers) conceptualize menstruation as a development problem and how they defend it.

Examine how the subjectivities/embodied experiences of beneficiaries of interventions relate to the framing of menstruation as a development concern

Determine what effects are produced by my interlocutors conceptualisations of the problem of menstruation.

Examine what my interlocutors leave unproblematic in their conception(s) of menstruation as a problem.

Examine whether assumptions/premises underpinning the conception(s) of menstruation as a development problem at the global level shared by my interlocutors.

Investigate how NGO workers themselves problematize menstruation, specifically in relation to the biomedical problematization of menstruation in the global development agenda and the subjectivities of beneficiaries.

Determine how NGO workers broker/translate between different problem representations of menstruation including that of the global development agenda and those experienced by beneficiaries.

Examine what other framings of menstruation are beneficiaries subject to and how these impact their embodied experiences of menstruation.
UK 2023-10-02 16:10:32 2026-10-02 Social Science and Humanities Non-Clinical Trial Degree Award
Deborah Natumanya
ID:
Smartphone Application for detecting Pesticide residues found in edible parts of tomatoes, cabbages, carrots and green pepper vegetables.
REFNo: SIR206ES

(i) To develop a mobile app that takes bio components of tomatoes, cabbage, carrots, and green pepper
vegetables in-form of infrared images and detects the presence of chemical residues.
(ii) To test the accuracy of the App in finding and determining the chemical residue amounts found present in
tomatoes, green pepper, carrots and cabbage vegetables.
Uganda 2023-10-02 16:06:18 2026-10-02 Engineering and Technology Non-Clinical Trial Non-degree Award
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