Aggrey Semeere Semwendero
ID: UNCST-2019-R001648
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ESTIMATION AND EXPLANATIONS FOR THE HYPERTENSION SCREENING GAP AMONG HIV-INFECTED PATIENTS IN HIV PRIMARY CARE.
REFNo: HS118ES
1. Estimate the screening gap for hypertension among HIV-infected adults on ART attending Uganda Cares HIV primary care clinics in Masaka, Rakai and the St. Balikudembe Clinic in Kampala, Uganda over 12 months.
2. Document explanations for the screening gap for hypertension from the perspective of health providers at the Uganda Cares HIV primary care clinic in Masaka, Rakai and St. Balikudembe Clinic in Kampala, Uganda.
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Uganda |
2017-11-28 |
2020-11-28 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Non-degree Award |
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Kaelin Marisa Brigitta
ID:
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Programmatic Management of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis: Treatment, Monitoring and Outcomes at the National Tuberculosis Treatment Centre in Uganda from 2012 – 2015
REFNo: HS139ES
To describe a cohort of DR-TB patients (specifically RR-TB, MDR-TB, pre-XDR-TB and XDR-TB patients qualifying for second-line anti-TB drugs) at the National Tuberculosis Treatment Centre, Kampala, Uganda
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Switzerland |
2017-11-28 |
2020-11-28 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Non-degree Award |
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Yoanna Pumpalova
ID:
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Symptom Profile Among Women in Uganda with Newly Diagnosed Metastatic Breast Cancer and Their Understanding of the Role of Palliative Chemotherapy
REFNo: HS141ES
The proposed study will enroll patients with newly diagnosed metastatic breast cancer who present to the Uganda Cancer Institute (UCI)/Mulago breast cancer clinics and the UCI Private ward/Mulago Solid Tumor ward and pose the following research questions:
1) What are these patients’ dominant symptoms and how are they being addressed?
2) What is the patients’ understanding of the goal of chemotherapy in their disease?
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USA |
2017-11-23 |
2020-11-23 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Non-degree Award |
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Charles Mondo Kiiza
ID: UNCST-2019-R001281
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A Randomized, Double-Blind, Efficacy and Safety Study of AR 14 (AZILSARTAN MEDOXOMIL) Treatment and Withdrawal, Followed by an Open-Label Extension, in Children 6 to Less Than 18 Years of Age With Hypertension
REFNo: HS113ES
Primary objective: To evaluate the antihypertensive effect of AZM compared with placebo after a randomized, double-blind, withdrawal (Withdrawal Phase).
Secondary objectives: To evaluate the antihypertensive effect of AZM compared with losartan during double-blind treatment (Double-Blind Phase).
Additional Objectives: To assess the population pharmacokinetics of azilsartan derived from AZM.
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Uganda |
2017-11-20 |
2020-11-20 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Non-degree Award |
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Heather Brown
ID:
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Epidemiology of Traumatic Injuries in Masindi, Uganda
REFNo: HS115ES
The purpose of this study is to characterize the incidence, patterns, and severity of injury among patients presenting to MKMC.
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USA |
2017-11-20 |
2020-11-20 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Non-degree Award |
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Madelyn Prevost
ID:
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The Entrepreneurial Spirit: Crafting subjects with regimented health and religion
REFNo: SS122ES
This project is intended to further the knowledge on HIV/AIDS, Catholicism, Non-Governmental Organizations, poverty, and work in a Ugandan context as globalization, greater access to medicine, and modernity change the cultural landscape. In addition to furthering scholarly knowledge, this project will also, ideally, help the site organization, Reach Out Mbuya remain relevant in the changing climates of donor funding, client needs, and HIV prevalence rates. Reach Out is a Catholic-based HIV/AIDS organization that seeks to provide holistic care to clients and their families through medical care, material support, subsistence projects, counseling, HIV prevention, and peer support. In Kampala, Reach Out has community sites in Mbuya, Banda, and Kinawatak; they also have an additional site in Kasaala. I will likely draw all of my participants from the Mbuya, Banda, and Kinawataka site locations; as a volunteer, I will spend most days at Mbuya, but also do work in Banda and Kinawataka sites weekly. Therefore, I will be more known to staff and clients at these locations, making recruiting participants smoother.
Building off literature that demonstrates how an HIV diagnoses affects a person’s sense of self and habits (Wekesa and Coast [2013]; McGrath et al [2014]); Whyte [2014]; Bartos and MacDonald [2000]), I propose that HIV, as well as comprehensive aid programs can have unique and varied affects on a person’s employment and livelihood. Adding to this argument, I will draw on literature dealing with subject formation (how a person’s identity and behaviours are formed and changed through processes and interactions), both in secular and Christian contexts (Foucault [2000]; Koopman [2013]; Skinner [2012]; Tambling [1990]; Norget, Napolitano, and Mayblin [2017]). Using this literature, I will argue that it is a combination of the regimented HIV/AIDS treatment schedule and Catholic belief and practice encouraged and facilitated by Reach Out that creates a socially responsible and productive subjects in their clients.
Working from this hypothesis, my project asks three primary questions: (1) How might being HIV positive affect an individual’s work, livelihood, and/or employment, and what role might religion play in the extent of these effects? (2) How does Reach Out’s comprehensive, holistic-based approach complement services provided by the government? (3) How does being HIV positive affect one’s social and/or economic standing, and one’s capability to remain in care?
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Canada |
2017-11-20 |
2020-11-20 |
Social Science and Humanities |
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Degree Award |
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Robert Borst Adriaan Johannes
ID:
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Exploring the impact of governing community health workers through a community health entrepreneurship model: protocol for a mixed-method research project
REFNo: HS58ES
Aim: To evaluate the impact of organising community health services through a social franchise model.
Research objectives: To assess the association between exposure of inhabitants to the Healthy Entrepreneurs social franchising model and several health related factor and 2) To explore the performance and motivation of the community health workers enrolled in the Healthy Entrepreneurs model.
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Netherlands |
2017-11-14 |
2020-11-14 |
Medical and Health Sciences |
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Degree Award |
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Lara Rosenoff Gauvin Shelley
ID:
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We are Sons and Daughter of Bwoc: Refusal and Land Rights Protections in Rural Post-Conflict Acoliland, Northern Uganda.
REFNo: SS112ES
To understand: What do processes involved in writing a clan-based non-profit foundation’s constitution (in a previously oral tradition of indigenous governance) do for relatedness in the post-conflict, land-pressured context? After it is written, and circulated, what does the document do for relatedness in context? How does/can it mediate both between sons and daughters of the clan, and between clan members, National Government, and foreign companies, as examples? And finally, how do real and perceived land pressures impact ideas and practices of relatedness, and thus social repairing and particular notions of refusal, through time.
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Canada |
2017-11-14 |
2020-11-14 |
Social Science and Humanities |
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Non-degree Award |
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Joe Abell Nadin
ID:
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A study investigating different perspectives on the use of participatory approaches in HIV prevention work
REFNo: SS123ES
This project will explore the use of participatory methods in HIV prevention work in Uganda. Proponents of the use of participatory methods in HIV prevention would claim that their projects avoid making demands by allowing ordinary people to decide themselves what changes they feel they need to make.
Critics of participatory approaches used in economic development projects have, however claimed that they do not result in any real moves towards transfer of control and that any ‘participation’ involved is essentially cosmetic. Other possibilities are opened up by suggestions that the forms that projects take in order to qualify as participatory can leave them open to contestation and the possibility of resistance from participants.
Through participant observation of prevention projects and interviews with participants, facilitators and the employees of NGOs using participatory methods to carry out HIV prevention work I will explore the dynamics at play and the perceptions of different actors involved when these methods are used in the context of HIV prevention.
Aims:
This project will have two main aims:
1) To explore the different perspectives of participants, organizers, facilitators and planners on the use of participatory methodologies and the dynamics of the implementation process. The main objective here will be to examine people’s expectations regarding participation and their assessments of the degree to which control is handed over. The way in which this will be approached is by testing a hypothesis derived from existing criticisms of participatory methodology: that this methodology does not lead to real changes in the dynamics of development work.
2) To explore the use of the idea of ‘participation’ in the context of HIV prevention work. HIV prevention, which deals with the regulation of sexuality, presents many contrasts with development projects which focus on economic development. This project will examine how prevention projects adapt the concept of participation in this context and the degree to which the idea of participation has to widen to allow this to happen.
Significance and Expected Benefits:
The most direct benefit of this research will be the information that it will make available to organisations planning, developing and implementing HIV prevention work. The project will deliver information on the perceptions of the intended beneficiaries of the HIV prevention work that has been studied. This will include participant’s evaluations of the degree to which the design and implementation of the prevention work resulted in a genuinely participatory experience from their perspective. Contrasting this with views expressed by staff at different level of the implementing organisation will allow any differences in perceptions to be identified, both in terms of the understanding of the ideas behind ‘participation’ and how it works in practice. Having access to this information will be useful to implementing organisations in improving the design of prevention work and putting it into practice. Providing those who have taken part in prevention work as participants with feedback may strengthen their ability to demand changes from providing organisations.
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UK |
2017-11-14 |
2020-11-14 |
Social Science and Humanities |
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Degree Award |
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Hannington Gumisiriza
ID:
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EXTRACTION, ISOLATION AND CHARACTERISATION OF THE BIOACTIVE COMPOUNDS FROM THE LEAVES OF GOUANIA LONGISPICATA
REFNo: NS34ES
1. Isolation of the phytochemical constituents of Gouania longispicata leaves.
2. Phytochemical screening of the crude extracts
3. Determining the antimicrobial activity of the extracts against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida albicans, Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli.
4. Antioxidant and cytoxicity studies on the most active extract
5. Structure elucidation of the compounds isolated from the most active extract against the selected organisms
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Uganda |
2017-11-14 |
2020-11-14 |
Natural Sciences |
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Degree Award |
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