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).
Search By Approval Date:
Clear Filter Total: 6,010
Name Title Nationality Approval Date Expiry Date Field of Science/Classification Trial Type Research Type  
Timothy  Muwonge Ronald
ID: UNCST-2020-R014680
ART on the GO: Assessing the impact of mobility on HIV care cascade outcomes in refugee settlements in Uganda
REFNo: HS1197ES

Aim 2: To enroll individuals living with HIV and currently or formerly in HIV care in Nakivale, Palorinya and Adjumani Refugee Settlements in Uganda, and prospectively assess their mobility to evaluate associations between mobility and retention in HIV care.,Aim 1: To prospectively enroll a longitudinal cohort of people newly diagnosed with HIV in Nakivale Refugee Settlement in Uganda and assess the association of mobility and linkage to HIV care.,
Uganda 2021-07-01 2024-07-01 Medical and Health Sciences Non-Clinical Trial Non-degree Award
Bruce Kirenga J
ID: UNCST-2019-R001460
MID-TERM PROJECT EVALUATION: CAPACITY BUILDING OF NATIONAL TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL
REFNo: HS1253ES

Primary objectives
1. To analyze the matching rate of M-KIT testing results between NTRL and Kumoh National Institute of Technology (KIT).
2. To analyze the change in TB case detection rate in Bukomansimbi from 2017 to 2020

Secondary objectives
1. To analyze the change in TB treatment success rate in Bukomansimbi from 2017 to 2020
2. To analyze the change in TB case notification rate in Bukomansimbi from 2017 to 2020
3. To analyze the change in DOT coverage in Bukomansimbi from 2017 to 2020
4. To analyze the trend of the number of DST performed in NTRL from 2017 to 2020
5. To review the satisfaction of NTRL training program
6. To identify potential activities to incorporate into the ongoing project
Uganda 2021-07-01 2024-07-01 Medical and Health Sciences Non-degree Award
Harriet Kisembo Nalubega
ID:
EFFECT OF CLINICAL IMAGING GUIDELINES ON APPROPRATENESS OF COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY REQUISITIONS FOR YOUNG PATIENTS IN SIX SELECTED HOSPTALS IN UGANDA
REFNo: HS1313ES

General objective
To assess the effect of CIG on appropriateness of CT requisitions for common CT examinations among young patients in six selected hospitals in Uganda.
Specific objectives:

1.To systematically review literature for barriers and facilitators for guideline implementation in diagnostic imaging with special emphasis to low resource setting
2.To determine the proportion of inappropriate CT requisitions for commonly performed examinations among patients 35 years and below in the six selected hospitals in Uganda

3.To identify the factors contributing to inappropriate Imaging in the six selected hospitals in Uganda
4.To explore the barriers and facilitators of CIGs use in six selected Hospitals in Uganda
5. To determine the proportion of inappropriate CT requisitions for common examinations among patients 35 years and below after introducing the ESR (iGuide) in six selected hospitals in Uganda

Secondary objectives
1.To assess the quality of requisition forms in regard to appropriateness of CT examinations among patients 35 years and below in six selected hospitals in Uganda
2.To measure the base-line (pre-intervention) and the post-training (post intervention) knowledge level of prescribers regarding the use of CIGs in the selected hospitals in Uganda

Uganda 2021-07-01 2024-07-01 Medical and Health Sciences Degree Award
Sarika Dewan
ID:
Maternal exposure to violence and child malnutrition: a cross-sectional survey in northern Uganda
REFNo: SS845ES

Understand the impact of COVID-19 on maternal well-being and victimization, feeling of safety and access to services,Examine the role of maternal depression as a mediator between violence exposure, nutrition-sensitive behaviour and child malnutrition.,Determine the impact of exposure to violence on maternal nutrition-sensitive behaviour.,Examine the types of violence exposure associated with child malnutrition.,
Germany 2021-07-01 2024-07-01 Social Science and Humanities Non-Clinical Trial Degree Award
Richard Mallett
ID:
The effects of digital employment on livelihoods, associational life and politics in the urban informal economy: a case study of Kampala’s boda boda sector
REFNo: SS844ES

This proposed research looks at the effects of digital employment on livelihoods, associational life and politics within the urban informal economy – an important area of research lacking serious academic engagement. It aims to do so through an analysis of labour and livelihoods in the motorcycle taxi (or boda boda) sector of Uganda’s capital city, Kampala. Though difficult, dangerous and poorly paid, boda riding nonetheless provides vital work in a context of widespread unemployment, helping a significant share of the urban population make a living in the absence of formal alternatives and safety nets. With the recent arrival of the gig economy, involving app-based motorcycle taxi companies, the nature and organisation of employment in the sector is being reconfigured in uncertain ways and with uncertain effects – testing, amongst other things, the capacity of boda work to absorb urban unemployment. The purpose of the study is to engage critically with the idea that new technologies of employment integrate smoothly and seamlessly into local settings, creating jobs and connecting workers to new economic possibilities in ways that are often perceived to be unproblematic. Instead, it focuses on the challenges that occur as digital innovations come into contact with the urban informal economy, and the unintended consequences that accompany the disruption of people’s livelihoods within it. There are three specific objectives guiding the study, which have been formulated through a review of relevant literature. These are as follows: 1. To examine the effects of digital employment on the livelihoods of riders in Kampala’s boda boda sector 2. To examine the effects of digital employment on the associational and organisational features of work within Kampala’s boda boda sector 3. To examine the effects of digital employment on the relationship between riders in Kampala’s boda boda sector and political actors and processes
UK 2021-07-01 2024-07-01 Social Science and Humanities Non-Clinical Trial Degree Award
View Sort By:

"A prosperous Science and Technology Led Ugandan Society."