57 results match your criteria: "New Mulago Hospital[Affiliation]"

Background: Retesting for HIV during pregnancy, labor, and postpartum is crucial for identifying new infections and ensuring timely interventions to prevent mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT). Uganda's national guidelines recommend that pregnant women be retested in the 3rd trimester or during labor/delivery. However, limited information exists regarding adherence to these guidelines, which may affect the effectiveness of PMTCT efforts.

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Finding the missing men with tuberculosis: a participatory approach to identify priority interventions in Uganda.

Health Policy Plan

January 2025

Department of Research and Innovation, Makerere University Lung Institute, New Mulago Hospital Complex, Upper Mulago Hill Road, Kampala P.O. Box 7749, Uganda.

Gender impacts exposure and vulnerability to tuberculosis (TB) evidenced by a higher prevalence of both TB disease and missed TB diagnoses among men, who significantly contribute to new TB infections. We present the formative research phase of a study, which used participatory methods to identify gender-specific interventions for systematic screening of TB among men in Uganda. Health facility-level data were collected at four Ugandan general hospitals (Kawolo, Gombe, Mityana and Nakaseke) among 70 TB stakeholders, including healthcare workers, TB survivors, policymakers and researchers.

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Geographical, social, and political contexts of tuberculosis control and intervention, as reported by mid-level health managers in Uganda: 'The activity around town'.

Soc Sci Med

December 2023

Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), ANSIRH Program, 1330 Broadway, Suite 1100, Oakland, CA, 94612, USA; Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, San Francisco, CA, USA. Electronic address:

Training district-level health officers and other mid-level health system managers revealed multiple contextual factors across political, administrative, and social axes affecting tuberculosis (TB) and TB control in Uganda. Individual relationships between local health, political, and media leaders affect efforts to inform the public and provide services, yet greater administrative coordination between national-level logistics, implementing partner funding, and local needs is required. Social challenges to TB control include high population mobility, local industries, poverty with high-density living and social venues, and misinformation about TB.

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Neonatal emollient therapy and massage practices in Africa: a scoping review.

Int Health

March 2024

Prematurity Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, 1701 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA.

There have been few reports from Africa on the use and health effects of emollient therapy for newborn infants. We aimed to describe neonatal skin care practices in Africa, and to illuminate opportunities to introduce evidence-based interventions to improve these practices. We conducted a scoping review of the quantitative and qualitative published peer-reviewed and grey literature in English on emollient use in Africa.

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Objective: To examine prevalence of novel newborn types among 541 285 live births in 23 countries from 2000 to 2021.

Design: Descriptive multi-country secondary data analysis.

Setting: Subnational, population-based birth cohort studies (n = 45) in 23 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) spanning 2000-2021.

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Introduction: Hypertension is a growing burden in Uganda and other low- and middle-income countries. Appropriate diagnosis services are needed at primary care health facilities to identify, initiate treatment for, and manage hypertension. This study assessed service availability and readiness as well as facilitators and barriers in primary health care facilities for hypertension diagnosis services in Wakiso District, Uganda.

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Background: Uganda has registered an increased investment in family planning (FP) programs, which has contributed to improvement in knowledge of modern contraceptive methods being nearly universal. However, this has not matched the uptake of modern methods or the reduction in the unmet need for FP. This may be explained by the different influences which include health workers, family, and friends.

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Socio-economic and education related inequities in use of modern contraceptive in seven sub-regions in Uganda.

BMC Health Serv Res

February 2023

Marie Stopes Uganda, Plot 1020 Rose Lane, Kisugu-Muyenga, P.o. Box 10431, Kampala, Uganda.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates inequities in the use of modern contraceptives in Uganda, focusing on socio-economic and educational dimensions among different population groups.
  • Data were collected from 3,607 participants in seven statistical regions, highlighting disparities in family planning access, particularly between urban and rural areas, as well as between different socio-economic statuses.
  • Results indicate that higher socio-economic status and education levels are associated with increased use of modern contraceptives, with significant inequities detected based on these factors.
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Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) is commonly used to sample from key populations without a sampling frame since traditional methods are unable to efficiently survey them. Surveying these populations is often desirable to inform service delivery, assess effectiveness of programs, and determine prevalence of diseases. However, there are concerns about how RDS works in practice due to its many assumptions.

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Objective: Several comments and recommendations called to embed better the patients' and public voice in healthcare policymaking. Still, no studies captured patients' bottom-up perspectives regarding healthcare at the time of COVID-19 at a micro-level in a range of different countries. We, therefore, explored the perspectives of patient representatives in all six World Health Organisation (WHO) regions and extracted suggestions for care redesign after the pandemic.

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The use of contraceptives among adolescents and young adults is one of the most cost-effective strategies to address many sexual and reproductive health (SRH) challenges, including unintended pregnancies, early marriages, and sexually transmitted infections. Despite a high burden of SRH challenges, uptake and unmet needs of modern contraceptives remain low in Uganda, especially among adolescents and young adults in informal settlement settings. This study aimed to explore the motivations of adolescents and young people to use modern contraceptives (or not).

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The use of contraceptive methods is very low in Guinea, particularly among adolescents and young people. The purpose of this study is to analyze the experiences and expectations of adolescents and young people regarding the use of contraceptive methods in 2019 in Conakry, Guinea. We conducted a 6-month qualitative and descriptive study.

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Update and utilization of modern contraceptives has public health benefits including reduction of unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortions, and related maternal mortality. However, paucity of evidence on key indicators of family planning in the informal settlements abounds. Data are usually collapsed within the larger urban communities that tend to mask peculiarities of informal settlements.

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A high unmet need for family planning (FP) prevails in sub-Saharan Africa. Knowledge, awareness creation, and ensuring accessibility are frequently used to increase FP uptake. However, evidence on knowledge or information dissemination about FP among marginalized populations in urban settings in Africa is limited.

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Geospatial Distribution of Family Planning Services in Kira Municipality, Wakiso District, Uganda.

Front Glob Womens Health

February 2021

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Makerere University School of Public Health, New Mulago Hospital Complex, Kampala, Uganda.

Access to family planning (FP) services remains a challenge, particularly in informal urban settlements. The unmet need for FP in these settings is high, with a correspondingly high prevalence of unintended pregnancies that may lead to unsafe abortions. However, there is a paucity of quality data on the distribution of FP services in such settings in Uganda.

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Background: Appropriate breastfeeding is vital for infant and young child nutrition. Annually, oral clefts affect 0.73 per 1000 children in Uganda.

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Introduction: This paper aimed at estimating the resources required to implement a community Score Card by a typical rural district health team in Uganda, as a mechanism for fostering accountability, utilization and quality of maternal and child healthcare service.

Methods: This costing analysis was done from the payer's perspective using the ingredients approach over five quarterly rounds of scoring between 2017 and 2018. Expenditure data was obtained from project records, entered and analyzed in Microsoft excel.

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Background: Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) is required to achieve HIV viral load suppression. However, children under 5 years in Jinja, Uganda, had been shown to have low HIV suppression rates. This study aimed to determine the level of ART non-adherence among these children and the associated factors.

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Background: Recently, a 3-month (12-dose) regimen of weekly isoniazid and rifapentine (3HP) was recommended by the World Health Organization for the prevention of tuberculosis (TB) among people living with HIV (PLHIV) on common antiretroviral therapy regimens. The best approach to delivering 3HP to PLHIV remains uncertain.

Methods: We developed a three-armed randomized trial assessing optimized strategies for delivering 3HP to PLHIV.

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Background: To reduce the under-five mortality (U5M), fine-gained spatial assessment of the effects of health interventions is critical because national averages can obscure important sub-national disparities. In turn, sub-national estimates can guide control programmes for spatial targeting. The purpose of our study is to quantify associations of interventions with U5M rate at national and sub-national scales in Uganda and to identify interventions associated with the largest reductions in U5M rate at the sub-national scale.

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Gendered dimensions of population mobility associated with HIV across three epidemics in rural Eastern Africa.

Health Place

May 2019

Division of Prevention Science, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, 550 16th Street, 3rd Floor, UCSF Mail Code 0886, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA. Electronic address:

Mobility in sub-Saharan Africa links geographically-separate HIV epidemics, intensifies transmission by enabling higher-risk sexual behavior, and disrupts care. This population-based observational cohort study measured complex dimensions of mobility in rural Uganda and Kenya. Survey data were collected every 6 months beginning in 2016 from a random sample of 2308 adults in 12 communities across three regions, stratified by intervention arm, baseline residential stability and HIV status.

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Surgical need among the ageing population of Uganda.

Afr Health Sci

March 2019

Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Department of Anatomy, Kampala, Uganda P. O. Box 7072, New Mulago Hospital Complex Kampala, Uganda.

Background: Uganda's ageing population (age 50 years and older) will nearly double from 2015 to 2050. HIV/AIDS, diabetes, stroke among other disease processes have been studied in the elderly population. However, the burden of disease from surgically-treatable conditions is unknown.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding the causes of death in children under five is crucial for developing effective public health interventions in Uganda, where incomplete civil death registration hampers accurate mortality estimations.
  • Household surveys were utilized to assess the impact of key childhood diseases like malaria, anaemia, malnutrition, diarrhoea, and acute respiratory infections on overall under-five mortality rates at both national and regional levels, while accounting for various socio-economic and health factors.
  • The study found a U5M rate of 90 deaths per 1000 live births, with significant regional disparities, highlighting Kampala's lower rate of 56 compared to the North-East's higher rate of 152 per 1000 live births.
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Background: Although malaria burden in Uganda has declined since 2009 following the scale-up of interventions, the disease is still the leading cause of hospitalization and death. Transmission remains high and is driven by suitable weather conditions. There is a real concern that intervention gains may be reversed by climatic changes in the country.

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The impact of intimate partner violence on women's contraceptive use: Evidence from the Rakai Community Cohort Study in Rakai, Uganda.

Soc Sci Med

July 2018

Department of Epidemiology Biostatistics & Occupational Health, McGill University, 1020 Pine Avenue West, Montréal, QC H3A 1A2, Canada; Institute for Health and Social Policy, McGill University, 1130 Pine Ave West, Montréal, QC H3A 1A3 Canada. Electronic address:

A systematic review of longitudinal studies suggests that intimate partner violence (IPV) is associated with reduced contraceptive use, but most included studies were limited to two time points. We used seven waves of data from the Rakai Community Cohort Study in Rakai, Uganda to estimate the effect of prior year IPV at one visit on women's current contraceptive use at the following visit. We used inverse probability of treatment-weighted marginal structural models (MSMs) to estimate the relative risk of current contraceptive use comparing women who were exposed to emotional, physical, and/or sexual IPV during the year prior to interview to those who were not.

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