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Institution

Makerere University

EducationKampala, Uganda
About: Makerere University is a education organization based out in Kampala, Uganda. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Public health. The organization has 7220 authors who have published 12405 publications receiving 366520 citations. The organization is also known as: Makerere University Kampala & MUK.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the key factors associated with use of modern contraceptives varied among young and older married women age 15–24 and 25–34 respectively, and there is need for variability in media targeting among the young and the older women categories for improved use ofmodern contraceptives.
Abstract: Much of the research literature about the use of family planning generalizes contraceptive use among all women, using age as a covariate. In Uganda, a country with divergent trends in modern family planning use, this study was set to explore whether or not the predictors of contraceptive use differ by age. This was assessed by using data from the 2011 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS). We restricted the sample from each round to fecund, non-pregnant married women age 15–34 who were sexually active within one year prior to the survey, resulting in a sample of 2,814 women. We used logistic regression with age variable used as an interaction term to model the relationship between selected independent variables and the outcome variable (modern contraception use) for each group of women. We found that the key factors associated with use of modern contraceptives varied among young and older married women age 15–24 and 25–34 respectively. Results showed that perception on distance to health facility, listening to radio and geographical differences exhibited significant variability in contraceptive use among the young and the older women. Other key factors that were important for both age groups in explaining contraceptive use were; desire to have children after two years and education level. Addressing contraceptive use among old and young women in Uganda requires concerted efforts that target such women to address the socio economic barriers that exist. There is need for increased access of family planning service to the population through strengthening the use of Village Health Teams (VHTs) whose service is currently limited in coverage (MoH, 2009). Given the variation in contraceptive use between the two age groups, our findings further suggest that there is need for variability in media targeting among the young and the older women categories for improved use of modern contraceptives, for instance using alternative media strategies to reach the young women. Family planning policies should also be tailored to address the specific needs of different age groups of women with varied geographical locations.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Hugh Trowell1
01 Dec 1973
TL;DR: Food tables do not report the constituents of dietary fibre by direct analysis; crude fibre must therefore serve as an indicator of Dietary fibre and be used to test provisionally the two following hypotheses.
Abstract: Definition of dietary jibre Dietary fibre is defined as the remnants of vegetable cell walls which are not hydrolyzed by alimentary enzymes of man (Trowell, 19-72 a,b; Cummings, 1973). Dietary fibre appears to be identical with unavailable carbohydrate (celluloses and hemicelluloses) and lignin (Southgate, 1969). Food tables do not report the constituents of dietary fibre by direct analysis; crude fibre must therefore serve as an indicator of dietary fibre and be used to test provisionally the two following hypotheses.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the contribution of training and employee engagement on employee performance using evidence from Uganda's health sector using cross-sectional data from the National Health Service (NHS).
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate the contribution of training and employee engagement on employee performance using evidence from Uganda’s health sector. This study is cross sectional a...

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rate of decomposition was significantly faster under aerobic than in anaerobic composting conditions and the final composts contained high K and TN, indicating high potential as a source of K and N fertilizer.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The 6-year Uganda Sustainable Clubfoot Care Project (USCCP) aims to build the Ugandan healthcare system’s capacity to treat children with the Ponseti method and assess its effectiveness, and is following a cohort of treated children to evaluate its effectiveness.
Abstract: Neglected clubfoot is common, disabling, and contributes to poverty in developing nations. The Ponseti clubfoot treatment has high efficacy in correcting the clubfoot deformity in ideal conditions but is demanding on parents and on developing nations’ healthcare systems. Its effectiveness and the best method of care delivery remain unknown in this context. The 6-year Uganda Sustainable Clubfoot Care Project (USCCP) aims to build the Ugandan healthcare system’s capacity to treat children with the Ponseti method and assess its effectiveness. We describe the Project and its achievements to date (March 2008). The Ugandan Ministry of Health has approved the Ponseti method as the preferred treatment for congenital clubfoot in all its hospitals. USCCP has trained 798 healthcare professionals to identify and treat foot deformities at birth. Ponseti clubfoot care is now available in 21 hospitals; in 2006–2007, 872 children with clubfeet were seen. USCCP-designed teaching modules on clubfoot and the Ponseti method are in use at two medical and three paramedical schools. 1152 students in various health disciplines have benefited. USCCP surveys have (1) determined the incidence of clubfoot in Uganda as 1.2 per 1000 live births, (2) gained knowledge surrounding attitudes, beliefs, and practices about clubfoot across different regions, and (3) identified barriers to adherence to Ponseti treatment protocols. USCCP is now following a cohort of treated children to evaluate its effectiveness in the Ugandan context.

96 citations


Authors

Showing all 7286 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pete Smith1562464138819
Joy E Lawn10833055168
Philip J. Rosenthal10482439175
William M. Lee10146446052
David R. Bangsberg9746339251
Daniel O. Stram9544535983
Richard W. Wrangham9328829564
Colin A. Chapman9249128217
Ronald H. Gray9252934982
Donald Maxwell Parkin8725971469
Larry B. Goldstein8543436840
Paul Gepts7826319745
Maria J. Wawer7735727375
Robert M. Grant7643726835
Jerrold J. Ellner7634717893
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202343
202289
20211,200
20201,120
2019900
2018790