Search Results - "Nakubulwa, Rosette"
-
1
Social Influences on Engagement With HIV Testing, Treatment and Care Services Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Living in Rural Uganda
Published in Qualitative health research (01-03-2022)“…Men who have sex with men in Uganda are a heterogenous, discriminated population, experiencing high HIV burden, limited access to HIV testing, and low…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
Understanding and managing HIV infection risk among men who have sex with men in rural Uganda: a qualitative study
Published in BMC public health (04-07-2021)“…Abstract Background Same-sex sexual relations are criminalised in Uganda, and men who have sex with men (MSM) experience a high burden of HIV infection. In…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
3
Self-collected samples as an additional option for STI testing in low-resource settings: a qualitative study of acceptability among adults in Rakai, Uganda
Published in BMJ open (14-11-2023)“…IntroductionSelf-collected samples (SCS) for sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing have been shown to be feasible and acceptable in high-resource…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
The negative health spillover effects of universal primary education policy: Ethnographic evidence from Uganda
Published in Global public health (2023)“…Scholars of global health have embraced universal education as a structural intervention to prevent HIV. Yet the costs of school, including fees and other…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
5
“Men are always scared to test with their partners … it is like taking them to the Police”: Motivations for and barriers to couples’ HIV counselling and testing in Rakai, Uganda: a qualitative study
Published in Journal of the International AIDS Society (01-01-2014)“…Introduction Uptake of couples’ HIV counselling and testing (couples’ HCT) can positively influence sexual risk behaviours and improve linkage to HIV care…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
"Someone who hates themself doesn't come for their drugs": Experiences of mental health along the HIV care continuum in South-Central, Uganda
Published in PloS one (10-10-2024)“…Poor mental health occurs more frequently among people living with HIV. Understanding what mental health problems occur and at what point during the continuum…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
7
Identifying longitudinal patterns of HIV treatment (dis)engagement and re-engagement from oral histories of virologically unsuppressed persons in Uganda: A thematic trajectory analysis
Published in Social science & medicine (1982) (01-12-2023)“…There is limited study of persons deemed "harder to reach" by HIV treatment services, including those discontinuing or never initiating antiretroviral therapy…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
8
Capacity to Consent to Research Among Adolescent-Parent Dyads in Rakai, Uganda
Published in The Journal of pediatrics (01-06-2023)“…To assess the cognitive capacity of early, middle, and late adolescents and their parents or guardians to provide informed consent to a population-based cohort…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
9
The Promise and Peril of Mobile Phones for Youth in Rural Uganda: Multimethod Study of Implications for Health and HIV
Published in Journal of medical Internet research (02-02-2021)“…In East Africa, where landlines are used by 1% of the population and access to the internet is limited, owning a cell phone is rapidly becoming essential for…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
10
High Acceptability and Perceived Feasibility of Long-Acting Injectable Antiretroviral Treatment Among People Living with HIV Who Are Viremic and Health Workers in Uganda
Published in AIDS patient care and STDs (01-06-2023)“…Long-acting injectable antiretroviral treatment (LAI ART), such as a bimonthly injection of cabotegravir/rilpivirine, is a promising HIV treatment option. LAI…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
11
Importance of Relationship Context in HIV Transmission: Results From a Qualitative Case-Control Study in Rakai, Uganda
Published in American journal of public health (1971) (01-04-2014)“…We present results from life history interviews with 60 young adults from southern Uganda. Using a novel qualitative case-control design, we compared newly…”
Get full text
Journal Article