Collaborations and Partnerships

East Africa IeDEA Regional Consortium

East Africa IeDEA Regional Consortium The East African International Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA-EA) is one of seven regional data centers funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health to provide a rich resource for globally diverse HIV/AIDS data. Indiana University leads the East African region in collaboration with the University of California San Francisco […]

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Clarkson University

Clarkson University Partnering with the MUST Faculty of Business and Management Sciences, the Clarkson School of Business is working on a long term microfinance study. Embedded within that study the Institute for a Sustainable Environment has initiated a carbon sequestration scheme where women in the microfinance groups are given training and an economic incentive to […]

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Stockholm University

Stockholm University The SPIDER – MUST partnership programme under the Faculty of Computing and Informatics is sponsored by the Stockholm University, Sweden. The project is implemented through E-Learning and multimedia technology for mathematics and basic health education in Nakivale Refugee Camp, Uganda. The project provides learners in Nakivale settlement access to learning resources using radios, […]

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Karolinska Institutet

Karolinska Institute MUST-Karolinska Institutet collaboration is research-based. Under this partnership, a project aimed to identify the etiology of childhood meningitis in Southwestern Uganda and develop and evaluate new methods for point-of-care diagnosis of childhood meningitis in a low-income setting was implemented in 2020. The observational study included 600 children aged 0-12 years from Mbarara, Uganda. […]

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California University of Science and Medicine (CUSM)

California University of Science and Medicine (CUSM) CUSM and MUST have an active running institutional partnership currently working together on projects funded by NIH. One of the grants is spearheaded by MUST to build capacity to mentor health professionals in handling non comunicable diseases. A total of six health professionals will benefit from the grant […]

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