Intergenerational education and violence effects on adolescent education, early employment and adolescent parenting.
Mosha N, Mshana G, Toska E, Hertzog L, Desmond C, Cluver L, Kapiga S, Stöckl H.
Psychol Health Med. 2022 Aug 12:1-14.
DOI: 10.1080/13548506.2022.2108083
PMID: 35959944
Men’s Reflections on Romantic Jealousy and Intimate Partner Violence in Mwanza, Tanzania. Violence Against Women.
Aloyce D, Stöckl H, Malibwa D, Peter E, Mchome Z, Dwarumpudi A, Buller AM, Kapiga S, Mshana G.
2022 Aug30:10778012221108421.
DOI: 10.1177/10778012221108421
PMID: 36039538
Understanding barriers and facilitators to clinic attendance and medication adherence among adults with hypertensive urgency in Tanzania.
Kisigo, G. A., Mcharo, O. C., Robert, J. L., Peck, R. N., Sundararajan, R., & Okello, E. S. (2022).
PLOS Global Public Health, 2(8), e0000919.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000919.
‘Young men should work hard’: adult men’s views of young people in Mwanza, Tanzania.
Stöckl H, Malibwa D, Brambilla R, Kapiga S, Mshana G.
Psychol Health Med. 2022 Aug 28:1-12.
DOI: 10.1080/13548506.2022.2115084.
PMID: 36036244.
Prehypertension and Retinal Arteriolar Narrowing in PWH in Tanzania.
Woodward R, Fadhil S, Kisigo G, O’Donnell P, Mwanansao C, Wong TY, Cheung CY, Hamzah H, McNairy M, Peck R.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2022 Aug 2.
DOI:10.1097/QAI.0000000000003068.
PMID: 35916630
Does a school-based intervention to engage parents change opportunity for handwashing with soap at home? Practical experience from the Mikono Safi trial in Northwestern Tanzania.
Sedekia Y, Kapiga S, Mcharo O, Makata K, Torondel B, Dreibelbis R, Okello E.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2022 Jun 6;16(6):e0010438.
DOI:10.1371/journal.pntd.0010438.
PMID: 35666720.
Emerging Viral Infections, Hypertension, and Cardiovascular Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Narrative Review.
Yan LD, Matuja SS, Pain KJ, McNairy ML, Etyang AO, Peck RN.
Hypertension. 2022 May; 79(5):898-905.
DOI:10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.17949. Epub 2022 Mar 11.
PMID: 35272495; PMCID:PMC9010372
Mwanza Intervention Trials Unit (MITU) has launched a new trial of human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine (“Add-Vacc Trial”). HPV vaccination has been included within the Tanzania national vaccination programme since 2018 and is delivered to girls around 14 years of age to protect them from cervical cancer. Apart from being the main cause of cervical cancer, HPV virus also causes other health problems including anogenital warts and other less common forms of cancer, such as penile cancer, anal cancer and throat cancer.
Over the course of three years, the Add-Vacc trial will investigate the benefits of adding male vaccination to the existing national programme of female HPV vaccination in Tanzania. A number of countries have begun vaccinating boys in addition to girls – known as gender neutral vaccination. Vaccinating males can protect them from health problems caused by HPV virus infection while at the same time preventing them from passing the virus on to their unvaccinated female partners. This could help reduce the amount of HPV infection and associated health problems in the community.
Twenty-six communities will be randomly assigned to receive either the intervention (male HPV vaccination plus female vaccination as part of the ongoing national vaccination programme) or the control condition (only female vaccination as part of the ongoing national vaccination programme). A single dose of male HPV vaccination will be provided to males 14-18 years of age. Two household surveys will be conducted – one before male vaccination is implemented and another one three years later, to assess whether this added vaccination reduces the amount of HPV infection present in the communities. Social science research will be conducted as part of this trial to help the research team to better understand community knowledge and perceptions of HPV vaccination.
Dr. Victoria Ewing who is coordinating the implementation of this trial said, “This trial is important because giving a single dose of HPV vaccine to males might provide a simple and cost-effective way to reduce the amount of HPV infection in the community. We are excited to be the first to conduct a trial of HPV vaccination in boys in sub-Saharan Africa.”
This trial is led by Prof. Debby Watson-Jones and Dr. Kathy Baisley from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and John Changalucha from MITU.
Same habitus in new field? How mobile phone communication reproduces masculinities and gender inequality in intimate relationships in Mwanza, Tanzania.
Mshana, G., Malibwa, D., Aloyce, D., Peter, E., Mchome, Z., Kapiga, S., & Stöckl, H.
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 026540752210979.
Comparison of Immune Responses after One Dose of HPV Vaccine in a Dose-Reduction HPV Vaccine Trial in Adolescent Girls in Tanzania to the Costa Rica Vaccine and India HPV Vaccine Trials.
Baisley, K., Kemp, T. J., Kreimer, A. R., Basu, P., Changalucha, J., Hildesheim, A., Porras, C., Whitworth, H., Herrero, R., Lacey, C., Schiller, J. T., Lucas, E., Mutani, P., Dillner, J., Indangasi, J., Muwonge, R., Hayes, R. J., Pinto, L. A., & Jones,
SSRN Electronic Journal.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4055428.