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Dive into the research topics where Fred M. Ssewamala is active.

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Featured researches published by Fred M. Ssewamala.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Cost-Effectiveness of a Savings-Led Economic Empowerment Intervention for AIDS-Affected Adolescents in Uganda: Implications for Scale-up in Low-Resource Communities

Fred M. Ssewamala; Julia Shu-Huah Wang; Torsten B. Neilands; Laura Gauer Bermudez; Irwin Garfinkel; Jane Waldfogel; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn; Gwyneth Kirkbride

PURPOSEnNearly 12 million children and adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa have lost one or both parents to AIDS. Within sub-Saharan Africa, Uganda has been greatly impacted, with an estimated 1.2 million orphaned children, nearly half of which have experienced parental loss due to the epidemic. Cost-effective and scalable interventions are needed to improve developmental outcomes for these children, most of whom are growing up in poverty. This article examines thexa0direct impacts and cost-effectiveness of a savings-led family economic empowerment intervention, Bridges to the Future, that employed varying matched savings incentives to encourage investment in Ugandan children orphaned by AIDS.nnnMETHODSnUsing data from 48 primary schools in southwestern Uganda, we calculate per-person costs in each of the two treatment arms-Bridges (1:1 match savings) versus Bridges PLUS (1:2xa0match savings); estimate program effectiveness across outcomes of interest; and provide the ratios of per-person costs to their corresponding effectiveness.nnnRESULTSnAt the 24-month postintervention initiation, children in the two treatment arms showed better results in health, mental health, and education when compared to the usual care condition; however, no statistically significant differences were found between treatment arms with the exception of school attendance rates which were higher for those in Bridges PLUS. Owing to the minimal cost difference between the Bridges and Bridges PLUS arms, we did not find substantial cost-effectiveness differences across the two treatment arms.nnnCONCLUSIONnAfter 24xa0months, an economic intervention that incorporated matched savings yielded positive results on critical development outcomes for adolescents orphaned by AIDS in Uganda. The 1:1 and 1:2 match rates did not demonstrate variable levels of cost-effectiveness at 24-month follow-up, suggesting that governments intending to incorporate savings-led interventions within their social protection frameworks may not need to select a higher match rate to see positive developmental outcomes in the short term. Further research is required to understand intervention impacts and cost-effectiveness after a longer follow-up period.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Assessing the Association Between Depression and Savings for Kenyan Youth Using a Validated Child Depression Inventory Measure

Njeri Kagotho; Michele Patak-Pietrafesa; Fred M. Ssewamala; Gwyneth Kirkbride

PURPOSEnThe Child Depression Inventory (CDI) is a commonly used measure of depression among youth and has been used in studies conducted in sub-Saharan Africa demonstrating positive effects of financial asset-building interventions on physical and mental health outcomes. However, before we can be certain that asset building does indeed improve mental health functioning, we must first be sure that the instruments used to measure mental health in this population are valid and culturally appropriate.nnnMETHODSnThis two-part study used baseline data from a sample of youth (Nxa0= 1,348, 13-18xa0years) participating in the YouthSave-Impact Study Kenya to clarify the psychometric properties of the 10-item CDI (study A), and then used the 10-item CDI to assess the relationship between financial assets and mental health functioning among this sample of adolescents (study B).nnnRESULTSnFactor analysis on the 10-item CDI indicated a one-factor eight-item measure with excellent model fit. Invariance testing indicated that the measure performed differently for male and female respondents. Finally, using the latent structure as the dependent variable, the second part of the analysis established that cash savings were associated with depression. Female and male adolescents with savings reported lower depression (female βxa0=xa0-.17, p ≤ .003; male βxa0=xa0-.12, p ≤ .020) than other youth.nnnCONCLUSIONnThis study identified a reasonable one-factor eight-item depression measure that was noninvariant across gender. This validated measure was used to confirm the association between financial assets and mental health outcomes, hence, supporting the hypothesis that financial assets are associated with mental health outcomes.


Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies | 2018

Social support and school outcomes of adolescents orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS living in South Western Uganda

Hadiza Osuji; Proscovia Nabunya; William Byansi; Tyrone Parchment; Fred M. Ssewamala; Mary McKay; Keng Yen Huang

ABSTRACT The goal of this study is to examine the role of social support from multiple sources, including the extended family, caregivers, classmates, peers and teachers, in improving the school outcomes (grades and attendance) of children orphaned by AIDS in Uganda. Data for this study comes from a 4-year randomized control trial, called Suubi-Maka (Hope for families), conducted in the Southwestern part of Uganda from 2008 to 2012. Using multivariate regression modeling – controlling for several individual-level and school-level characteristics, we find that social support (perceived emotional and information support received from parents, classmates and teachers), caregiver’s acceptance and warmth, and family cohesion have positive effects on children’s school grades and attendance. This finding underscores the importance of strengthening relationships within the extended family and the school environment to serve as a net of strength that can influence not only family functioning but also vulnerable adolescents’ educational trajectories.


Trials | 2018

Strengthening mental health and research training in Sub-Saharan Africa (SMART Africa): Uganda study protocol

Fred M. Ssewamala; Ozge Sensoy Bahar; Mary McKay; Kimberly Hoagwood; Keng Yen Huang; Beverly Pringle

BackgroundChildren in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) comprise half of the total regional population, yet existing mental health services are severely under-equipped to meet their needs. Although effective interventions for the treatment of disruptive behavioral disorders (DBDs) in youth have been tested in high-poverty and high-stress communities in developed countries, and are relevant for widespread dissemination in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), most of these evidence-based practices (EBPs) have not been utilized in SSA, a region heavily impacted by poverty, diseases including HIV/AIDS, and violence. Thus, this paper presents a protocol for a scale-up longitudinal experimental study that uses a mixed-methods, hybrid type II, effectiveness implementation design to test the effectiveness of an EBP, called Multiple Family Group (MFG) aimed at improving child behavioral challenges in Uganda while concurrently examining the multi-level factors that influence uptake, implementation, sustainment, and youth outcomes.MethodsThe MFG intervention will be implemented and tested via a longitudinal experimental study conducted across 30 public primary schools located in both semi-urban and rural communities. The schools will be randomly assigned to three study conditions (nu2009=u200910 per study condition): (1) MFG delivered by trained family peers; (2) MFG delivered by community health workers; or; (3) comparison: usual care comprising mental health care support materials, bolstered with school support materials. A total of 3000 children (ages 8 to 13 years; grades 2 to 7) and their caregivers (Nu2009=u20093000 dyads); 60 parent peers, and 60 community health workers will be recruited. Each study condition will comprise of 1000 child-caregiver dyads. Data will be collected at baseline, 8 and 16xa0weeks, and 6-month follow-up.DiscussionThis project is the first to test the effectiveness of the MFG intervention while concurrently examining multi-level factors that influence overall implementation of a family-based intervention provided in schools and aimed at reaching the large child population with mental health service needs in Uganda. Moreover, the study draws upon an EBP that has already been tested for delivery by parent peers and community facilitators, and hence will take advantage of the advancing science behind task-shifting. If successful, the project has great potential to address global child mental health needs.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT03081195. Registered on 16 March 2017.


International Social Work | 2018

Understanding female migrant child labor within a cumulative risk framework: The case for combined interventions in Ghana

Laura Gauer Bermudez; Ozge Sensoy Bahar; Mavis Dako-Gyeke; Alice Boateng; Abdallah Ibrahim; Fred M. Ssewamala; Mary McKay

North-to-south migration has been a persistent trend in Ghana. Yet the migrating population has recently shifted to become predominantly female and younger, with a significant increase in rural adolescent girls seeking employment in urban and peri-urban areas. For adolescents without strong networks of social and financial support, this practice can jeopardize their physical and mental health, putting them at risk of sexual victimization and economic exploitation. Building upon the work of cumulative risk and ecological systems theorists, this article examines the case of female adolescent load bearers (Kayayei) in Ghana, highlighting the need to develop and evaluate multi-component prevention efforts.


BMC Public Health | 2018

Suubi4Her: a study protocol to examine the impact and cost associated with a combination intervention to prevent HIV risk behavior and improve mental health functioning among adolescent girls in Uganda

Fred M. Ssewamala; Laura Gauer Bermudez; Torsten B. Neilands; Claude A. Mellins; Mary McKay; Irv Garfinkel; Ozge Sensoy Bahar; Gertrude Nakigozi; Miriam N. Mukasa; Lindsay Stark; Christopher Damulira; Jennifer Nattabi; Apollo Kivumbi

BackgroundAsset-based economic empowerment interventions, which take an integrated approach to building human, social, and economic capital, have shown promise in their ability to reduce HIV risk for young people, including adolescent girls, in sub-Saharan Africa. Similarly, community and family strengthening interventions have proven beneficial in addressing mental health and behavioral challenges of adolescents transitioning to adulthood. Yet, few programs aimed at addressing sexual risk have applied combination interventions to address economic stability and mental health within the traditional framework of health education and HIV counseling/testing. This paper describes a study protocol for a 5-year, NIMH-funded, cluster randomized-controlled trial to evaluate a combination intervention aimed at reducing HIV risk among adolescent girls in Uganda. The intervention, titled Suubi4Her, combines savings-led economic empowerment through youth development accounts (YDA) with an innovative family strengthening component delivered via Multiple Family Groups (MFG).MethodsSuubi4Her will be evaluated via a three-arm cluster randomized-controlled trial design (YDA only, YDAu2009+u2009MFG, Usual Care) in 42 secondary schools in the Central region of Uganda, targeting a total of 1260 girls (ages 15–17 at enrollment). Assessments will occur at baseline, 12, 24, and 36xa0months. This study addresses two primary outcomes: 1) change in HIV risk behavior and 2) change in mental health functioning. Secondary exploratory outcomes include HIV and STI incidence, pregnancy, educational attainment, financial savings behavior, gender attitudes, and self-esteem. For potential scale-up, cost effectiveness analysis will be employed to compare the relative costs and outcomes associated with each study arm.ConclusionsSuubi4Her will be one of the first prospective studies to examine the impact and cost of a combination intervention integrating economic and social components to reduce known HIV risk factors and improve mental health functioning among adolescent girls, while concurrently exploring mental health as a mediator in HIV risk reduction. The findings will illuminate the pathways that connect economic needs, mental health, family support, and HIV risk. If successful, the results will promote holistic HIV prevention strategies to reduce risk among adolescent girls in Uganda and potentially the broader sub-Saharan Africa region.Trial registrationClinical Trials NCT03307226 (Registered: 10/11/17).


Aids and Behavior | 2018

Does Economic Strengthening Improve Viral Suppression Among Adolescents Living with HIV? Results From a Cluster Randomized Trial in Uganda

Laura Gauer Bermudez; Fred M. Ssewamala; Torsten B. Neilands; Lily Lu; Larissa Jennings; Gertrude Nakigozi; Claude A. Mellins; Mary McKay; Miriam N. Mukasa

To assess the effect of a savings-led economic empowerment intervention on viral suppression among adolescents living with HIV. Using data from Suubiu2009+u2009Adherence, a longitudinal, cluster randomized trial in southern Uganda (2012–2017), we examine the effect of the intervention on HIV RNA viral load, dichotomized between undetectable (<u200940 copies/ml) and detectable (≥u200940 copies/ml). Cluster-adjusted comparisons of means and proportions were used to descriptively analyze changes in viral load between study arms while multi-level modelling was used to estimate treatment efficacy after adjusting for fixed and random effects. At 24-months post intervention initiation, the proportion of virally suppressed participants in the intervention cohort increased tenfold (ΔT2−T0u2009=u2009+u200910.0, pu2009=u20090.001) relative to the control group (ΔT2−T0u2009=u2009+u20091.1, pu2009=u20090.733). In adjusted mixed models, simple main effects tests identified significantly lower odds of intervention adolescents having a detectable viral load at both 12- and 24-months. Interventions addressing economic insecurity have the potential to bolster health outcomes, such as HIV viral suppression, by improving ART adherence among vulnerable adolescents living in low-resource environments. Further research and policy dialogue on the intersections of financial security and HIV treatment are warranted.


Archive | 2004

Overcoming Poverty: Supported Saving as a Household Development Strategy

Margaret S. Sherraden; Trina R. Williams Shanks; Amanda Moore McBride; Fred M. Ssewamala


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

The Power of Financial Inclusion: Reporting on the Efficacy of Economic Strengthening Interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa

Fred M. Ssewamala; Laura Gauer Bermudez; John S. Santelli


Global Social Welfare | 2018

School Banking as a Strategy for Strengthening Youth Economic Participation in Developing Countries: Lessons from YouthSave

Lissa Johnson; YungSoo Lee; Githinji Njenga; Joseph Kieyah; Isaac Osei-Akoto; Catherine Rodriguez Orgales; Sharad Sharma; Gina Chowa; David Ansong; Fred M. Ssewamala; Margaret S. Sherraden; Michael Sherraden; Li Zou

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Mary McKay

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ozge Sensoy Bahar

Washington University in St. Louis

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Margaret S. Sherraden

University of Missouri–St. Louis

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Gertrude Nakigozi

Uganda Virus Research Institute

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