An evaluation of the feasibility and aceptability of a group participatory EIP, Baby Ubuntu, for young children in Uganda.

We have more than 25 years’ expertise and knowledge in Remote Community Development and Maternal, Newborn and Child Health.
We have developed these resources to leverage the learnings from our programmes and the deep expertise of our teams. We hope that they will impact, influence and inspire many others to create change in their own communities.
Explore these resources below.
An evaluation of the feasibility and aceptability of a group participatory EIP, Baby Ubuntu, for young children in Uganda.
This paper focuses on how the road is affecting villagers’ subjective wellbeing in two Himalayan communities.
This paper describes demographic, clinical characteristics and outcomes from a rural neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in central Uganda from 2005-2008.
Kimber McKay challenges our culture’s definition of marriage by sharing stories from her field work in Nepal’s northwestern Himalayan district of Humla.
An analysis revealing interesting relationships among health, culture and vulnerability and provide insight into directions for future health interventions in similar contexts elsewhere.