Cost and Cost-Effectiveness Analyses of the PULESA Trial to Integrate HIV and Hypertension Care in Urban and Peri-Urban Uganda
The PULESA-Uganda trial is a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized trial evaluating the effectiveness, implementation, cost and cost-effectiveness of integrating hypertension care into public and private-not-for-profit HIV clinics in the Kampala and Wakiso Districts of Uganda. The study compares two implementation strategies: HTN-BASIC (providing access to essential hypertension management tools and drugs) and HTN-PLUS (adding advanced training, remote monitoring, and performance feedback). It targets improving hypertension outcomes (12-month controlled blood pressure) for people living with HIV (PLHIV). PULESA addresses critical gaps in care by focusing on integration, affordability, and enhanced service delivery. The Tobin fellow would work closely with the study co-investigator and a current RA to clean and analyze patient and provider cost data, time-and-motion data and produce literature reviews. Fellow may be asked to produce tables of basic descriptive statistics, conduct basic econometric analyses, or other tasks.
Requisite Skills and Qualifications:
Required:
- Basic understanding of cost and cost-effectiveness analyses
- Ability to conduct literature reviews and summarize economic findings
- Strong attention to detail and numerical accuracy
- Good time management and ability to meet deadlines
- Knowledge of academic writing standards
- Plays well with others
Desired:
- Data cleaning/processing/analysis experience in Stata or R or another programming language