{"success":true,"data":{"current_page":1,"data":[{"id":3,"user_id":1,"title":"Community Health Worker Training Programs: Impact on Health Literacy in Juba County","abstract":"This study evaluates the effectiveness of structured training programs for Community Health Workers (CHWs) in improving health literacy among populations in Juba County. Through a longitudinal study spanning two years, we assessed knowledge retention, behavioral changes, and health outcomes in communities served by trained CHWs. The findings demonstrate significant improvements in health awareness and preventive health practices.","methodology":"A longitudinal cohort study was conducted with 120 CHWs who received standardized training between 2022-2024. We administered pre- and post-training assessments, followed by quarterly knowledge evaluations. Community health outcomes were measured through household surveys covering 2,400 families over the study period.","findings":"Trained CHWs demonstrated 78% knowledge retention at 12 months post-training. Communities served by trained CHWs showed: 56% increase in immunization coverage, 43% improvement in maternal health knowledge, 38% increase in early healthcare-seeking behavior, and 29% reduction in preventable disease incidence. The study supports scaling CHW training programs nationally.","references":"1. Lehmann et al. (2023). Community Health Workers in Humanitarian Settings. BMJ Global Health, 8(1), e009876. 2. WHO (2022). Community Health Worker Programs: Global Evidence Report. 3. South Sudan Health Cluster (2023). CHW Integration Guidelines.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-12-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2025-12-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":4,"publication_id":3,"original_name":"CommunityHealthWorkerTrainingProgramsImpactonHealthLiteracyinJubaCounty.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_3.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_3.pdf","file_size":1344196,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":4,"user_id":1,"title":"Mobile-Based Disease Surveillance Systems in Humanitarian Settings: Lessons from South Sudan","abstract":"This research paper examines the implementation and effectiveness of mobile-based disease surveillance systems in humanitarian settings within South Sudan. Focusing on the Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response (IDSR) system enhancements, we analyze how digital tools have improved outbreak detection, reporting timeliness, and response coordination in displacement camps and conflict-affected areas.","methodology":"We conducted a retrospective analysis of surveillance data from 2020-2024 across 45 health facilities in displacement-affected regions. The study included key informant interviews with 30 surveillance officers and analysis of outbreak response times before and after mobile system implementation.","findings":"Mobile surveillance systems reduced reporting time from an average of 7 days to 24 hours. Outbreak detection improved by 67%, with measles and cholera outbreaks identified 5 days earlier on average. The system demonstrated 94% data completeness compared to 61% with paper-based systems. Challenges included connectivity issues (23% of reports delayed) and battery limitations in remote areas.","references":"1. WHO AFRO (2023). IDSR Technical Guidelines, Third Edition. 2. CDC (2023). Mobile Technology for Disease Surveillance. 3. OCHA (2024). Humanitarian Response Plan South Sudan.","category":"tech","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":5,"publication_id":4,"original_name":"Mobile-BasedDiseaseSurveillanceSystemsinHumanitarianSettingsLessonsfromSouthSudan.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_4.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_4.pdf","file_size":1227072,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"},{"id":6,"publication_id":4,"original_name":"Supplementary_Data_4.xlsx","stored_name":"supplementary_4.xlsx","file_path":"publications\/supplementary_4.xlsx","file_size":108322,"mime_type":"application\/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet","file_type":"doc","is_public":false,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Supplementary data and analysis files","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":5,"user_id":1,"title":"Nutrition Education Through Digital Platforms: Assessing Impact on Child Feeding Practices in Wau","abstract":"This study investigates the impact of nutrition education delivered through digital platforms on infant and young child feeding practices in Wau, Western Bahr el Ghazal. The research evaluates whether multimedia content delivered via smartphones and community viewing sessions can effectively change caregiver behaviors and improve child nutrition outcomes in a low-literacy population.","methodology":"A cluster-randomized controlled trial was implemented across 24 villages, with 12 receiving the digital nutrition intervention and 12 serving as controls. The intervention included weekly video content on exclusive breastfeeding, complementary feeding, and dietary diversity delivered through community health workers equipped with tablets and solar projectors.","findings":"Intervention villages showed: 41% improvement in exclusive breastfeeding rates (from 52% to 73%); 38% increase in minimum dietary diversity for children 6-23 months; 29% reduction in childhood stunting over the 18-month study period. Qualitative findings revealed high acceptability of video content, particularly among younger mothers who shared content via WhatsApp.","references":"1. UNICEF (2023). Nutrition Programming in South Sudan. 2. Global Nutrition Report (2023). 3. WFP (2024). Digital Nutrition Education Toolkit.","category":"clinical","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":7,"publication_id":5,"original_name":"NutritionEducationThroughDigitalPlatformsAssessingImpactonChildFeedingPracticesinWau.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_5.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_5.pdf","file_size":1966215,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":6,"user_id":1,"title":"Health Information Seeking Behavior Among Urban Youth in South Sudan: Implications for Digital Health Literacy","abstract":"This research explores how urban youth in South Sudan seek, evaluate, and use health information in the digital age. With increasing smartphone penetration among young people, understanding their information-seeking patterns is crucial for designing effective health communication strategies. The study identifies key sources, trust factors, and barriers to accessing reliable health information.","methodology":"A cross-sectional survey was administered to 800 youth aged 15-24 in Juba, Wau, and Malakal. The survey instrument assessed health information sources, digital literacy levels, trust in various media, and health behaviors. Focus group discussions with 120 participants provided qualitative depth to the quantitative findings.","findings":"Social media was the primary health information source for 67% of respondents, with Facebook and WhatsApp being most popular. Only 34% could identify reliable health sources from misinformation. Factors influencing trust included source authority (78%), peer recommendations (65%), and visual presentation (54%). Digital health literacy interventions are urgently needed.","references":"1. Norman & Skinner (2023). eHealth Literacy Framework. 2. BBC Media Action (2023). Youth and Health Information in East Africa. 3. South Sudan National Bureau of Statistics (2023). Youth Demographics Report.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":8,"publication_id":6,"original_name":"HealthInformationSeekingBehaviorAmongUrbanYouthinSouthSudanImplicationsforDigitalHealthLiteracy.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_6.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_6.pdf","file_size":862668,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":8,"user_id":1,"title":"Gender-Based Violence Response Services: Integrating Digital Tools for Improved Case Management","abstract":"This research examines the integration of digital tools in gender-based violence (GBV) response services in South Sudan. The study evaluates a mobile-based case management system implemented by humanitarian organizations, assessing its impact on service quality, case tracking, and survivor outcomes. Findings inform best practices for digital GBV service delivery in humanitarian contexts.","methodology":"Mixed-methods evaluation combining analysis of 450 GBV case records, surveys with 30 case workers, and in-depth interviews with 25 survivors who consented to participate. The study compared outcomes before and after digital system implementation at three women's centers in Juba, Bentiu, and Yei.","findings":"The digital system improved case follow-up rates from 43% to 87%. Average time from incident to service access decreased from 12 days to 4 days. Survivors reported greater confidentiality (92%) and satisfaction with services (88%). Challenges included staff training needs and system downtime in areas with poor connectivity.","references":"1. UNFPA (2023). GBV Response in Humanitarian Settings. 2. UNHCR (2024). Digital Case Management Guidelines. 3. International Rescue Committee (2023). Technology for GBV Prevention.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":11,"publication_id":8,"original_name":"Gender-BasedViolenceResponseServicesIntegratingDigitalToolsforImprovedCaseManagement.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_8.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_8.pdf","file_size":2127374,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":9,"user_id":1,"title":"Malaria Prevention Education Through Community Radio: A Case Study from Northern Bahr el Ghazal","abstract":"This case study documents the effectiveness of community radio programs in disseminating malaria prevention education in Northern Bahr el Ghazal State. The research evaluates listener engagement, knowledge acquisition, and behavioral changes related to malaria prevention practices. The study provides insights for scaling radio-based health education across South Sudan.","methodology":"Pre- and post-broadcast surveys were conducted with 600 radio listeners across four counties. Program monitoring data included listener call-in volume, quiz participation rates, and message retention scores. Longitudinal data on malaria incidence from health facilities provided outcome measures.","findings":"The weekly radio program reached an estimated 180,000 listeners. Survey results showed: 73% of regular listeners could correctly identify malaria symptoms (vs. 41% non-listeners); 68% reported using mosquito nets consistently (vs. 39% baseline); 52% sought treatment within 24 hours of symptom onset (vs. 28% baseline). Facility data indicated 22% reduction in severe malaria cases.","references":"1. WHO (2023). Malaria Prevention Communication Guidelines. 2. BBC Media Action (2022). Health Communication via Radio. 3. South Sudan Malaria Control Program (2023). Annual Report.","category":"clinical","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-12-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2025-12-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":12,"publication_id":9,"original_name":"MalariaPreventionEducationThroughCommunityRadioACaseStudyfromNorthernBahrelGhazal.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_9.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_9.pdf","file_size":2063023,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":11,"user_id":1,"title":"Health Supply Chain Optimization Using Mobile Technology: Evidence from the Essential Medicines Program","abstract":"This research investigates the impact of mobile technology on health supply chain management in South Sudan's Essential Medicines Program. The study documents the implementation of a mobile-based inventory management system and evaluates its effectiveness in reducing stockouts, improving order accuracy, and enhancing supply chain visibility across health facilities.","methodology":"A before-and-after study design was employed, analyzing supply chain data from 50 health facilities over 24 months (12 months pre-implementation, 12 months post-implementation). Key metrics included stockout rates, order fulfillment time, inventory accuracy, and reporting compliance.","findings":"Mobile system implementation resulted in: 67% reduction in essential medicine stockouts; 54% improvement in order accuracy; reporting compliance increased from 45% to 94%; average order fulfillment time reduced from 21 days to 8 days. The system enabled real-time visibility of stock levels at central medical stores, facilitating proactive distribution planning.","references":"1. USAID (2023). Supply Chain Management in Health Systems. 2. WHO (2024). Essential Medicines and Health Products. 3. John Snow Inc. (2023). Supply Chain Strengthening in South Sudan.","category":"tech","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-01-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":15,"publication_id":11,"original_name":"HealthSupplyChainOptimizationUsingMobileTechnologyEvidencefromtheEssentialMedicinesProgram.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_11.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_11.pdf","file_size":1339842,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":12,"user_id":1,"title":"Traditional Medicine Integration in Primary Healthcare: Perspectives from South Sudanese Communities","abstract":"This qualitative study explores community perspectives on integrating traditional medicine practices with conventional healthcare services in South Sudan. Recognizing the continued importance of traditional healers in many communities, the research examines opportunities for complementary approaches that respect cultural practices while ensuring safety and quality of care.","methodology":"Qualitative study using focus group discussions (12 FGDs with 120 participants) and key informant interviews (25 traditional healers, 15 healthcare workers, 10 health administrators) across three states. Thematic analysis identified key themes around traditional medicine use, integration preferences, and concerns.","findings":"78% of community members reported using traditional medicine alongside conventional care. Key integration opportunities identified: referral pathways for traditional healers, shared health education, mutual respect frameworks. Concerns included potential herb-drug interactions, delayed care-seeking for serious conditions, and need for traditional healer training on danger signs. A collaborative model is proposed.","references":"1. WHO (2023). Traditional Medicine Strategy 2023-2032. 2. African Union (2024). Traditional Medicine in Africa. 3. South Sudan Traditional Health Practitioners Association (2023). Annual Report.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-03-01T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":16,"publication_id":12,"original_name":"TraditionalMedicineIntegrationinPrimaryHealthcarePerspectivesfromSouthSudaneseCommunities.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_12.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_12.pdf","file_size":2251011,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":13,"user_id":1,"title":"COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy and Digital Health Communication: Lessons from South Sudan","abstract":"This retrospective analysis examines COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in South Sudan and the role of digital health communication in addressing misinformation. The study documents communication strategies employed, analyzes their effectiveness, and provides recommendations for future pandemic preparedness and vaccine communication in similar contexts.","methodology":"Analysis combined COVID-19 vaccination data, social media monitoring, and community surveys (n=1,200) across six states. We reviewed digital communication campaigns and their reach, engagement metrics, and correlation with vaccination uptake. Key informant interviews with 30 health communicators provided implementation insights.","findings":"Initial vaccine hesitancy was 64% (March 2022), decreasing to 38% by December 2023. Digital campaigns reached 2.3 million people via social media. Most effective messages featured local religious and community leaders (78% trust). Misinformation correction through WhatsApp fact-checking service was utilized by 45,000 users. Lessons emphasize community leader engagement and pre-bunking strategies.","references":"1. WHO (2024). COVID-19 Vaccine Communication Lessons. 2. Africa CDC (2023). Vaccine Hesitancy in Africa. 3. Ministry of Health South Sudan (2024). COVID-19 Response Evaluation Report.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-04-15T06:42:27.000000Z","approved_by":1,"created_at":"2026-03-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-15T06:42:27.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[{"id":17,"publication_id":13,"original_name":"COVID-19VaccineHesitancyandDigitalHealthCommunicationLessonsfromSouthSudan.pdf","stored_name":"research_paper_13.pdf","file_path":"publications\/research_paper_13.pdf","file_size":2487402,"mime_type":"application\/pdf","file_type":"pdf","is_public":true,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Main research document","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"},{"id":18,"publication_id":13,"original_name":"Supplementary_Data_13.xlsx","stored_name":"supplementary_13.xlsx","file_path":"publications\/supplementary_13.xlsx","file_size":126489,"mime_type":"application\/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet","file_type":"doc","is_public":false,"version":1,"download_count":0,"replaces_file_id":null,"description":"Supplementary data and analysis files","created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:27.000000Z"}]},{"id":17,"user_id":7,"title":"HIV\/AIDS Awareness and Testing Uptake Among Youth in South Sudan","abstract":"This cross-sectional study assesses HIV\/AIDS knowledge, attitudes, and testing practices among youth aged 15-24 in urban and peri-urban South Sudan. With HIV prevalence at 2.7% nationally, understanding youth behavior is critical for prevention strategies. The study reveals important insights into stigma, testing barriers, and educational needs.","methodology":"Cross-sectional survey of 3,000 youth across Juba, Wau, and Malakal. Structured questionnaires assessed knowledge, attitudes, and practices. Focus group discussions explored barriers to testing. HIV testing was offered on-site with counseling.","findings":"Comprehensive HIV knowledge was 42% among respondents. Stigma remained high with 38% expressing discriminatory attitudes. Testing uptake increased from 18% to 34% following educational interventions. Mobile testing units showed highest acceptance rates.","references":"1. UNAIDS. (2023). Global AIDS Update.\n2. South Sudan AIDS Commission. (2023). National HIV Strategic Plan.\n3. PEPFAR. (2022). Country Operational Plan.","category":"clinical","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-02-14T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-23T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":8,"created_at":"2026-02-28T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":7,"name":"Senior Mentor","email":"mentor@sshia.org","username":"mentor@sshia.org","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:24.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:24.000000Z"},"files":[]},{"id":18,"user_id":2,"title":"Nutritional Status and Feeding Practices of Children in IDP Camps","abstract":"Internally displaced persons face heightened nutritional vulnerabilities. This study assessed the nutritional status of children under five in three major IDP camps in South Sudan, examining feeding practices, food security, and anthropometric indicators. The research provides evidence-based recommendations for nutrition programming in humanitarian settings.","methodology":"Cross-sectional assessment using standardized anthropometric measurements, 24-hour dietary recalls, and household food security scales. Sample included 1,800 children across three IDP camps. WHO growth standards applied for nutritional classification.","findings":"Global acute malnutrition rate was 14.3%, exceeding emergency thresholds. Exclusive breastfeeding rates were 48%. Minimum dietary diversity achieved by only 32% of children. Integrated nutrition programs showed 25% improvement in recovery rates.","references":"1. WHO. (2023). Child Growth Standards.\n2. WFP. (2023). Nutrition in Humanitarian Settings.\n3. UNICEF. (2022). Nutrition Assessment Report.","category":"clinical","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-11-14T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-04-04T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":6,"created_at":"2025-05-20T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":2,"name":"SSHIA Administrator","email":"admin@sshia.org","username":"admin@sshia.org","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z"},"files":[]},{"id":21,"user_id":8,"title":"Digital Health Literacy Assessment Among Healthcare Workers in South Sudan","abstract":"As healthcare becomes increasingly digitized, understanding digital health literacy among healthcare workers is essential. This study assessed digital competencies, identified training needs, and developed a capacity-building framework for South Sudanese healthcare professionals. The research informs national digital health strategy implementation.","methodology":"Cross-sectional survey of 500 healthcare workers across all ten states. Digital competency assessment using validated tools. Focus group discussions explored barriers and enablers. Training intervention pilot tested with pre-post evaluation.","findings":"Basic digital literacy at 34% among healthcare workers. Urban-rural divide significant (58% vs 18%). Training intervention improved digital competencies by 65%. Preferred learning modalities included peer mentoring and hands-on practice.","references":"1. WHO. (2023). Digital Competency Framework.\n2. ITU. (2022). Digital Skills Assessment.\n3. Health informatics literature review 2020-2023.","category":"tech","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2026-02-24T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-04-11T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":11,"created_at":"2025-12-27T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":8,"name":"Mentorship Mentee","email":"mentee@sshia.org","username":"mentee@sshia.org","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:24.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:24.000000Z"},"files":[]},{"id":22,"user_id":3,"title":"Telemedicine Implementation for Specialist Care Access in Remote Regions","abstract":"Specialist healthcare services remain largely unavailable outside Juba. This pilot study implemented telemedicine platforms connecting remote health facilities with specialists at Juba Teaching Hospital. The research evaluates clinical outcomes, cost-effectiveness, and sustainability of telemedicine in the South Sudan context.","methodology":"Pilot implementation at 6 remote facilities with specialist consultation platform. Retrospective chart review for clinical outcomes. Cost analysis comparing telemedicine to patient travel. Patient and provider satisfaction surveys conducted.","findings":"1,200 teleconsultations conducted over 18 months. Diagnostic accuracy improved by 28%. Average patient cost savings of $150 per consultation. Provider satisfaction high at 85%. Sustainable model identified through integration with existing systems.","references":"1. WHO. (2023). Telemedicine Implementation Guide.\n2. American Telemedicine Association. (2022). Best Practices.\n3. Ministry of Health. (2023). E-Health Strategy.","category":"tech","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-11-24T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-08T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":7,"created_at":"2026-02-23T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":3,"name":"Operations Manager","email":"manager@sshia.org","username":"manager@sshia.org","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z"},"files":[]},{"id":23,"user_id":1,"title":"Electronic Health Records Implementation: Challenges and Solutions in South Sudan","abstract":"This research documents the implementation of electronic health records (EHR) in selected health facilities in South Sudan. The study identifies infrastructural, human resource, and systemic challenges while proposing context-appropriate solutions. Findings inform national health information system strengthening efforts.","methodology":"Implementation case study at 4 health facilities using OpenMRS platform. Process documentation, barrier analysis, and solution testing over 24 months. User acceptance testing and data quality assessments conducted quarterly.","findings":"Internet connectivity primary barrier (available 60% of time). User training required average 40 hours per staff. Data quality improved by 75% after 12 months. Paper-electronic hybrid systems most practical approach currently.","references":"1. OpenMRS. (2023). Implementation Guide.\n2. DHIS2. (2022). Health Information Systems.\n3. WHO. (2023). Health Data Standards.","category":"tech","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-11-21T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-03-08T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":7,"created_at":"2026-02-11T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":1,"name":"Super Admin","email":"admin@sshia.com","username":"superadmin","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:18.000000Z"},"files":[]},{"id":25,"user_id":2,"title":"Gender Barriers to Healthcare Access in South Sudan: A Qualitative Study","abstract":"Gender inequality significantly impacts healthcare access in South Sudan. This qualitative study explores cultural, economic, and systemic barriers facing women and girls in accessing health services. The research provides recommendations for gender-responsive health programming and policy reform.","methodology":"Qualitative study using in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with 200 participants. Purposive sampling across four states. Thematic analysis applied to identify patterns. Gender analysis framework utilized.","findings":"Decision-making power concentrated with male heads of household. Distance to facilities poses safety concerns for women. Female healthcare worker availability influences care-seeking. Economic dependence limits healthcare access for women.","references":"1. UN Women. (2023). Gender and Health Report.\n2. WHO. (2022). Gender Mainstreaming in Health.\n3. Ministry of Gender. (2023). National Gender Policy.","category":"social","status":"approved","is_featured":false,"cover_image":null,"submitted_at":"2025-11-29T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_at":"2026-04-13T06:42:28.000000Z","approved_by":10,"created_at":"2025-06-24T06:42:28.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:28.000000Z","deleted_at":null,"user":{"id":2,"name":"SSHIA Administrator","email":"admin@sshia.org","username":"admin@sshia.org","phone":null,"avatar":null,"two_factor_enabled":false,"two_factor_confirmed_at":null,"email_verified_at":null,"is_active":true,"created_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-04-29T06:42:23.000000Z"},"files":[]}],"first_page_url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=1","from":1,"last_page":2,"last_page_url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=2","links":[{"url":null,"label":"&laquo; Previous","page":null,"active":false},{"url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=1","label":"1","page":1,"active":true},{"url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=2","label":"2","page":2,"active":false},{"url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=2","label":"Next &raquo;","page":2,"active":false}],"next_page_url":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search?page=2","path":"https:\/\/sshia.org\/research\/search","per_page":15,"prev_page_url":null,"to":15,"total":27}}