Skip to main content
×
Home
  • About
    • Mission, Vision, & Strategic Themes
    • Leadership, Governance, & Professional Staff
    • Center Structure
    • Our Impact
      • Impact Report 2025
    • Giving
    • Get Involved
  • Research
    • Funding Pathways
      • Data Collaborative Pilot Funding
      • Impact Accelerator Grants
      • Seed Grants
    • Data Collaborative
    • Supported Projects
  • Education & Training
    • Seminars
    • Impact Scholars Program
    • Student Programming
  • Membership
    • Become A Member
    • Member Search
    • Member Communities
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • News
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
+
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
+

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Research
  3. Supported Projects
  4. Assessing flooding impact of households within the Rakai cohort in Uganda
Project Investigators
Joseph (Joe) Eisenberg, PhD, MPH, MS
Professor
Epidemiology
Pamela (Pam) Jagger, PhD, MS
Professor
Environmental Policy and Planning
Collaborating Organizations
Rakai Health Sciences Program

Assessing flooding impact of households within the Rakai cohort in Uganda

Start Date: 
August 2024
End Date: 
August 2026
Project Affiliation: 
Faculty

The project "Assessing Flooding Impact of Households within the Rakai Cohort in Uganda" is a collaborative initiative between the University of Michigan and the Rakai Health Sciences Program (RHSP) aimed at validating and administering climate shock surveys to evaluate the impacts of extreme weather events, with a particular focus on flooding, on household health in southern Uganda. This study adapts climate shock surveys previously developed in Kenya and Bangladesh to assess climate risks, adaptation behaviors, and health outcomes related to respiratory and water-borne diseases. 

The project will enroll 500 households from the Rakai Community Cohort Study (RCCS) in a year-long nested longitudinal study to capture recent and future flooding impacts. Coordinated with research efforts in Kenya and Bangladesh, the project seeks to build climate change and health research capacity in Uganda and ultimately integrate the validated survey into global environmental surveillance systems, advancing a data-driven approach to developing environmental health interventions amidst climate risks.

Themes
Climate, Environment, and Health
Data Science
Locations
Uganda
U-M Center for Global Health EquitySubscribe to Our Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

We bring people together globally across disciplines to co-create bold solutions that improve health where resources are limited.

Sitemap:

  • About
  • Research
  • Education & Training
  • Membership
  • News & Events
  • Giving

Quick Links:

  • Contact Us
  • Branding
  • Resources for Vendors
  • Videos & Recordings
©2026 The Regents of the University of Michigan Produced by Michigan Creative, a unit of the Office of the Vice President for Communications